Write That Book Already!: The Tough Love You Need To Get Published Now (2 page)

I admire this book for its honesty, its bravery, and for its charm. Had I not decided, over forty years ago, to be a writer, I might have read this book and decided not to try. However, the joy they promise in their prose makes me glad that I and other writers have been willing to make good writing our aim, and even great writing our dream.

~Maya Angelou

INTRODUCTION

ASK THE AUTHOR ENABLERS

 

They call to you from the store window. They also call from the library, your lover’s bedside table, your friend’s fanny pack, or your great-aunt’s dusty attic. They lure you away from your housework, schoolwork, job, or career. They offer escape, entertainment, knowledge, enlightenment, humor, and the wisdom of the ages, in addition to their own unique brand of nourishment.

Of course, we’re talking about that half-empty bag of fried pork rinds (your great-aunt’s favorite, and her demise). But if you look in the other store, the bookstore, you’ll see another kind of sustenance— the kind you find in books: the ones you love, the ones you read over and over again, the ones you’ve always meant to read and never got around to, and most especially, the one you plan to write.

As the Author Enablers, we get questions from aspiring writers from all over the world. There are those who think they have a book in them but who have no idea how to write. We often suggest to this group that they consider pursuing a more suitable and lucrative career, such as government lobbyist or investment banker. But most of the time we get interesting questions from a diverse group of people. Many of these folks are gifted writers who are struggling with the business end of publishing; others have a handle on marketing but find the writing to be tough. And there are many variations and combinations of these issues presenting a block to a writer’s dream of becoming a published author. The most common question we get is some variation of “How do I get my book published?”

We intend to spend the rest of this book answering that question.

Along the way, we hope to demystify the overall writing and book-publishing process, revealing what happens to your book, step by step, between that first lightning-bolt of inspiration and the last ride to the shredder—oops, we mean the bestseller list. We’ll also dispense plenty of good advice and tough-love reality checks, including the reminder that talent, luck, and timing all come into play. Our goal is to help you become one of the lucky, hard-working writers who wind up with a publishing contract.

But while we will focus on making the writing and publishing business clearer for all you aspiring authors, throughout this book we never want to forget to encourage you—whether or not you ever get a book published—to keep writing. Writing helps clarify thoughts and feelings, and being a good writer is essential to good communication skills, which will help you in every area of your life. Well, not in your golf game, and come to think of it not so much in your cooking or household chores. But writing is a good skill to have.

If your goal is to write a book for publication, rule number one is that no one ever finished a book without sitting down and getting started. Few authors get published without engaging in the daily discipline of writing, even if some days that means staring down a blank notebook or computer screen and drooling into your bag of pork rinds.

So fire up that laptop (or desktop, or Blackberry, or spiral notebook), apply butt to chair, and let’s get started.

CHAPTER
ONE
WHY WE WRITE
(AND WHY YOU
WRITE, TOO)

 

We all have stories to tell and important information to share. Whether or not you ever get published, the discipline of putting your words down on paper and improving your writing skills is good for you. Really.

Unlike the order in which most people read books, it happens that we are writing this first chapter last. The reason for this is that we’ve gone back and forth and back and forth again over the issues of voice and tone. On one hand, we want to present our writing to you in a consistent shared voice, much as we do in our
BookPage
column. That means taking a lighthearted tone and cracking a few jokes, while imparting useful information about writing and publishing.

On the other hand, if you’ve picked up this book then we know you are serious about your writing. And when we started writing Chapter 1 (the most important chapter in any book) we found ourselves getting pretty serious ourselves—even, dare we say it, a little preachy. We just couldn’t help it. We care that much. But we don’t want you to think we’ve lost our sense of humor.

What to do? At Author Enablers World Headquarters we aim to please. So here are two Chapter 1s: one is more lighthearted, one more sincere.

CHAPTER 1 (LITE)

Writing is an extension of something that is deeply ingrained in the human species—graffiti. Look at all those cave paintings! And those Egyptian tombs. Graffiti satisfies the age-old irrepressible urge to make one’s indelible mark on a nice clean wall (or tomb). Writing helps us record history and empathize with others, even when we know those others are misguided and wrong. Just as we learn to walk, talk, and eat (anyone for pork rinds?), we learn to write by growing up around other people who write mysterious things we long to understand.

THE STORY OF WRITING

The earliest form of writing can be dated to around 3000
B.C
., when the ancient Chinese discovered that they could keep secrets from their children by spelling words instead of saying them out loud. But many ancient cultures continued to pass on their knowledge, stories, and history by word of mouth. It took their bards and druids decades to learn everything they had to remember, and often by the time they had completed the task no one cared any more. Homer tried to keep things interesting with tales of food, violence, and loose women, which is why his stories are still being made into major motion pictures to this very day.

