by Stephanie Morrill
On Monday I posted the full list of steps for getting your novel published, so today I’ll start breaking them down.
Often new writers know they want to get published or find an agent long before they know a thing about story structure or what genre they write. There’s nothing wrong with wanting that, but before anyone in the publishing industry will take you seriously, you’ll need to prove yourself. And one of the things you’ll need to prove is that you can write a full length book.
Nonfiction writers can often sell on a partial manuscript and detailed outline, and published fiction writers can sell on a partial, but I rarely hear of new writers who sell a book without having written the full.
Which means learning to write a great, full-length book is your highest priority as an unpublished writer.
Here are some resources that can help you along the way:
Articles:
- How to Write a Novel
- Understanding the three-act structure
- The Snowflake Method, an article written by Randy Ingermanson
- Plot and Structure by James Scott Bell
- The Plot Whisper by Martha Alderson
- From the Inside Out by Susan May Warren
- Writing the Breakout Novel Workbook by Donald Maass
- What responsibilities are involved in being a published writer?
- What part of the job would I like? What would I not?
- How much will I make?
- What is the process of a book going from a manuscript to a finish product?
- Who is publishing books like mine?
- What is already on the shelves, and do I see any gaps that I could fill? How is my stuff unique from what’s already being done?
- Are there writing groups in my area that I could join?
- Are there on-line writing groups for me?
- Is there a writer’s conference near me that I could attend?
- What are literary agents? Acquisitions editors?
- What is involved in self-publishing? What are the pros and cons? What about traditional publishing?
Fortunately, tons of people in the industry have industry-focused blogs. Here’s a
Pub Rants: Literary agent Kristin Nelson runs this one. It’s described as, “A very nice literary agent indulges in polite rants about queries, writers, and the publishing industry.” She has a bunch of helpful links under her “Cool Blogs and stuff” sidebar. Including this one that I’m particularly fond of:
Brooklyn Arden by Cheryl Klein, who’s the editor at Arthur A. Levine. Her editor’s site is great too: http://cherylklein.com/talks/
MacGregor Literary is one I refer to often on here. It’s primarily agents Chip and Amanda who blog on there, but they have great stuff to say about marketing, the industry, and writing in general.
I also love literary agent Rachelle Gardner’s blog. Very popular and lots of great information.
I said this on Monday as well, but you don’t need to know everything about publishing before you start submitting queries, but regularly reading blogs likes those listed above can help prevent you from making naive mistakes.
Next we’ll cover identifying your genre, growing your audience, and putting together a book proposal.
Have questions? Leave ’em below!