Wednesday, 6 December 2023
Doors Opening
Sunday, 8 October 2023
Always Check Your Junk Mail
The title says it all... I
happened to check my junk inbox today and discovered that I'd come in first
place in a story competition. For eight whole days, my work has been published
online, and I've been none the wiser! Anyway, you can check out the story
‘The Slumbering Dragon’ here.
According to my records, there
should be a £300 prize for first place in this competition. Hopefully, this
should come my way now that I’ve responded to the email from the competition
organisers. If it does, it will be a dream come true, as I will be in profit
from my ventures into short story competitions.
Reaching a longlist was
incredible, but perhaps a fluke. Reaching a shortlist and being published was
amazing, but perhaps just a one-off. To win a competition and be published a
second time suggests that people do actually want to read what I have to write.
It’s still early days, but I’d love to make a career from my writing. My agent is currently approaching editors at publishing houses for my YA Fantasy novel. It will be at least six weeks before we hear anything about it. Garth Nix (a fellow writer!) wrote a post comparing this stage to 16th-century merchants setting out in their ships across the sea, uncertain whether their venture would lead to profit or shipwreck. To keep busy, I’m at work with the sequel. But if nothing comes from the novel series, I have plenty of other projects to consider in future years.
Tuesday, 12 September 2023
Representation
It’s been quite a week. First came the news I’d reached the shortlist in the flash fiction competition, and then the conversation with the agent who had read the full manuscript for the novel. I’ve been sitting on exciting news since Thursday, hardly able to trust its reality, terrified it would be snatched away, but now that I’ve signed the relevant documentation, I can share it: I have accepted an offer of representation!
It’s been a long journey. I first embarked upon the quest
for publication in 2006 with a novel that I shelved several years later. Two
full novels later, various concepts that never made it to completion, and six
drafts of my current project later, I’m now a client at DKW Literary Agency
under the representation of the lovely Camille Burns.
This is a bigger step than I ever believed I would take. Secretly,
I expected, when I quit my paid job last summer, to be back in some sort of
educational setting (probably tutoring) part-time after a year out without any
glimmer of hope. I wouldn’t give up, but I’d shelve the current novel (having
exhausted the list of agents that I thought might take an interest) and write a
new novel, to begin the long process again. I have a novel already
conceptualised, that I was planning to draft in January 2024. I was working to
a five-year plan that would eventually lead to self-publication of several novels.
It would be a route into publication, and maybe I would find some success, but
it would not be my dream path…
However, gaining an agent means I have access to the
traditional route into publishing and all the benefits in terms of connections
and industry experts. Just in brief conversations with Camille so far, I’ve
received feedback that I’ve never received elsewhere that has been
transformative for the novel (and right now I’m planning out a major redrafting
of the final third), and her works have also made me consider areas of
publishing that I’ve never considered, things like overseas and translation. I
don’t know if my novel will ever have the level of success to require those
kinds of services, but I know that it’s the sort of thing that wouldn’t have
occurred to me if I were going it alone.
This has all come about because of the Bradford Literary Festival sessions where writers could pay to meet an agent and receive a
critique of their work. Meeting an agent face-to-face, in a setting where that
agent was paid to consider your work (rather than look for excuses to skip over
it since they have another thousand hopefuls to also consider that day), really
did make all the difference. And it makes such a big difference to have someone
who is really enthusiastic about your writing, who believes that what you’ve
written deserves to be read. If you are reading this as an aspiring writer, I
strongly encourage you to check out Jericho Writers – a website that facilitates
conversations between writers and agents, similar (if more expensive) than what
I was lucky enough to be involved in at the literary festival.
Telling people that I have written a book is often a process
of ‘expectation management’, since people who don’t know the industry often
believe that reaching ‘the end’ means the book will be published the very next
day. Even with an agent, it might be years before a publisher takes interest in
this novel, if at all. However, it’s a palpable step, and I’m very excited to
see where this road will take me.
