Rejection Can Be Swift

5th March 2010
Blog
2 min read
Edited
9th December 2020

The hardest thing for a writer to cope with is rejection. We all pour so much of ourselves into our writing, we invest it with so many of our hopes, that it’s impossible not to take rejection as a personal blow.

John Simmons

So, what should you do? Partly it depends on the form of the rejection. If your work is returned to sender with the flimsiest of covering notes – ‘unfortunately we don’t believe we could publish your book successfully in the current market’ – you probably sigh, curse and move on without much pause for thought. Perhaps you console yourself with the belief that ‘they never even read it’. I’m sure many of you will have examples of that.

The shortest rejection I received was this week: “it’s a no”.

Sometimes the rejection is more reasoned and given with regret. Perhaps it’s even accompanied by some notes on what let the book down, at least in the eyes of that reader. This can be even more irritating – to have got close and still be rejected – but it’s valuable feedback. You should think hard about it, try to understand what’s being said, and ask yourself honestly if the reader has a valid point.

Having done that, the important process of editing (further editing) might begin again.

Your approach will depend on the nature of the comments and of your work. Is it a practical book or literary fiction? You might want to stick to your guns but reconcile yourself to the book not being published. Or you might want to put yourself in a publisher’s position and think about what will help your book sell better.

The important thing is not to give up. It takes persistence and the whole process can be dispiriting. You have to believe in yourself. If you don’t it’s unlikely that a publisher will. So try to use rejection as positively as you can.

Bounce back with a determination to prove them wrong. Or bounce back with a better version of the book – or with a completely different book that comes out of the rethinking process. Remember that you write for a reason – it satisfies a desire inside you, and that always makes writing worthwhile. So keep writing.

Have you had to deal with rejection?

Writing stage

Comments

Like everything, rejection is relative; meaning our response to it depends on our individual personalities. However, as mentioned in other W&A blogs, there are things one can do to lessen the chances of rejection mainly,

-Taking time to perfect one’s work.

-Researching compatible agents/publishers.

-Following submission guidelines

-Avoiding egotistical impulses.

-Being courteous and professional.

Remember, the book is not final until it reaches the press (for some even after, there are possibilities for revision in later editions). So there is no need to be faithful to it’s contents, only it’s idea. Personally, though I’ve never had a submission nor rejection, I would regard more highly someone whose advice or analysis on a rejection form would give me insight to perfect. And I wouldn’t discriminate that advice as good or bad, just use it.

Xean

5/5/13/2010

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Xean
.
65 points
Practical publishing
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Xean .
13/05/2010

Cressida - you scrawled on my rejection note "I hope you didn't give up the day job." It was valuable and rare advice. I've gone back to road sweeping.

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Michael
Dakin
270 points
Developing your craft
Michael Dakin
08/05/2010

I've had a lot of that same experience. Ive found that after a while, I don't even get bothered by it at all.

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David
Nolan
270 points
Developing your craft
David Nolan
08/05/2010