Post
#185 September 23 2019
“Handling
Rejections Part II”
You get a letter in the mail or an email: “Thanks for letting us review your
story. Unfortunately, we feel it is not
quite right for us. Good luck in the
future.” Or words to this
effect. Congratulations. You’ve just been rejected. It’s an occupational hazard for every writer
who puts his or her work out for consideration.
Nowadays, much of my work is published online so I
don’t have to deal with rejections, just the ever-shifting daily download
numbers. But I still write short stories
and novelettes that I try to place with print publications. And from them: lots and lots of rejections.
In fact, I recently started shopping around an sf short story called ‘Upload
Incompatibility.’ In one of the
rejections, the editor said he liked my prose but the narrative didn’t hold
him.
This led me to make several changes, after which I
re-submitted to another market. And back
came a standard rejection letter.
How should a writer deal with this?
Emma Bowd, on the website writersandartists.co.uk has this to say about rejection letters:
(My editor) used to tell me that being a writer is like being a
farmer – you work for many years on a product (without income) and then, when
it’s time to go to market, you literally do not know if there is going to be a
glut of your product or no demand at all.
She also wisely said that the book would “end up where it’s
meant to be” – and painful as it was, I completely agree with this. It is so
wonderful to be with a publisher that completely ‘gets’ my work and is so very
supportive of me.
So the message is, keep going and believe in your work. Always
revisit your manuscript after a rejection letter and take what positive
feedback you can from it and tweak accordingly. A manuscript is an evolving
entity. And you are the only person in charge of its destiny.
All good advice,
especially the part about learning from each rejection whatever you can and
tweaking accordingly.
Many years ago, I
submitted a story to the old OMNI magazine.
The science fiction editor sent me an interesting rejection. He liked my writing and suggested that I had
the makings of a decent novel but needed to change the focus from one of
character relationships to the hard science at the core of the story. I didn’t (and still don’t) fully agree with
this assessment but he was honestly trying to put me in a position of future
commercial success. By the way, this
basic story has become the nucleus of a new science fiction novel that will
appear in 2020, entitled Monument. Look for it.
Writers can’t take
rejection letters personally…of course, that’s easier said than done, if you
put any real effort into your work. It
can’t be personal. The editor doesn’t
know you. They know only the work. Some editors have informed me that my work or
my story was a very good story, polished, engaging, well-written, just not
quite what the publication was looking for at that time. Editors always say study the publication
first. Read copies. That way you’ll know what they’re looking
for. And that makes sense.
I’m working on a science
fiction short story now entitled “The Battle of the Gauntlet.” It’s not finished and naturally, it hasn’t
been sent around yet; I’m collecting feedback from fellow writers and friends
whose opinions I value. I have made some
changes based on this feedback, so hopefully the story will be better for
it. Soon, I’ll send this story out and
see what happens.
I’ll leave you with some
Do’s and Don’ts about handling rejection.
This is from author J.T. Ellison and her website jtellison.com:
Do – Give yourself permission to be upset when
a rejection comes. If a piece of chocolate or an ice cream cone will make you
feel better, then have it. Enjoy a drink with friends. Be social.
Don’t – Comfort yourself with destructive
behaviors, like going out on the town and ending up blowing in a tube. It’s
just a rejection letter, not the end of the world.
Do – Go for a walk.
Don’t – Burn your manuscript, shred your notes,
and delete all the files on your computer. Seriously.
Do – Take a day off from writing and read a book.
Don’t – Call all your friends and tell them
you’ve decided not to be a writer anymore.
Do – Step away from the computer for a few hours, allow
yourself a break from the cycle.
Don’t – Call the originator of your rejection to
ask why they didn’t like your project. Really, that’s just not a good idea.
The next post to The
Word Shed comes on September 30, 2019.
See you then.
Phil B.
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