seanan_mcguire: (marilyn)
seanan_mcguire ([personal profile] seanan_mcguire) wrote2011-02-24 07:41 am

5 things I wish I'd known when I started this crazy ride.

Well, here we are. Late Eclipses [Amazon]|[Mysterious Galaxy] is officially five days from release, and most of those days are part of the weekend, which means they'll pass in like, eight minutes, flat. The point of no return is sending nice postcards, and wishes we were still there. Sadly, we've passed it. In honor of passing things, here are five things I wish I'd known when I started publishing (but am probably glad I didn't).

5. By the time you've survived peer critique, the agent search, submissions, and editorial, you're pretty much accustomed to bad reviews. You'll never be used to them, but they're no longer the shocking "but...but...but I'M THE PRETTIEST PRINCESS" catastrophes they were in the beginning. This will do absolutely nothing to prepare you for the bad reviews which have nothing whatsoever to do with your book. Bad reviews I have received: "This costs too much, so it sucks." "This book had no sex in it and I wanted sex, so it sucks." "No one told me this book would have fairies in it." There is no avoiding these reviews. No matter how much you want to.

4. Everyone in the world is going to assume that you, as author, have a great deal more knowledge and control than you do. You will constantly be asked questions to which you will not have the answer, and some people will not believe you when you tell them that really, you don't know. Also, if you're wired anything like me, you'll start having trouble not snapping at people after the seventy-fifth time you're asked something. This is a problem, unless it was the same person asking the question seventy-five times. In that case, snap away.

3. Again, if you're wired anything like me, you'll probably have become a writer because you enjoy writing. It's what you do for fun. Yay, writing! This becomes a little complicated when suddenly, writing is also your job. Sadly, the odds are good that after about six to eight months of existential angst, you'll find yourself unwinding from a long session of writing by...writing something else. On the plus side, your agent will love you.

2. An awful lot of traditional publishing is "hurry up and wait." Patience is a virtue. So is the ability to distract yourself with bad television.

1. It never stops being terrifying, exciting, and basically the most interesting thing going on in your world. It may, however, stop being terrifying, exciting, and the most interesting thing in the world for your friends. Be prepared to buy interest with chocolate.

[identity profile] alicetheowl.livejournal.com 2011-02-24 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Regarding #1, you can always go meet new people who DO want to hear about it, and who'll bribe you with dinner for the privilege. ;)

My housemate finally caved in to my and Josh's pushing the books at her, and read all 3 in the last month. She was on page 100 of An Artificial Night when we left for dance practice last night. When we got back, she was around page 250.

"Weren't there some things you were going to do tonight while we were gone?" we asked.

"Shut up. You gave me the book; this is your fault."

She finished it at 10:30 last night, and came up to return it, and tell us how much she liked it. She said she really enjoyed all the character development, and pretended to curse us for handing her these books when she has other things she wants to read.

So, yay. And Kathleen talks up stuff she likes, and knows just about everyone, so hopefully she'll get the word out.

[identity profile] seanan-mcguire.livejournal.com 2011-02-24 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
AWESOME.

Gold star for you.