In general, as there was an increasing amount of history to remember, it became more efficient to write things down. But as time went on, cuneiform images and early alphabets became disfigured by natural erosion and graffiti artists, and—slowly and gradually—began to take on different meanings from one century to the next, resembling a very slow version of the children’s game of Telephone. When the game begins, the first player must whisper a particular phrase into the next player’s ear, but by the time the message gets to the end of the line, an amazing transformation may occur—a transformation so dramatic and bizarre that everyone is astonished! This was, in fact, how T. S. Eliot’s poem
The Waste Land
was composed by a classroom of Irish kindergartners.

But we digress.

“What,” we can hear you asking, “does an Irish kindergarten class or cuneiform graffiti have to do with me? I’m writing an important book about (pick as many as apply):

• Ethel Merman’s costume jewelry and its cultural and historical importance

• Traveling with your pet goat

• The history of the lug wrench

• An alternate universe in which anyone who can’t play the kazoo is imprisoned and tortured.”

Whatever your subject, you believe the world needs to hear your message. You are certain that once the agents, editors, publishers, and movie producers of the world have access to your work, they will make you famous and offer you life-changing opportunities because you are
that good.

“Come on, Author Enablers,” you say, “show me the money.”

Which shows how much you know—we don’t have the money. The banks have the money. Still, whatever your message, writing makes it possible to compose and record your thoughts and stories in a form that will last as long as language is understood. And giving a little thought to why you want and need to write is a good idea.

CHAPTER 1 (SINCERE)

Writing is an extension of something that is deeply ingrained in the human species—language. Writing helps us clarify our thoughts and record history; it deepens our understanding of the world and allows us to empathize with others. We learn to speak when we’re very young, and we use language to address almost every area of our lives. We use words to teach our children the lessons of life, to express emotion, to conduct commerce, to record our deepest religious practices, to share our knowledge, to stay connected, and to express the thoughts and ideas that emerge from our imaginations. Words are so important to us, so vital to our beings, that we sometimes take this gift of ours for granted. We shouldn’t—words are too powerful to take for granted.

THE DIFERENCE BETWEEN SCRIBBLING AND BABBLING

Connected though they are, spoken and written languages are very different. If you have ever written a speech, you may have learned this. A speechwriter must be conscious of the cadences of oratory, of course—you want to keep the audience engaged, or at least awake. But a speechwriter must also be aware that in the spoken word, the listener doesn’t have the luxury of re-reading a difficult idea. This is why speechwriters often employ very straightforward language. People’s minds may wander, and any audience will have represented in its ranks various levels of sophistication. To address these factors speechwriters use tricks such as repetition, or three simple points, or one example that is returned to again and again like a touchstone, which enables the listeners to make connections and follow the message.

Writers use similar tricks, and some tricks of the spoken word may help us to be better writers. However, because the reader has more time to review, consider, and mull over the message or story, the writer has far greater leeway to convey a more complex, nuanced message. But tone of voice and body language, essential tools of the spoken word, are missing on the page, which means the writer must work harder to convey the emotional content and intent of the message.

YOU HAVE TO READ TO WRITE—RIGHT? WRITE!

Most of us write because we read. Reading teaches us the power of words, of stories and history and argument. So, first and foremost, to be a writer you must be a reader. If you’re like us you grew up reading everything—novels, history, popular science books, newspapers, comic books, cereal boxes, road signs—anything that was put in front of you. Just as we learn how to walk and talk, we learn how to write from others, from the people who go before us telling stories and recording history and trying to explain the meaning of it all. We read to get our vocabulary—not just the nouns and verbs and prepositions, but the means to express our mind, heart, and soul.

A crucial stage in any writer’s development occurs long before the dream of writing a published book, at the moment when we go from reading to doing a bit of our own writing. This may happen when we are very young. It may be because we are not allowed to play with a toy until we’ve written a thank-you note, or we are given a notebook of some kind at school. Many of us will scrawl something almost illegible, but that illegible scrawl is the beginning of a moment of amazing discovery—the power of creating our own written words.

WHY WE WRITE

We write to tell a story, to describe an event, to imagine or explain what has been or will happen, to warn or touch or inspire. We write to express our most profound emotions—love and hatred, joy and sorrow, humor and sadness.

Writing is also how we pass on knowledge. This is why reading other writers is so important: by exploring the written works of the past we can perform a sort of archaeological dig, discovering how an idea has changed or persisted over thousands of years. Our ancestors speak to us through writing more directly than through any other medium, with the possible exception of YouTube.

Writing makes it possible for us to compose and record our thoughts and stories in a form that will last as long as the language is understood. The written word is fixed. Depending on what it is written with and on, the word can remain preserved for a very long time, and although a piece of writing can be interpreted in different ways, the text itself does not change—unless, of course, it is revised.

Writing is one of the most important, useful, and most rewarding of human endeavors. But you need to be disciplined and keep at it. Over time, you will be surprised by how much you accomplish.

BOTTOM LINE

You must sit down and write. Not
talk
about writing, but actual pen-to-paper or fingers-to-keyboard writing. Books are crafted one good sentence at a time. No matter what happens, if you persist, you won’t be sorry. Human beings have been telling stories and discovering more about life and the world and passing it along via the written word for centuries. You are part of that tradition. Be humble, but also be proud.

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