How
to Survive Rejection
By Jacqui Murray
An
efriend writer originally published this as a guest post on their blog to help
me launch Against All Odds August 2020. In case you missed it there, here are
my anecdotal thoughts on how to add drama to your story:
***
I have a lot of experience with rejections. I sent queries to agents for my first three books. I made sure these busy folk represented my genre, that I followed their website directions, that I referenced books they already represented so they'd know I spent time preparing my query. I set a goal of 100 queries--100 agents--before deciding I wasn't going to get to yes.
That's a lot of rejection. You
probably wonder how I survived it. With a dollop of humor and a strong belief
that no agent can shape my future. Here are my tips for you:
- When you get your first rejection--or 100th--say this: Well
there it is, the stupidist thing I'll read all day.
- You got five rejections in one day. You want to leave a
nasty Tweet on each of their Twitter feeds and then scream about them on
your Facebook page. You don't care if you burn the relationship. Don't!
Smile knowingly, that they missed the best book to cross their book in
years, and self-pub.
- Crawl under your bed with the rejection letters and
whisper to the agents, "Any dumber, you'd be jellyfish. Or rocks! How
could you not see my brilliance!"
- Getting upset about rejections is like inviting a pin
to a balloon party. What did you expect?
- Given the choice of a rejection letter or a
recreational colonoscopy, which would you choose? See, there are worse
things.
- S/he probably didn't even read it.
- You don't want to work with him/her either.
- Rejection is when theory meets reality, the agent's
theory about what will sell and the reality that they're wrong. Their loss.
- Get over it.
- Rejections have the charm of a car alarm but at least
car alarms have a purpose.
- You thought your mss was a twelve-alarm fire. They
called it a sparkler. They're wrong.
- They used hyperbole to reject you, like, "This is
the worst story I've ever read". As though ‘worst’ is all the
explanation necessary. Not.
My favorite survival tip is
distraction. I have a lovely dog who thinks he's pack leader of our family. I
don't disagree which puts me at his beck and bark
anytime he chooses. That helps to distract me. Maybe you have a similar dog...
or cat... If you do, you are nodding along with me.
#amwriting #IndieAuthor
Jacqui Murray is the
author of the popular Building a Midshipman, the story of
her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy,
the Rowe-Delamagente
thrillers, and the Man vs. Nature saga. She
is also adjunct professor of technology in education, blog webmaster, an Amazon Vine
Voice, a columnist for NEA Today, and a
freelance journalist on tech ed topics. Look for her next prehistoric fiction,
Laws of Nature, Book 2 in the Dawn of Humanity trilogy, Winter 2021.
Look for Jacqui’s upcoming
release tomorrow on Friday’s Great Read.
AND...
AND....
42 comments:
Sounds like a good read! Hugs, Valerie
I found humor and pain in those words. I'm glad you shared this.
Happy belated birthday to CJ. Happy belated birthday to Elizabeth.
Most interesting to read Sandra, also belated birthday wishes to CJ ans Elizabeth.
Have a good, happy Thursday.
Yvonne.
Love Jacqui's perspective.
And a very Happy Birthday (belated or not) to CJ and Elizabeth.
Hi Sandra - happy birthday to CJ and Elizabeth. Looking at Jacqui's thoughts on rejection ... we really should be able to brush it off - all through life we're knocked down ... starting as kids - strange we all have challenges in recognising and getting over rejection. Take care - Hilary
Great read.
And happy birthday to CJ and Elizabeth.
Thanks!
Yeah, I know what you mean. I find humor a good salve for pain...
Thanks! It comes from years of experience with rejections.
I don't get rejections anymore, Hilary. One of the joys of going Indie.
Thanks, Jamie!
It is:)
Hugs received and returned.
Jacqui certainly nailed the rejection syndrome.
It was interesting, wasn't it, Yvonne?
Indeed.
Been there, done that, Jaacqui.
That's for sure, Hilary.
Jacqui, let's here it for Indie! Right there with ya.
As is her new book:)
This is great. Although I will say, sometimes rejection letters are well deserved. It's a pity, though, that with the rejection doesn't come some constructive criticism!
Good way to deal with those rejection letters :)
Happy birthday to CJ
Happy Birthday to CJ and Elizabeth.
All the best Jan
Thank you, Sandra. <3
That's definitely coming from the other side of the fence:)
A very healthy way.
Hope your birthday was as special as you:)
I was rejected recently.
Having a dog or cat that leads sure can bring on the break, whether we want to or not haha.
That's why so many self publish. I had an agent reject me like 2 months later
Happy Birthday CJ and Elizabeth, hope your days were fabulous! A sense of humor saves us from so many things, and I love the way you look at life.Hugs, RO
From one Elizabeth to another, I hope your birthday was the best, despite the shape of the world this year.
Congratulations, Jamie. You are now officially a writer:)
Heh. Isn't that the truth.
Thanks for visiting, Yvonne!
The agents would explain how busy they are and they wish they could. Sigh.
A pinch of humor and a spoonful of sugar.
:)
You know what I mean, don't you, Pat? And I still love that dog!
Which is as bad as the one who rejects you five minutes after sending your query. Had that happen more than once. Truth, that didn't hurt very much.
It's that armor you wear whenever you need it. Thanks for visiting!
Congratulations, Adam. You are officially a writer.
Your rejection advice not only works for books, but for things that happen in life too. Thanks for the birthday wishes! And Ink in the graphic 😺
Great list isn't it.
We can't ever forget Ink.
Hope your BDay was wondrous...and filled with cake:)
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