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Blogger will said...

Writing is the easy part. Ignoring life's distractions is much more difficult. What you're doing is much the same as that of having a desk job.

When it time to write, Norman Mailer often rented a separate room, away from his home. He typically spent the entire day writing and did so for four days a week.

Using only a pen he wrote on average 1500 words per day.

Mailer was also a prolific letter writer, he found the time to write 47,000 letters - using a pen.

January 9, 2020 at 10:19 PM

Blogger julochka said...

@will - that's astonishing and inspiring and daunting.

January 10, 2020 at 12:16 PM

Blogger will said...

I had traditional publishing houses and they typically have their own in-house guidelines. Such as, when they want to get a book to market, the number of pages connects with price points and, is the author's language style translatable to international cultures?

Of course if you're famous there's more leeway.

Once the contract was signed I knew the generalized word count and I used that as motivation - approx. 2000 a day seemed doable but to achieve that, especially after doing it for several, the tasks got more uphill. That's when the action of steady writing on a daily basis becomes valuable.

Established publishing house are terrific to have when it comes to distribution, I believe my first book had eight reprints. Despite their reach you should prepare for what I consider the toughest part - you will need to self-promote the book.

The publisher sent me a book, "Guerrilla Marketing for Writers" and the advice, if I want the book to sell, I'd better reach out to bookstores, libraries, social medias, radio and TV stations - and just find ways to get the book in front of people.

Then, there's the afterward. Ego is a terrific tool to have when taking on a book but, for me, once the books were finished, they were simply became something I had done. What did matter - as a self-employed person, did the books produce revenue? At the time I was close with several successful authors and they all said, writing one book is no big deal, to be successful, to achieve notice and profitability I would need to write a series of books.

My walk-away. If one wants the challenge, something unto itself, then do a book. And, if you're OK to basically be working for peanuts, then take on the challenge. Then, there's the question - are you willing to be teeth gnashing, hair pulling and stressed beyond belief to write something on spec?

And, what about the biz of self-publishing? I looked into that and the money out of pocket to print a few hundred books was unacceptable - plus all the cold calls you need to make. So, a standard publishing house, with their boilerplate contracts and modest royalties should be considered.

Bottom line. If you have something say, a story to tell and you believe in your skills to write creatively, then keep going and don't look back.

January 10, 2020 at 6:44 PM

Blogger Molly said...

Helen lives across the water from me and is a total inspiration. Try befriending her on facebook (Daisy Den Eeden) - she is one of the few reasons I still spend any time there and has a wide and varied community of lovely people. She has many frank observations about her own procrastination, mild depression, ADHD and how she still manages to write, and so well! I loved that piece of hers too.
Sorry you are glum, I can't imagine that weather helps at all :(

January 17, 2020 at 10:34 AM

Blogger Molly said...

And I'm so excited for your novel!!

January 17, 2020 at 10:35 AM

Blogger julochka said...

@will - thank you for this wealth of advice from your experience with publishers! we aren't yet at the stage where we have really thought about it too much yet - I think we want to have some of it written before we try to get an agent or submit any specs to a publisher. it will all come in good time!

@molly, i will look for Helen on Facebook! I haven't read her fiction, but I loved that article and her honesty. Also, the sun has now shined for two days in a row and I feel transformed. I really just need more sunshine!

January 17, 2020 at 11:45 AM

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