mbarker: (MantisYes)
[personal profile] mbarker
Original Posting 2021/12/16
Writer's Digest, July 1991, pages 38-39, has an article by Chet Cunningham with that title. It's broken into 14 little chunks, mostly with titles that summarize the points. So, let's walk through his ideas.

1. Want to write novels more than anything else in the world. Unstoppable! You gotta want to do it!
2. Create characters you can't stop writing about. Make them people you really know. He says he uses a big questionnaire to work through each of the main characters, including physical description, psychology, work, hobbies, dreams, etc. Make sure you know your characters!
3. Finish your first novel. Then keep on doing it.
4. Aim at a specific market. Probably not a "mainstream novel." Hit the genres. His idea -- pick the one you like, and read 20 contemporary novels in that genre. Take them apart. What's the story line, how does the writer make it work, what is the pitch. Check characterization, style, structure, viewpoint, suspense, twists... 
5. Specialize. Don't jump around, at least to start. Stick to one genre, build a byline. This also lets you reuse your research!
6. Write what editors buy. (hum, this may not be as much of a problem with indy publishing?) Anyway, he suggests analyzing what's on the bookstore shelves to see what the editors bought a year ago. Check the magazines that survey the marketplace (Publishers Weekly, Writer's Digest). Then plan your book for a specific publisher and a specific line.
7. Write series books. Continuing series do great in genre. One great character, one slant or idea, and push out that series.
8. Sell your books with partials. After you have a track record, sell new ones with a partial. 4 chapters and an outline of the rest of the book. 
9. Keep the pipeline full. While you are writing current books, send out queries for new books and new series.
10. Write more than you do now. If you do your daily quota, and there's time left... do some more! Write every day. Focus on writing, and keep that writing time first.
11. Have a work space where you write. Try to do your writing (and only your writing) in one place. Write, plan, plot, research. That's your work place.
12. Set a writing schedule. Lay out your calendar, including research and rests.
13. Join a novel writing workshop. Writing group interaction helps you and them. 
14. Enjoy the hell out of your writing. "Writing is the most wonderful and thrilling and satisfying job in the world." So enjoy it!
Write! 
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting 12 November 1993

Roger Writes (and Randy and Chris kicked around, too)

-> -- for example there's much less talk of literary markets than
-> I thought (are any of you sending your wonderful SUB:'s out?) -- Roger
->

do you remember someone recently mentioning depth-charges and the effect they have on subs? Sometimes I feel that must be the fate of these rascals.

Actually, with enough patience, the swallows do return to Capistrano and shit all over the walls.

Then I put them in another envelope and sending them winging out into that great darkness again.

And come back to writers to keep my spirits up during that long, cold winter.

Someday, someway, the sun must rise, and we'll go surfing in the summer sun, with the beach boys riding the waves and the salt breeze spitting on our smiling face. [this is my obligatory pie in the sky by and by dream...]

In the meantime, what would you like to know? I know how to make up a list of markets, how to send things out, how to wait impatiently, how to wait quasi-patiently, and how to vent frustrations while waiting and upon getting that dreaded "your piece was not selected..." I even know how to grit my teeth, skim it once more (and edit if I see something major), and put back in envelope to restart waiting.

Say, is there any way to wait patiently? That is something I haven't learned!

My market lists come from the Writer's Digest big book (groan!) and Gila Queen's monthly (if you want to subscribe, mention that I told you about it - sometimes she gives out extra issues...) I also get Scavenger's right now, but may drop that next year, simply because it seems aimed at the "pays in copies" magazines and I cannot afford them (it costs me about three dollars in postage to send out a submission - reject me a few times and we're talking money! I want some payoff...)

[Edited June 18 2009 to add: No longer true. There are some excellent web listings that can help. For the speculative fiction genre, try these
Ralan's SpecFic & Humor webstravaganza: http://www.ralan.com/
StoryPilot's Science Fiction and Fantasy Market Search Engine: http://storypilot.com/
duotrope's digest: http://www.duotrope.com/]

How do I make a list? Sit down with book. Read and guess. Toss out obvious no-fits. Scratch head and guess. Play with ouiji board. Guess. Throw dice. Guess.

Highly scientific approach, no?

This is not my favored part of the biz, but I haven't seen anything better. Do it up as nicely as possible, send it out, and keep on sending it out. During #&@*( blank pauses, work on other pieces, and try to keep as many out as you can.

And dream.

(whoever it was saying they were happy to get a rejection - I always love them, too. at least I know the thing hasn't vanished in the post box or been eaten by bookworms or whatever fantastic tragedy I can dream up to account for it disappearing somewhere on the way. It really did go there and come back, and now I get to do something with it again, at least for a little while...)

Profile

The Place For My Writers Notes

February 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
2 345 6 7 8
910 11121314 15
161718192021 22
232425262728 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 29th, 2025 06:48 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios