I had no idea what I was doing. In my mind, there was no way that I would ever complete the book, so I just kept on going.
Years of stealing an hour here, and an hour there. Of getting up at 4am to get in five hours of quality book time before going to my regular nine to five. Ego wasn’t driving me then. Ambition was.
And I did it. I finished. It was good. My hopes rose. My beta readers were in love, and my entire being swelled with pride…until I ‘Googled’ the words ‘word count’.
Debut novels should typically fall between 60,000 – 90,000 words depending on the genre. Shocked didn’t even begin to cover my reaction. My book was almost five times that length!
Another search led to the discovery that my masterpiece was ten – yes, ten – words longer than the entire Lord Of The Rings Trilogy. Including appendices. Crap!
So I did what any other novice would have done – I picked a cliffhanger chapter, slapped an epilogue at the end, and went about my merry way as I queried the literary world…and in my head, they were welcome.
This is a public service announcement – do not, under any circumstances, do what I did!
I don’t want to say that I wasted large portions of my life…but I didn’t do the research before I started. I didn’t know how difficult it was going to be to break into the literary industry. Anyone that’s read the one with the red room of pain has said to themselves: I can do better than this!
But I discovered something. It’s true what they say: writing a book is easy. If it wasn’t, then literary agents would get back to you within hours instead of weeks – they have a ton of queries to get through.
Anyone can write (I can hear your indignant guffaws from here!), but not everyone can truly craft a novel.
I had no luck getting published with that beast of a book. Chopping it up did nothing for it, even as I realized that I needed to start over from the end of the first book (that really, really, hurt my soul), and re-wrote, and revised, over and over. No success.