Alfador, those are a lot of comments! But a wonderful article. It’s always really interesting to hear from and editor or agent perspective. I’m fairly sure that my first submitted story was rejected because of #2 on that editor’s 14 list (to be fair, I thought at the time that it fit the magazine’s style… then I read more into the genre and realized I had written something totally different than what I thought I wrote).
Lennis, to note, the Todd Akins part was supposed to be so over the top as to be disarming. I had meant it as the classic pairing of two ridiculous opposites. However, it clearly didn’t work, so I apologize about that.
Anywho, I think you are taking most my comments far too one-dimensionally. Yes, everything is a learning experience and must be perceived in that light, but it is still a full narrative to be taken seriously with the end-game in mind. The two aren’t really separate. We do, however, have different goals in mind. Mine is to become a publishable author. It sounds like yours is to produce a publishable book.
To use an analogy, I might want to run a mile in 6 minutes, but I am under no illusions that I have the ability to do so right now. I would have to train. While that require doing my best each time, if I never run a mile to begin with, I’ll never be able to run a 6 minute mile. That first mile I run will be horrible. But if I run that first mile, then run a second, then a third, I’ll improve. But if I want to run a “perfect mile” by making sure every single step is perfect…
Anywho, I’ll probably just annoy if I try to harp on that anymore. Onwards!
There are a variety of reasons I call my current project crap. The first is the shock value. It’s probably better described as unpublishable.
Second, it’s a comparatively mundane epic fantasy. I wanted it to be this way: I want to try my hand at a lot of different genres, and decided to start with epic fantasy. There are plenty of creative touches in it, but I wanted to try to write to genre norms before I start trying to add large twists. Have to know the rules before you can break them, you know? Anywho, the end result is that it’s not a cookie cutter but also not cutting edge. I’m alienating both readerships, and thereby there isn’t much of a market for it.
Additionally, it has a lot of problems of the exact sort that I don’t currently have the skills to properly address. Pacing, for example, was never an issue I encountered seriously until I started making significant progress towards the completion of a book, simply because I had never gotten far enough for book-scale problems to arise. I’m getting better, but it’s crazy-pants for me to think I’ll master pacing by the time the draft is done. No sense spinning my wheels about it even before then.
Yes, it’s a shame that this first book has to be bad, but the thing is, as Alfador noted, everyone’s first book is bad. Overnight successes are backed by decades of failed attempts. I really like the ideas in my book, but since I want to be a career author, that means I also need to practice coming up with new (and better) ideas. And, to note, the more I practice, the better I get (yes, creativity is a learned attribute).
Besides, nothing is ever wasted (well, unless you delete it, which is another reason not to edit as you go). After a few books are under my belt, I can come back to this one, take the good ideas, rework them, and use them again.
Anwyho again!
You mentioned you used to be all discovery, and now outline a little. But I am still curious, have you tried consistent writing sessions (even if they are small)? And if so, for how long did you stick with it? While every author has their own method, every author still has to figure out what works best for them. I’m curious in how you figured out what works for you.
But yes, I suppose we should take this to a writing thread.