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PRESS ROOM
Dealing
with Rejection
by Kenneth Atchity
Reprinted from The Writer, February, 1995
If you can't stand - or can't learn to stand - the idea that your work
may be rejected, you should give up the dream of writing.
Becoming professional means learning to deal with rejection with dignity
and determination. Besides, rejection slips aren't so bad. Over the
years, as I've listened to writers complain about them, I've come to
realize that we surely prefer them to at least one alternative.
A dark Lincoln limousine pulls up in front of your house in the morning.
Your hair is still in curlers as a woman in a severe tweed suit walks
up the driveway with a leather attaché case under her arm. "Hello,
Jan Matthews," she says, handing you an envelope. "My name
is Ashburton Mary Calhoun, senior editor of Pachyderm Books. I wanted
to return your manuscript in person to tell you we thought it was awful."
She tips her hat. "Have a nice day."
The rejection slip is the industry's alternative to blatant callousness;
it's not worth brooding over. Brood over a personal visit from Calhoun,
but until that happens keep up your momentum.
Fear of rejection is inevitable for writers, since writing involves
an extension of self. The ability to keep moving forward despite rejection
distinguishes professionals from amateurs. Rejections can even become
a badge of success. All successful writers have amassed a hill of them.
The goal is to control the rejection slips rather than be controlled
by them. Some people do this by burning them; others do it by using
them to paper the bathroom wall. A famous composer is said to have written
this letter:
"I am sitting in the smallest room in my house. Your criticism
is in front of me. Soon it will be behind me."
When an article or manuscript is returned to your mailbox, you already
have your "linkage." Before even looking at the rejection
notice, take the manuscript out of the return envelope and slip it into
the addressed envelope for the next submission. Put that in the mail
and only then, if you must, read your rejection slip. Record it on your
submission list so you don't resubmit the same version of a manuscript
to an uninterested publisher a second time. Above all, don't let your
response to rejection delay getting the manuscript in circulation again.
It's not going to get published if it sits around the house.
Rejection slips vary widely. A careful study of them can lead to building
bridges with editors. A personal signature can mean more than a completely
printed form. But the general rule among editors and publishers (who
read countless manuscripts) is not to say more than their time allows.
An editor is usually not interested in being addressed personally by
a writer unless the editor has included specific comments about how
to improve your manuscript with the response. One way of addressing
the editor - building the bridge - is to write back asking why your
piece was rejected, including a copy of the editor's letter when you
do so. Most editors, if you read their rejection letters correctly and
query them courteously, will take the time to answer such a question.
Many editors will distinguish between their rejection letters as follows:
- Lowest
level - a printed form - generally sent if the writer hasn't addressed
a particular editor.
- A note with a
personal signature - it may still "sound" like a form letter.
Polite but no particulars.
- A note as above,
but with particular details about rejection, brief suggestions about
needed revisions, and an invitation to see further work.
When they have any interest in your work, they will say so, as in a #3
response. If they send you a #2 response, you may conclude that they found
too many things wrong with the concept or execution of your story or manuscript
to allow them time to respond in more detail.
The less work needed to make a manuscript publishable, the better the
response from a publisher. If you have received less than a #3 response
from an editor or publisher, it's improbable that asking an editor why
your manuscript was rejected will build a bridge to the publishing industry
for your personal network. If the editor didn't find it practical to analyze
the shortcomings of your manuscript in the first place, you'll only put
her on the spot by asking her a second time. Editors don't want to be
hurtful, and the kind of letter they would have to formulate to avoid
deepening a writer's rejection wound is also too time-consuming. One publisher
relates:
I recently had a three-page, single-spaced letter from a writer reviewing
the history of another writer's lack of success in publishing a book and,
by implication, trying to get back at me for rejecting it. Did I understand
genius and the writer's frustration? The author also wanted to take me
to lunch to discuss the book in detail - it was some 800 pages.
Any personal correspondence from an editor is worth a follow-up on your
part. But be cautious about how you interpret their language, and don't
be discouraged!
Publishers and editors suggest the following guidelines for interpreting
and responding to their comments:
- Consider
any editorial suggestions seriously, though you may feel bruised at
first. Do they make sense? How could you rectify what's wrong?
- Has the editor
understood what you're attempting to say? How could you make it clearer?
- If so, only if
clarification (and suggestions for change) might change the editorial
opinion, write an explanatory letter. But don't do so as a means of
self-justification against the establishment.
Some editors may use the phrase, "We can't use it right now"
merely to soften the letdown, and many writers take the words as literal
truth. However, some editors may mean the phrase literally, so if an editor
writes, "We can't use it right now," write back and ask, "When
can you use it?" If you receive encouragement from an editor, ask
"If I changed the ending (or whatever change the editor suggests),
would you be interested in seeing it again?" If you do resubmit your
revised manuscript to an editor, query first with a copy of the original
rejection letter. Then be sure to note that the manuscript is a revision
of one previously submitted.
It's not uncommon for a writer to receive 36 rejections and then be accepted
- or 50 rejections in the U.S., and finally be published in England. Be
patient. Suspense novelist Elmore Leonard's The Big Bounce was
rejected 84 times before it was sold as a Gold Medal Original, with Warner
Brothers making the film. Make a chart of submissions and fill in the
blanks without thinking about it. Note any constructive feedback and suggested
revisions. Modify your submission list if the comments or lack of response
in an area you thought might be most marketable for your work indicate
the contrary. Unless a half-dozen editors make the same criticism of your
work, plan to send it out at least 30 times before you begin major revisions
that require withdrawing it from your active file. Frank Herbert's Dune
was rejected by some 20 publishers, Jerry Kosinski's Cockpit 36
times - three times by the publisher who eventually published it, once
by that same publisher after the book came out!
(Kosinski sent a copy of a typed manuscript, with its title and author
changed, to a different editor at the same publishing house; when that
editor rejected it, Kosinski sent him a copy of the signed book.)
George Bernard Shaw said that he realized when he was still a child that
nine things out of ten he attempted were failures.
"I didn't want to be a failure, so I decided I had to work ten times
harder!
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Fourteen
Reasons for Rejections
by GENE FEHLER |
"The
suggestions made for revisions will often make the difference between
acceptance and rejection..."
- You really
don't want to write; you just want to be published.
- You haven't
read widely the kind of material you are trying to write.
- You haven't
mastered writing techniques.
- You've
been too easily discouraged.
- You haven't
studied the market.
- You failed
to follow up leads.
- You can't
take criticism.
- Your writing
is commonplace or lacks imaginative spark.
- Your query
letters don't "sell" your idea.
- You don't
revise before submitting your manuscript.
- You are
too concerned with writing for a specific market.
- You haven't
learned the editorial requirements of a specific market.
- You make
excuses for not writing.
- You may
not have the talent or skill to succeed at the level you'd envisioned.
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