Saturday, April 24, 2010

Rejection Letter #2


The bad news is...
This is rejection letter #2. It is the typical form letter, and it leaves me disappointed once again. But, I will push on and I will find the next publisher on my list and I will submit my manuscript once more. I may just get a letter back saying, "We are delighted with your writing and we would enjoy reading the entire manuscript!" or, "We found the first three chapters of your manuscript a delight to read and we would like to see more. Please submit your entire manuscript so that we may whet our appetites by reading the whole story!" (I know, that is really dreaming on my part, but it could happen, right? This is where you are supposed to say, "Yes Janet, it will happen, you will see!" Did you say it? I need all of the positive reinforcement I can get right now.)
I know that writing is what I was meant to do. I know that to give up would be cutting myself short. I know that seeing my book on the shelf of my local bookstore is what I want. I know that I cannot give up so easily. So, I will grab my Writer's Market and I will begin to comb carefully through the pages until I find the next publisher that I will send my manuscript to. I have my paper with the 'no's' and the one 'yes'. I will be marking off another 'no' and pushing forward for that one 'yes'. I know it is out there, it is out there and it is waiting for me to find it. I am not going to stop looking, I just need to look in a different place. Wish me luck once more!
I will be re-writing my query letter and my synopsis. I plan to write a KILLER query this time, I have a new strategy that I learned from this book...
and I will be putting it to the test. I have also subscribed to the Children's Book Insider and I have become a fightin' bookworm. I am learning new things and I am going to put these things to good use. I am going to write a query letter that will beg to be read. I will polish up my synopsis and make it so that the editors will have to see more. This is my plan and I intend to follow through. One thing about it, I am definitely NOT a quitter!I cannot quit, I have told you all that this is what I am going to do. How can I tell you that and then walk away? How can I tell you all that and not put forth my best effort? How can I tell you all that and not keep trying until I have no one else to submit to? I would be nothing short of totally humiliated to not push on and move forward. I can't let you down, and more than that, I can't let me down either. Stay tuned, I will be posting my new submission details as soon as I get it figured out. Once again, keep your fingers crossed and wish me lots of luck!

Thursday, April 22, 2010

A Few Things I Picked Up..

I did a little shopping yesterday and I found a couple things that I had been looking for. I also found some things I was not necessarily looking for, but I had to have just the same. Isn't that the way it is with shopping? You always find more than what you were looking for in the first place? Wanna see what I got? Well here you go...
One of the things I WAS looking for!
Another of the things I WAS looking for!
Oh yeah, and one other thing I WAS looking for!
And one thing I WAS NOT looking for...
And one other thing I WAS NOT looking for...
And This I WAS NOT looking for either, but...
 
This I HAD TO HAVE, as I already have book one and book three, so I had to fill in the gap! There are two more of these books in the series currently, book four and five, but I will have to wait for them to come out in paperback. Oh, and if you have never felt a book cover just for the feel, I highly recommend it. The cover and the pages of this series are totally cool to the touch! I love to thumb the pages just for the wonderful soft feeling in my fingertips.
I am a dreamy, die hard book lover. It is part of me, as my heart and lungs and soul are part of me. The book world captivates me and holds me its prisoner until someone or something comes along to jolt me back to the here and now of things. It is a world of imagination and wonder and a place where anyone can go at anytime to escape, and I absolutely love to escape. It is what keeps me sane. The smells and the visual stimulation of a true, honest-to-God bookstore could never be replaced by e-books or computers. That is why I know that the book industry is not going away anytime soon. There are too many like me out there that need to walk through the doors of a bookstore just for the scent of it, just to walk among the gondolas filled to the top with the rich colors and mystical depictions of worlds far away that none of us can imagine until we open the pages and begin to see with our minds. To feel the pages between finger and thumb gives a pleasure to so many that it can never be replaced by the Kindle's™or the Nook's™. There are still many out there like myself that just have to pick up a book and hold it in the palm of their hand, that have to flip through the pages and look at the font and see the drawings and the illustrations as they were intended to be seen. I definitely am in the age of technology with wishes of owning a Nook™, but at the same time, I NEED books! I HAVE to be able to walk into a bookstore or a library and pick up a book in all of its glory and thumb through its pages and see it and feel it and touch it and smell it. This is what will never die, the captivating stimulating feelings that only a book can provide. Oh, I am sorry,  Did I fail to mention that I am a book lover? Through and through I tell you!!

