I'm approaching the first draft mark on a fiction novel and starting to think more seriously about how to take things forward. I was curious as to whether there are people on here who have been involved in the publishing process or have published themselves who could offer some advice/things they wish they'd known earlier/mistakes that first time authors always make? It's young adult fantasy/~60-65k words and will close off as an independent book. I'd really appreciate any advice that might be available! I'm very certain I don't want to go down the self-published route.
Quote from: MischaHY on August 16, 2022, 08:14:07 amI'm approaching the first draft mark on a fiction novel and starting to think more seriously about how to take things forward. I was curious as to whether there are people on here who have been involved in the publishing process or have published themselves who could offer some advice/things they wish they'd known earlier/mistakes that first time authors always make? It's young adult fantasy/~60-65k words and will close off as an independent book. I'd really appreciate any advice that might be available! I'm very certain I don't want to go down the self-published route.Send Caff a message on Instagram. I think he's doing very similar.
If you want to write in that genre long term I would look at ways of building a name and following online (would probably involve sagas not an independent book) before sinking any money - either yours or publishers - into a print run.
For teens, series of books seem to be the way to go. If the reader likes number 1, they may well be keen on sequels 2-6 too.
I don't want to piss on your chips but my impression is your chances of getting a first novel physically published in that genre are vanishingly small. I wouldn't be too down on self-publishing. It's never been easier or less stigmatised and you are far more likely to see a financial return. I know a couple of writers in the outdoor genre who have been published by majors and subsequently chosen to self-publish purely on financial grounds.If you want to write in that genre long term I would look at ways of building a name and following online (would probably involve sagas not an independent book) before sinking any money - either yours or publishers - into a print run.
Lurker here.. thought I'd chime in. I work as a technical editor, edit/write/produce a magazine (in the US), have self-published a guidebook and have written speculative fiction novellas—unpublished however.A few thoughts. If you truly want to be published in the truest sense then what you're asking for is a new career. Publishers are looking for energetic writers who are prolific (can knock out a short story in a week kind of thing) and are willing to make significant sacrifices for their passion.Are you looking to pivot to a new career? Most of those who manage to pull it off have put in a significant chunk of time working in some adjacent career—as said before, journalism, publishing, editing, screenwriting, or have completed an MFA or attended prestigious workshops (or all of the above). I've hung out at a few online creative writing workshops, and I've been frankly shocked at how bad the writing is. I just couldn't believe how unaware these people were, who all thought they could get published.I don't want to give you a hard time, but what are your reasons for wanting to be published? I think that writing something is a tremendous achievement in of itself, and it doesn't need to be justified by an arbitrary societal trophy. What you want is to get readers, and traditional publishing is just one way of achieving this. Attending workshops, conventions, writing blog posts and essays on literature (how well do you know your canon?) as well as producing short form lit are all ways of getting your name out and connecting with a potential audience. Ultimately you need to be prolific, whichever route you end up pursuing.
It was more spoof Andy McNab / Frederick Forsyth. It was fairly terrible (I don’t even know if I have the final draft any more, as I chucked two old computers recently clearing the house) but I still maintain it was superior to Sasha Baron-Cohen’s The Dictator. It was about a crazed Saddam Hussein type (and his henchman) who wanted to wipe out the British population via the cunning ruse of biological agent-laced donor kebab meat. And the story of the ultra secret special forces team who were on their tail. It started off as The Donors of Death, and ended up being called FEL-8: Rendezvous with Destiny.