Saturday, January 13, 2007

More On Getting Published

Yesterday's post was short and sweet, and pointed you to Stephanie Feagan's blog about the "secret" to getting published. In my most recent issue of The Writer Magazine, they have an article by Phyllis A. Whitney (who turned 103 in September--you go, girl!) that is just excellent. (Ms. Whitney wrote the article 45 years ago, but it's still relevant.) I'd like to share a little of it with you here.

Ms. Whitney starts out by writing (and I'm paraphrasing): How do you think you're going to get the experience in what writing a book is all about if you don't first sit down and write a book? A sure way not to learn is to think you won't write unless you can write a perfect book that an editor will beg to publish. "How silly can you be?" (That's a direct quote. LOL)

But think about it. When you're on a job with an employer, you learn by doing. You make mistakes, some small, some big, and you brush yourself off and know not to do that again. So why wouldn't writing be the same way? You write, you learn. And sometimes you write scared. It's only natural to think "What if it's not any good?"

It might not be. You might have a lot to learn.

But it might be good enough to catch someone's attention. But you won't know until you write it.

So... start writing!




"A man in the house is worth two in the street." ~Mae West

3 comments:

Sam said...

Great advice!

Sherrill Quinn said...

Glad to hear it, Sam. :)

Sherrill Quinn said...

Marty, I have to tell you, I am a much better, stronger writer now than I was a year ago. I wrote my first book (a novella--Dragon's Bane) in July/August of 2005, signed the contract for it in early September 2005, though it ended up being the fifth story of mine that came out in 2006. It helps (A LOT!) that I have also since gotten into a critique group that I don't ever want to lose. :)

But a lot of what you learn is after you've done something and realize... Oops. Shouldn't have done it that way.