Reality Check: I have already read the necessary parts of The Writer's Digest Guide to Query Letters and I have begun to immerse myself into the pages of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Published. 
I lay awake in my bed until after midnight last night, still contemplating the idea of being a "Published Author". Do I move forward with this idea that I cannot get out of my head, or do I let it die? Do I withstand the pressures of trying to get a publisher to even glance at the pages of my manuscript or do I just step aside and tell myself it was a good try, but maybe I am not cut out for all of this? Do I continue to write and re-write and re-do and second guess my work in hopes of making it better or just let the pages rest where they may and move on to something else that is not so difficult and more 'conventional'? I ask myself these questions every single day and every single day, I tell myself the same thing...I was meant to do something with this talent that God has given me. I am meant to move forward and withstand the heartache and the rejection notices and the trials that I must go through to plunge ahead in this sea of unknown. I am doing what I am supposed to be doing. I will continue to gain the knowledge necessary to put me on the shelves of the bookstores. I will continue to reach out and grasp every bit of information I can to help me along this trying and difficult road. I will continue to find the inspiration and the strength to keep going in a forward fashion. I cannot and will not give up.
It is hard and it is time consuming and there are times when I feel my time could be better spent doing something else, but then I find myself thinking about the story and all of its wonderful characters once again and I move back to it, pushing forward, tearing down the walls that tower before me. I can't stop, I am compelled to write. I have to move forward, maybe take a little break once in a while, but move forward none-the-less. I just can't help myself. 
I was awake at 5:30 this morning. I have a job interview on Tuesday. I may be moving back into the work force. This is a scary thought for me. I worked so hard for so long trying to do what I thought was best and I didn't fare too well. What if it happens again? What if...? Will I lose myself again to the wishes and demands of others? Will I lose my identity that I have worked these last 10 months to create as a writer and a jewelry artist? Will I have to give up my passions to take on less of myself? Life is a scary place and I find myself plagued with thoughts of 'if only' and 'how can I' to which there is no real answer. I just hope that if there are lessons to be learned in all of this, that they are not being lost on me. My heart tells me one thing, but my mind tells me quite another. 
Rationality and reality need to step in somewhere along the way. I know that if I take on a 'traditional' or 'conventional' job that my family will be provided for. This is what makes me want to step back into the working world. But at the same time, I can't help but feel that I am giving up what truly makes me happy, writing and making jewelry and being here for my kids when they need me, and walking my 6 miles everyday (well almost everyday, anyway). There are so many things about ME that I have discovered and really LIKE about myself and who I have become, and I know that I will have to put some of these things on the back burner once more. I don't like the idea of working nights and weekends, but I may HAVE to. This aggravates me! 'How can I'...'I just wish'... and 'if only'...



Friday, April 16, 2010

Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, Inc.

Well, today I have decided to write and tell you about the publishing company that now holds my future as a published author in its palms. 
Name: Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, Inc.  
Address: 18 West 18th Street, New York, NY  10011.  
Website: www.fsgkidsbooks.com
Established: 1946
Imprints: Frances Foster Books. Children's Books Editorial Director: Margaret Ferguson (To whom my query was personally addressed).
Manuscript Acquisitions: Margaret Ferguson, editorial director; Frances Foster, Frances Foster Books; Wesley Adams, executive editor; Janine O'Malley, senior editor.  
Art Director: Not that important, as I am not submitting art, but I do know a couple of people that should!!
Publishes 40 picture books per year; 30 middle grade books per year; 10 young adult titles per year.
5% of books by first time authors (That's me!!); 20% of books from agented writers.
Fiction: All levels: all categories. (I think I fit in here just fine!) "Original and well-written material for all ages."
Recently Published: The Cabinet of Wonders, by Marie Rutkoski; Last Night, by Hyewon Yum.
Nonfiction: doesn't really matter because that is not what this book is by any stretch of the imagination. (Pardon the pun!)
How to Contact: Fiction/nonfiction: for novels, query (check!) with outline/synopsis (check!) and three sample chapters (check!); The rest really doesn't matter, as I write children's novels so part one is for me. Do not fax or e-mail submissions or queries. Responds to queries/mss in 3 months.
Publishes a book 18 months after acceptance (WOW!) Will consider simultaneous submissions. (Seriously thinking about!) Meaning: They will let you send manuscript to them and others at the same time.
Terms: "We offer an advance against royalties for both authors and illustrators." (This is a GOOD thing!) Sends galleys to authors. (Samples of illustrations that can be used for my book as an author and I get to choose. Cool huh?)
Tips: "Study our catalog before submitting. (Check!) Don't ask for criticism or advice (duh). Due to the volume of submissions we receive, its just not possible. (I just can't fathom anyone asking anyway!) Never send originals. (Could you imagine writing a novel when there were no typewriters? Could you imagine writing a novel when there were JUST typewriters? I am truly blessed!!) Always enclose SASE (For those of you who do not know-Self Addressed Stamped Envelope)."

