it merited them reaching out to her.
You mean someone contacted her?
it merited them reaching out to her.
I'd add one observation from my own experience: it's important to understand that publishers who produce tie-ins work on a different cycle to to publishers of "original" fiction and have different requirements. They don't just need writers who are good with words and who can tell a compelling story - they need writers who can deliver on time every time, who can take editorial direction well, who can work fast and clean and turn in copy that needs a minimum of revision. In short, they need writers who are a known quantity, and the only way to get that badge is to have experience.
I've sent MS's to so many agents I don't even recall who all I have and haven't sent to. I sent to anyone who was accepting open submissions and looking for MS's like mine. But that was fantasy I was writing.After SNW and when I landed my first novel contract, the novel wasn't even placed on the schedule until I'd turned in a manuscript and the editor (John Ordover, at that time) was sure it would pass muster with CBS (actually Viacom, back then). All I had to my name were the SNW stories, so I wasn't even swimming in the same lanes as the other writers at that point. I delivered my ms. in the fall of 2000, but the book wasn't published until January 2002.
Even then, and though I was working with Kevin for our SCE novellas by that point, it still took two years after delivering that first novel ms. before I was approached about another full-length novel.
As Jim says, this sort of thing tends to be a long game.
I'll say this much; this thread has reminded me of my very first attempt at writing fanfic.
What makes all this even more sad is that I truly thought when I was finished I would send it in. There's about a hundred reasons that would have gone absolutely nowhere.
Why? Feel free to laugh at me; I'm laughing at myself.And that's where that post should have ended.
Sounds like something Riker would have for breakfast.BLOOD YOGURT
Why?
You mean someone contacted her?
Yes, I believe that's so. But once again, it's worth pointing out that this pretty much never ever happens (usually), it's like a black swan event kinda thing...
Although there was a time when Pocket was offering more opportunities for people to demonstrate that experience, using Strange New Worlds and the S.C.E. eBooks as recruiting grounds for new writers.
<snip>
However, that was at a time when the line was expanding and there was greater interest in recruiting new talent. These days, with fewer books being published, the preference is to stick with proven, reliable quantities.
Because, unlikely as it is, that could count as a story idea. @trampledamage should decide though as she's the designated responsible person around here.
Yeah, you should see him on Facebook...Ignore that guy Ward. He's just grumpy.
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