tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2703861414547309188.post7024807766860529135..comments2024-03-25T20:40:44.806-04:00Comments on Literary Rejections on Display Now Has Long COVID: 100,000 Versions of the Same NovelWriter, Rejectedhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17241982229214057815noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2703861414547309188.post-3566263231438486202011-03-14T11:11:38.277-04:002011-03-14T11:11:38.277-04:00Oh wow. Your blog and mine should be best friends....Oh wow. Your blog and mine should be best friends. They should go have coffee or get matching tattoos or something. ;) <br /><br />I know exactly how you feel! I've been working on the same novel for years now and I'm always going forward and then back and then forward... it's exhausting! But you're right -- it's all for the best in the end. I figure I've written three terrible books along the way to one good one. I blog about all this kind of stuff here: http://egoburn.blogspot.com/<br /><br />Keep up the writing!Emily Sasohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06230018030198463285noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2703861414547309188.post-51701064765944616712011-03-12T19:19:36.525-05:002011-03-12T19:19:36.525-05:00You don't say what you do with the various ver...You don't say what you do with the various versions of your novel. If they are being rejected repeatedly, why not move onto something new? If that succeeds, you will have a good chance at getting the first accepted. "Flogging a dead horse" is more pertinent than ever in our new brave world.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2703861414547309188.post-35753489661259902842011-03-11T16:08:57.286-05:002011-03-11T16:08:57.286-05:00I try to look at it this way: I haven't spent...I try to look at it this way: I haven't spent 10 years writing one novel, I have spent 10 years writing 5 novels - that's not too bad really! The fact that at least 4 of them will remain in my desk drawer I try not to think about!ddelanohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16746885557383342096noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2703861414547309188.post-19987289013275373072011-03-09T12:46:24.274-05:002011-03-09T12:46:24.274-05:00Old drafts makes me appreciate how fallible my jud...Old drafts makes me appreciate how fallible my judgment can be. I remember how jubilant I was upon completing them, how absolutely sure I was that it was worthy of being published. <br /><br />Yes, those old drafts were necessary to "progress" one's art. But what progress they facilitate exerts quite a toll.<br /><br />I look at the drafts and realize just how misguided initial optimism can be. It makes me doubt what I'm doing today, and doubt what I'll be capable of doing tomorrow.Nickhttp://nickkocz.com/blog.htmlnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2703861414547309188.post-55427759698610282902011-03-09T09:54:38.450-05:002011-03-09T09:54:38.450-05:00This morning I was working on the latest version (...This morning I was working on the latest version (of many) of my current novel and felt a twinge of despair, but hopefully that was because of sleep deprivation. I have two other novels, both trunked, that also went through various revisions (though not as many as I've already gone through for this one). When I think about those novels now, the revisions that ultimately didn't lead anywhere don't bother me. They helped me learn and improve my craft. Writing a novel is a complex and difficult and ever-changing process. It <i>should</i> take time.<br /><br />I think the key is that you have to believe that the current version/novel you're working on now is going to be the right one (until you're ready to revise again, of course). Even slipping into the thought that this could become a discarded project makes it too crippling to continue Good luck to you.Laura Maylenehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18058744860709615256noreply@blogger.com