One of the topics I’m always interested to hear other authors talk about is how their novel came to be published, and all the ups and downs along the way. So I thought I’d share with you the long, painstaking and rewarding journey that led me to write Precious Things.
October 2009: Initial seed of idea pops into head. Post throwaway comment on blog: ‘One day I’ll write a novel about a cheeky little frock who gets about and lives in more cities than I ever will – won’t that be fun?’ Don’t give it much more thought, but short while later publisher friend sends email asking if I’m serious and asks to meet. Happy accident makes me commit to starting.
Early 2010 – end 2012: Get busy with other book projects and freelance writing. Put novel aside. Ignore nagging feeling that I really should be writing fiction.
August 2012: Pick up novel again. Finish first few chapters and think it is brilliant, surely best first draft anyone has ever written. Feel great.
September 2012: Join writing course at Faber Academy at Allen & Unwin called Bootcamp for Your Novel, just to keep me motivated. Have to share work for first time and realise how totally awful it is. Plunged into pit of despair. Delete first 15,000 words.
February 2013: Have about 60,000 words I’m tentatively proud of. Pluck up courage to show them to another friend in publishing. She tactfully tells me it needs major re-writing and a whole new structure if it’s going to work. Plunged into pit of despair again, but get to work re-drafting. On a roll.
May 2013: Feeling on top of the world! Have 90,000 words and plan for last few chapters, and fairly certain all but done. Make insane mistake of saying this on Facebook page, thereby ensuring another full year of writing and re-drafting.
August 2013: Start sending ‘first’ draft to agents in Sydney and the UK, hoping they will take me into their author stable. Success! UK agent reads and loves book! Makes some big suggestions for re-working the structure and sends me on my way. Work solidly for next few months changing the book as per my fabulous new agent’s suggestions.
December 2013: Finally hear back from UK agent about last draft. She’s changed her mind. Tells me book is not commercial enough for her to sell as is. Wants me to re-write, cutting out my main protagonist, Maggie. Search soul. Decide she’s not the agent for me. We part ways.
January 2014: Have a small car accident and get spinal injury. Back in spasm and neck is messed up for next five months. Can’t write, can’t do much of anything. Feel miserable and become hermit. Take up meditation and try to become Zen master. Go on family holiday to Europe. Tentatively research places for book while I’m there but mostly forget about writing. Come home a new person with neck better, able to write again. Forget spurious promises made during injury to work with impeccable posture, and go like hammer and tong once I return. Send book off to agents again. Mostly silence, and then: rejection after rejection. In the pit again. Still not Zen master (clearly).
August 2014: Have email offers from not one but two agents in London on the same day, asking me to sign with their agencies! Have Skype calls with both, and finally decide upon perfect agent. More thrilled than thought was humanly possible. Agent asks clever in-house editor to help me refine novel. Spend next few months re-writing it.
January 2015: Agent helps me sign two-book deal with HarperCollins Australia. HarperCollins comes back with more structural advice. Re-work for next few months.
April 2015: Hand in latest draft. Start work on novel two.
June 2015: Lovely HarperCollins editor comes back with more suggestions. Re-work and submit again.
September 2015: Editor comes back with more changes. Hand in mammoth edit of un-typeset pages. Think phew, I’m almost done.
Publisher starts sending out book to other authors for pre-publication endorsements we can put on the cover.
Designers at HarperCollins start working on cover image.
October 2015: Agent takes book to Frankfurt Book Fair. Meets German publisher who wants to publish Precious Things.
November 2015: Go speak to the good people at HarperCollins about my book, begging their sales team to do their best job at selling it to major chains and retailers across Australia for next Mother’s Day. Cross fingers.
Australian publisher and agent convince HarperCollins Holland to publish there.
Pages are typeset. Editor asks me to look over them again. Finally hand in last big edit. Think phew, I’m done.
December 2015: Bolinda Audio agrees to buy the rights to publish the audio book worldwide. Love my agent. Pre-publication endorsements start trickling in.
January 2016: Final changes have been made but I need to do one last proofread and edit. Think phew, I’m done. Last endorsements come in from a bunch of authors I admire. Totally thrilled.
1 February 2016: Go to print – yippee! Really am done. Start publicity process same day, working on a ‘making of’ free e-book and answering media questions about the book. Not really done.
21 March 2016: Precious Things to hit bookstore shelves across Australia.
1 April 2016: official publication date. Media campaign begins. Hurrah!
Have you got a similar story to tell? Please share. Like I said, I’m fascinated by this process.
Kelly – are you happy for me to share this with our publishing students at the Uni I work at? Congratulations on the final leg of the journey – it was all worth it 🙂 xx
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Hi Vanessa, absolutely – thank you! Don’t want to overwhelm them but it’s important for people to go into the process with open eyes… basically the whole thing is a big gamble which may or may not work, but it’s always worth it 🙂
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Thank you so much for sharing this and making me smile despite the ‘oh my god, jaw gaping, yup this is what it is like’ reaction! This is invaluable for aspiring authors to read
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Thanks Sarah – I’m so glad you think it’s helpful. It was a long journey but I wouldn’t do anything differently. Well, maybe I wouldn’t have posted that note on Facebook but honestly, it makes you stick to what you say you’re going to do. And the biggest lesson was figuring out when to listen to advice and when to trust my instincts 🙂
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Reblogged this on S.A. Menary and commented:
If you’re are trying to get published, read this and it will really show you that persistence counts!
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Wow. What a journey of persistence and perseverance. Thank you so much for sharing.
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How wonderful to have this sort of realist, warts-and-all account of the path to publication. 5 novels with Penguin, and new writers often tell me how ‘lucky’ I am. They don’t see the hard work, persistence and thick skin that has been required for years prior to publication. Some authors gloss over these difficulties, and give people the wrong impression. Thank for providing such an authentic account, and huge congratulations on your achievement 🙂
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Thanks so much, Jennifer, and congratulations on your own novels. It does feel make me feel awkward talking about all the rejection, rewrites etc. but it’s an absolutely real part of the journey. I’m sure most writers can relate! X
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