As always, I can’t thank enough the fellow writers on Critique Circle, who’ve always given me such valuable and thoughtful feedback on my
work. And thanks to everyone who has celebrated my small successes over the
last twelve months: I’m so grateful for all your support.
Saturday, 9 September 2023
Buns for Tea
I have exciting news: I can finally call myself a published writer!
This month, I reached a shortlist on The Bi-monthly FreeFlash Fiction Competition, which results in publication on the website and
a small prize of £20 (minus the £3.50 entry fee, of course). A real earning
from my writing! The story itself is only 300 words, so it ends up at about six
pence per word. But the validation is priceless.
The shortlisted story is called ‘Lost Property’ and can be read here. Warning: it is a very dark story exploring how aspects of modernity may enable predatorial behaviour.
I should also give a huge shout out to all the critters on CritiqueCircle who gave feedback on an earlier draft of this story. I made a lot of
substantial changes based on their input before I entered the story into this
competition.
Write, edit, submit: the strategy is beginning to work.
Saturday, 15 July 2023
The results are in...
I have a small bit of news: I can now say I’m a longlisted writer.
A short story I wrote earlier this year called ‘Another Man’s Treasure’ made
it onto the Frome Short Story Competition Long List 2023. You can click here to see
the list, but it’s nothing exciting - it doesn't even say my name.
However, a longlist is a glimmer of hope. It means that a judge liked
the story sufficiently to recognise it. It doesn’t mean that I’m published,
though it does mean that I can try the story elsewhere to see whether a
different judge in another competition would like it more.
It also means I can add this to my writing CV to hopefully make me stand out a little when querying agents for my novel. I don’t know whether I will have any success with the agent who is currently reading my full manuscript. I have to be prepared to be back in the usual position, with no agent, trying to reach out to others across the cybergulf. But if that’s where I am in a few months’ time, at least I’ll be able to tell agents that I am a longlisted writer.
Tuesday, 27 June 2023
How to Meet an Agent
I have a little news: an agent has asked to read my full manuscript.
This is a tiny step that has never occurred before. It’s
still very early days because the agent may read the entire novel and decide it
would be too hard to sell. I’ve accepted that. However, she has promised to
give feedback, so even in that scenario, hopefully her advice will make it more
attractive to other agents. She’s already given me some excellent feedback on the
opening chapters that I’m working to implement before I send it back to her.
Getting a full manuscript request has always been the
stumbling point, the point at which I put my novels on hold and write something
new. In some ways, the last ten months have been harder than when I was submitting
to agents in my teens. Back then, I received a nice piece of paper with a generic
rejection after a long wait. These days, the best I have received is an email,
and in most cases, nothing at all.
It turns out that submitting work to the slushpile (the inbox
of an agent) isn’t the best way to approach an agent. The route into communication
with this agent came from a very different avenue: my attendance at Bradford
Literary Festival.
I don’t know how typical this is of literary festivals, but
I should note here that Bradford Literary Festival 2023 was an amazing event
for emerging writers. They had many sessions which were pitched to unpublished
writers, and as well as offering encouragement, real stories and practical advice,
they also had a 1:1 event to meet an agent.
I booked onto this event through luck. I had no idea it was
happening until a writing buddy on Critique Circle told me that she was doing
it, and then I was lucky enough that I was in the country to attend, because
the day before we arrived home from a holiday in Europe. Anyway, after
wrestling with my own insecurities briefly (the terrifying prospect of receiving
verbal feedback), I decided to go for it, because that must be the attitude to
make something happen.
I had no expectations for the event. The website description
simply said it was a chance to receive feedback from an agent. I thought it
would be helpful to know which elements of my pitch were off-putting, and more
specifically if the novel concept itself just wasn’t saleable and I should work
on something else. So, it was an amazing experience to be told by someone in
the industry that my writing style is good. It’s a huge validation of all
the efforts I’ve put in over the years.
