
Still sick. :-( I suspect my cold has turned into some kind of bronchitis, probably because I've never been a particularly good sick person (i.e. I
hate lying in a bed doing nothing unless I have no choice).
Spent most of yesterday at the Toronto Metro Reference Library. I hadn't been there in over a year, so had forgotten how ideal the environment is for someone like me. Lots of power outlets, lots of empty table space (at least there was when I went late yesterday morning, stayed through the afternoon), lockers available for a quarter so I don't have to lug around my winter coat and mittens.
I love libraries in general, but I especially like the Metro Reference Library; I think I might just have to visit more often. The main reason I visited was to research some of my target magazine markets, browse through recent issues, compile a list of topics each has already covered in the past year. The library's 4th floor periodical section had everything I could possibly need, including hardbound annual compilations of magazines and an electronic directory of periodicals which included all the article titles (and sometimes a brief summary), organized by date. The staff told me I could
access the periodical directory from home, if I wanted (you need an active Toronto Public Library card for access, but it's free otherwise).
I came away super-inspired and revved to start querying some of these markets. I'm emotionally braced for a lot of rejection...it's going to be pretty tough to break into some of the higher-paying markets I'm planning to target, but I've resolved to be stubborn about it.
From my own experience and experience through talking with other writers through Inkspot, I think one of the biggest stumbling blocks for some writers is the
fear of rejection. You slave over a novel for months, perhaps years. Do you really want to send it out and risk some cold-hearted editor rejecting your baby with nothing but an impersonal form letter as compensation for your efforts? And what if it happens over and over again?
For my fiction, I feel lucky to have an agent to buffer me against the sometimes brusque rejection letters of publishing houses. Almost always, she'll scribble an encouraging note at the top of the copy she sends me; I still have a collection from when my first manuscript made the rounds five years ago. Some of those rejection letters were blunt ("we don't want it"), some encouraging ("we like her writing, but fantasy isn't selling now...we'd be happy to see any other material that -isn't- fantasy"). Each one was an ego blow, however, no matter how positive. It's one reason I agonized so much over the rejection letters I had to write as editor of Inkspot. My
non-fiction book was published in an unusual circumstance...Writer's Digest approached me to do it, rather than the other way around.
Anyway, wish me luck. My goal this year is to have at least a dozen magazine article queries or manuscripts (ideally more) circulating to potential markets at any one time, and to have two books finished by the end of the year. Just think of the potential number of rejections coming my way. No, no...must think POSITIVE. Just think of the potential number of paychecks coming my way! :-)
Jeff spent most of yesterday evening helping me set up a Filemaker database to help record my submissions. He's also a database genius, in my unbiased opinion. My files are now set up so that I'll be able to easily generate reports on what manuscripts or queries are still circulating, which editors I'll need to bug about response or payment, the contact history I've had from any particular market, payment earned (in various currencies, no less).
At times like this I'm especially glad I married a
Technonerdboy. :-)
Today's Blatherpics:- Photo I took during the Christmas holidays.
Today's Poll:Do you remember what you dreamed last night?