Simon P. Clark, author of EREN and regular W&A blogger, on why it's so important not to give up on your dream.
So, here we are. My book's being published this week and I finally get to irritate people by starting conversations with 'Well, as a published author...'
It's easy to forget everything it took to get here. The late nights, typing away and getting frustrated at just how bad my story was, are easy to justify now I get to hold the book. Staying home while friends went out seems like an easy choice now I know it all worked out. At the time, though, they were immensely difficult decisions. I had low moments when I wanted to throw my laptop across the room and long periods when I didn't write a word because of course it was pointless, and of course I was rubbish, and obviously this stupid dream had to come to an end.
Those moments – ones that I know other writers are going through right now - are exactly why I wanted to write this post. I know what I needed to be told back then, and I know what I want to tell others right now: Don't give up, because it will be worth it.
Writing means loneliness a lot of the time. It does mean sitting by yourself late at night, feeling like you're kidding yourself and the world is laughing. Sometimes it means tension with friends and family who don't understand that you can't come to the pub. Writing's not a good excuse in their eyes - why can't you just be cool?
Don't stop. Write. It will be worth it.
Success isn't something you can measure on a scale. For some, finishing the book will be success. Others will self-publish, and that will be success. Others will go the traditional method. Some will make money, and others don't need to. Those things aren't as important as making sure you do the writing, do the work, and get to a place where you can look back, smile, and know you did well.
It will be worth it.
Edgar Albert Guest, an American poet, put it better than I can in his poem It Couldn't Be Done. The last stanza goes like this:
There are thousands to tell you it cannot be done,
There are thousands to prophesy failure,
There are thousands to point out to you one by one,
The dangers that wait to assail you.
But just buckle in with a bit of a grin,
Just take off your coat and go to it;
Just start in to sing as you tackle the thing
That “cannot be done,” and you’ll do it.
That might seem cliché, but sometimes it's important to hear that you shouldn't give up. Writing a book is a big thing, and in the ocean of words that makes up modern life, it's tempting to feel insignificant and small and easily swallowed. To that, I say this: Keep going, word by word, line by line, and ignore the world when you need to.
Books aren't written in a day, and if - when - you get to where you need to be, you can look back and count the bad days and the good days together, knowing you powered through, fought the good fight, and kept going.
And it will be worth it.
Simon's debut children's novel, Eren, will be published September 2014 by Constable & Robinson, an imprint of Little, Brown. In the run up to publication, Simon has launched Eren Tales, a year-long collaborative project with photographer Brandon Rechten. Learn more at www.erentales.com, or visit Simon's website.
Congratulations. It is certainly not easy actually finishing a book and its really encouraging to know you have had success.
I finally finished my first novel (Lavender Girl) in March this year and decided to self-publish. I am fifty pages into my next book but have hit a bit of a wall. I find the best way round it is to sleep on it for a bit and sometimes I fast forward. I write whatever is in my head to develop characters or plot further along in the book and that usually brings me back to whatever I am stuck on. I also talk about it to family and friends and listen to their suggestions. Sometimes something comes completely out of the blue and your away again.
I think the hardest thing is to know when it's time let it go. I agonised for weeks and each time I read it I could have changed something, but in the end I was just nit-picking and decided to go for it, I was driving myself mad with doubt. You have to be brave and take a chance.
Above all - Don't give up. It is such a great sense of achievement when you finish it.
What a lovely positive, sensible approach. Just what I need. Though I don't equate being alone and writing with loneliness. Never have. But especially now as a mother to a 1 year old. Being alone writing seems like an unattainable heaven! ;-) But you're right, word by word, or half hour here and half hour there, I have to take what I can get, right? Your words have refocused and remotivated me. Thank you for that!
Reply to S.A Barlow
You will never make it without a Plan?
My plan is this; 9 Chapters, 8,000 words or more in a chapter, and finish the novel in 2 months.
But I have all the characters and the story line all laid out in my mind.
Try and focus on 1 paragraph at a time, then move on to the next, just like looking at different photos of the scene.
I am a great reader and have a quest for knowledge so maybe this helps when I'm writing but don't concentrate on the money and don't let anyone read it till your finished it. I let people read the first chapter which was a help but I got a lot of criticism which just inspired me more. If one cant accept criticism then one wont make it as a writer I'm afraid. The critics are the ones who have never wrote a short story never mind a novel.