It actually depends on the publisher/agent as to whether they mind simultaneous submissions. I was certain to check that each publisher/agent I am submitting to accepts simultaneous submission. Besides, I need to do everything within my power to get this published now. I want to get my career going.I have always read that you should only submit to one publisher at a time. They tend to dislike having to contend with other publishers if I remember right. Are you sure it's a good idea to send your's out to everyone at the sametime?
^Thanks! I'll have a lot of work to do to get all my submissions and queries out by Friday. Oh, and my roommate just looked at my book and pointed out that my main character (a little boy) looks like President Obama! I hadn't realized, but he kind of does! I haven't settled on his name, maybe it should be Barack? Nah.
Well, I've made my first submission to an agent! I wrote a few variations on a query letter today, and did some more research. I really like the sound of this agency, and the more I read the more I feel that, for me, an agent is the way to go. I simply have no head for business. I also joined the SCBWI, who have a NYC conference coming up in January, I wish it were sooner!
I'm terrified of this whole process, but also exhilarated. Does anyone here who has been through this have some advice?
I'm procrastinating before I write chapter 15 though it is actually chapter 14 because there's a prologue.
Anyhoo, I'm going to write now.
Edited to add: Chapter 14 is now written and all I have to do is type it up which I shall do when I'm sufficiently recovered from writing it, sometime Saturday afternoon probably. At which point I then need to return to the present day for the next few chapters.
300,000 words is a trilogy, not a novel.Well, I started it last fall, and then I lost my job in December. I didn't touch it again until April (I think). I finished the first draft a couple weeks ago. So, it took me about a year to write 140,000 words. Not that great, really. But I pushed myself to write a chapter at least every few days. I was really dreading the editing process, but it's going very well so far.
I think anyone can write a novel, if they just stick with it and have a plan. That's what I do. Even when I start, I assume it's going to be a certain length, so seeing how close I am getting to the end always keeps me going.
This is actually the second novel I've finished, which is kind of pathetic, since I have about (no exaggeration) a million words' worth of stuff that I haven't finished. Some of it is salvageable, some of it isn't. I figure I'll go back to it as I make more progress on the books I am finishing.
I have one thing I wrote between 1999 and 2002 that stands at about 270,000 words. It was 90% done and I just sort of lost interest. I need to revise the portion where I started to lose track of things and just redo that, so I can bring it to a proper conclusion. Then I get to go back and edit a 300,000 word "novel."![]()
I don't think 75k is really enough for a novel these days, though you might get away with it. Publishers like trilogies though so see if it will fit in that format, or I would go ahead and chop it in half.Yeah, actually, my plan was to split the 300,000 word thing into two halves. Or, barring that, four books. It's 100(-ish) segments, told in a serialized format, with a "major" event in every 25th. Gives me nice stopping points if I want to split it up.
I don't think 75k is really enough for a novel these days, though you might get away with it. Publishers like trilogies though so see if it will fit in that format, or I would go ahead and chop it in half.Yeah, actually, my plan was to split the 300,000 word thing into two halves. Or, barring that, four books. It's 100(-ish) segments, told in a serialized format, with a "major" event in every 25th. Gives me nice stopping points if I want to split it up.
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