A third piece of luck I should mention is the agent I originally
booked to meet was unable to attend, and the agent I met replaced him. From
researching her, I was already happy, because her bio expressed her interest in
Young Adult, while the original agent (from a pick of three not yet booked up) seemed
only partially suitable due to his interest in Adult Fantasy.
The lesson I have taken from the festival generally is that this
is a much better way to get in touch with agents. Meeting them in person begins
a dialogue, allows them to see your passion and understand your aims much
better than a sentence or two bio in a query letter ever can. Another statistic
I learned from another session at the festival is that a big agent receives 700
to 1000 submissions every week to their inbox, of which they might accept just
two new clients a year. I always knew the chances were slim, but statistics
like that really hammer home just how infinitesimally slim the odds are. A
really good question was asked in the general agent meet, when they referred to
how most of their clients are not unsolicited. Someone asked how they
find new writers, then, if they don’t find them in the slushpile, and the
answer was: events like this one.
If nothing else, I know to look out for future events which
involve agents. And that my writing is good.
Monday, 28 November 2022
Drafts and Redrafts and Redrafts
It’s been a busy few months, especially November, which became my editing month (as opposed to NaNoWriMo, which traditionally turns November into the drafting month). Each day my target was to edit one chapter, from the feedback I received on Critique Circle. I knew that I had time to edit the entire novel if I stuck to that target, and I managed to speed up towards the end (sometimes able to edit two chapters per day), meaning that I finished the entire draft on 24th November.
So, as a reward for ‘gaining’ time, I can now give the blog
a little attention…
This is the fourth draft. When I talk to people about the
process, people fall into two camps generally: those who don’t understand
drafting and those who wonder how you ever stop drafting. So, this blog can be
about the drafting process.
Stephen King’s memoir On Writing compares the
drafting process to excavating a dinosaur skeleton. The skeleton is the fragile
story concept, and each draft is about trying to reach it without destroying
the entire thing. He completes a novel in four drafts, if I recall the details
correctly.
My process for this novel can be more aptly compared to swinging
a wrecking ball and then collecting the rubble for the basis of the new
building. There was nothing fragile about the movement between the first and the
second drafts, which I suppose was because the skeleton was far from exposed
after the first draft, buried in a primordial sludge of misdirection and misjudgement.
A necessary sludge, I should note – because without a first draft, you
can never go any further.
That hopefully explains why drafting is necessary. From the
second draft, I received feedback from people on Critique Circle. Feedback comes
in all forms, but the best feedback allows me to reconsider elements, and key
world building elements came to light in this draft, which again significantly
altered the novel.
Perhaps it’s better to think about redrafting as a series of
earthquakes. Draft one to two was perhaps an 8 on the Richter scale, whereas two
into three was more of a 7. From the feedback on draft three, the impact of the
seismic shifts has significantly decreased. There was one major character decision
that altered things, but overall, it was probably more a magnitude 5 shake up.
It's too soon to know what it’s like while the dust is settling.
At the end of every draft, I inevitably think ‘yes, this is it!’ and then
realise later (through reading myself or letting others read) that there are
still major problems. However, I feel confident from the diminishing damage reports
that it is moving towards its final draft.
My plan going forward is to submit to CC what is known in
the industry as a ‘betaread’. The purpose of this is to receive overall feedback,
which is different from CC’s usual week-by-week, chapter-by-chapter process. It
should help me to know how well the novel as a whole is working. CC only brought
this function in part way through this year; it may have been helpful, probably,
at an earlier stage in the drafting process – something I will consider for
future novels.
January 2023 will be the beta month, and from that feedback
I’m hoping to be finished with this novel by the end of February. I feel like there
are no more substantial changes to be done, though I’m happy to be proven wrong.
However, if the Richter scale continues to diminish, I think the February draft
(number five) will be the final one.
I’ve also been putting my ‘gained’ time to use to research
short story competitions (the plan for 2023), but I’ll say more about that in
another blog.