My first post on this site, Sliding Doors, told the tale of how
I started writing, thanks to a poster in a bookshop. So for my World Book Week
post, I’m going to describe the journey from winning a short story
competition to my name on the spine of a paperback. It’s in shorthand, because
it took some years! Along the way I got into the habit of collecting ‘ticks’ ,
because the odds against me seemed so huge it was the only way I could stay
motivated. ‘Crosses’, I tried to bury.
I started writing a ‘book’ almost as soon as I heard that I
was a PWA. (Prize-Wining Author – my family’s idea of a joke.) The idea was
easy to come by because like all experienced marketers I ran a brainstorming
session, inviting my kids, then 10, 8 and 6. (Interestingly I didn’t make a
conscious decision to write for children, that was taken for granted somehow.)
Two sides of scribbled-on sheet of A4 later I began my summer 2005 project. And
loved it. I wrote every morning from about 6 to maybe 11, and the kids watched
non-stop telly. Brill. Then we ate our bodyweight in three-course breakfasts.
As the word count grew so did my determination for it not to languish on slush piles.
(I’d bought the Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook by then so knew the jargon.) Keen
to speed up the learning curve, I applied for a place on the University of Bristol
Creative Writing Diploma.
Tick!
I shared my enthusiasm with a
stranger at a party. The wrong person as it turned out. She said, ‘I’m a librarian
and my husband works at Waterstones, but I can’t get a children’s novel
published so you’ve got no chance.’
Cross.
I shared my enthusiasm with a
published children’s author. She said, ‘everyone thinks they can write.’
Cross.
I submitted my first assignment
at Uni.
‘Unvarying in prose style. No
sense of time or place and some format problems.’
Cross.
Sometime around then the
marvellous Show of Strength – a Bristol theatre company, announced a
competition to write a monologue for a show of rolling performances. Wonderful
idea. My monologue, It’s My Party’ was brought to life by Lynda Rooke (most
recognised from Casualty). I stood
in the audience and as the piece drew to a close I noticed the grey-haired man
next to me was crying.
Tick!
Excellent, because more crosses were
on the way.
I sent the first three chapters
of my finished children’s book to an agent.
‘I love it, rush me the rest,’
she said.
I could see my future – hardback,
paperback, film, Oscar ceremony . . .
Tick!
Tick!
‘It’s
got everything – drama, pathos . . . Can you come and see me in London?’
Tick!
She
wanted a few changes. I obliged.
Time
passed.
I let it – not wanting to be
annoying.
Eventually I chased her.
She appeared to have forgotten
about me, sending an email the essence of which was - ‘I didn’t like it that
much after all.’
CROSS!
(In retrospect, approaching
several agents at once might have been sensible, but I was terribly optimistic,
so only contacted one at a time.)
The next response was something
like, ‘it’s a ludicrous idea . . .’
Cross!
The next.
‘Too like Percy Jackson.’ (It really
wasn’t.)
Cross!
Surely time for some good news? Yes!
Bruce Hunter at David Higham
invited me for a cup of tea and agreed to represent me.
Tick!
Now, it would all fall into place.
Tick!
Now, it would all fall into place.
Not.
The book was rejected by
everyone.
Umpteen crosses over ten months (he
too sent things sequentially).
In summer 2007 I wrote another
book, which my agent loved. Was this the one?
No.
The book was rejected by
everyone.
Umpteen crosses over eight
months.
Cue Piccadilly Press, inviting me
for a meeting.
I didn’t know what to wear. What
do authors look like? Stupid thought.
But didn’t want to publish it –
too quiet.
Cross!
Cross!
Did I have any other ideas?
That morning (just in case) I’d
had another brainstorm with the getting-older kids (12, 10 and 8). I
regurgitated the rough idea of a gang of children called Tribe – who they were,
what they did.
I was dispatched to write a short
synopsis.
‘A paragraph will do,’ the publisher said.
Three paragraphs later (I didn’t
want to under deliver), I had a contract.
TICK!
TICK!
This October my fifth book will hit the fresh air. It’s
about how one small act changes everything that follows. We’re back to Sliding
Doors.
5 comments:
Very entertaining!
Blimey, it wears me out just thinking about it. And it doesn't stop once you're published either, does it?
Reads like a fulsome reply to the comment/question asked at parties etc. "Must be easy, being an author then?" :-)
Great blog!! So glad you didn't give up and let the crosses get in the way !!!
Really look forward to reading 'Mostly closed doors'.
Interesting post.
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