So, now all I do is wait to hear back from them. That, I believe, is one of the hardest parts to this as well, the waiting. Patience is a good thing to have a lot of in the trials and errors of getting published. I hope mine holds out. Oh yeah, I have tested it and it doesn't give in easily, so I am still feeling great for now. Hopefully I can maintain that attitude and endure through this time in my life. There is nothing I want more, so I think I can handle it...for as long as it takes.
A friend gave me some advice once. She told me of another friend that she has that wanted something badly in her life. She took a piece of paper and boxed out 100 no's on it. In the last corner of the paper at the bottom, she boxed out a yes. She began checking off the no's until one day, she was able to put a check in the yes box. Every time she got a 'no' she would mark it and move on to the next. She did finally get that 'yes' and I know that someday I will get that 'yes' as well. Until then, I will continue to mark the 'no boxes' and move on. Hopefully I don't have to use up a lot of paper in the process.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Changing my Blog

Well, I have made a decision. I am constantly neglecting to blog, so I have decided to blog about what is taking my time away from blogging about my family and everyday life. I am trying to become a PUBLISHED author and this is consuming a lot of my time. I have decided to gear my blog to the trials and errors of becoming just that...a PUBLISHED author. I am going to start from the beginning and I hope that you do not get too bored reading about what brought me to this point in the first place.
In the year 2001, I gave birth to our first son, Brinson Dee Cozzens. I was on maternity leave from an excellent job, a job that I loved, but not my dream job. Something had been gnawing at me during all the years I had worked up to this point. I was supposed to be doing something that I was not doing. I kept searching it out. I would search for it in every new job I took, hoping to get that fulfilled feeling from the job at hand and where I was in my life at that point. The taming of the lion inside of me still had not come. While on maternity leave from this good job, I got a call from a business that wanted to hire me to be their administrative assistant. I was scared to take on this new prospect, as I was very comfortable in the job I had. Still I had to do it, I had to take a chance, What did I have to lose? I knew nothing about the business and had no clue what the job entailed, but I didn't let this stop me. I had a job, it wasn't as if I NEEDED to move on. I went to the interview, I was not nervous, or shaky, or scared, for you see, I had a job and I was not necessarily looking for a new one. I went into the office of the administrator of this business and sat down in the seat across from him. I answered his questions showing no fear and was myself. I don't sugar coat ME very well, I don't see the point. Anyway, I continued the interview and to the dismay of the administrator, I was not scared or nervous. He asked me several times why I wasn't, I told him that I didn't feel I had a reason to be. That was the first day of my new career, what turned out to be my dream job.
I began my dream job, loving it and the people I worked for. I continued to work diligently day after day at the job I absolutely loved. I enjoyed going to work everyday. I enjoyed the people and the satisfaction I got from doing the work. I enjoyed making the people that I worked for happy. This in itself brought me much happiness. During that time I still felt as if there was something I was supposed to be doing that I was not doing. I felt a void in my life, like God wanted me to do something else, not entirely, but something else just the same. I set aside the thoughts of doing that something else that I felt I was meant to do. I kept at the job at hand trying to find the satisfaction I needed to stop thinking of the something else I was supposed to be doing. That something else still tugged at my insides like a nagging feeling of restlessness whenever I found myself alone and able to daydream a little, but I tried to shrug it off. It never went away. I still knew that I needed to do that something else, not knowing exactly what that something else was.
I continued to work at my dream job for 8 more years, working all the way up to being the director myself. I loved it, every single day, I loved it. I was doing something that meant something, even if it wasn't that something else that still tugged at me. I felt that I was doing something important and real for the people that I worked for. I felt that I could put all of my effort and hard work into making something better. I felt that I was doing something worthwhile. At 8 years, almost to the day, my dream job ended. I was no longer able to do the job I had come to love. I no longer could do the only real thing I had ever known. I was set free from my dream job on June 15, 2009.
That day marked the beginning of a very hard time for me. I cry still to this day over what I could have done, or what I should have done, or if only I had done. The end of these sentences I will keep to myself, as they only mean something to me. What I do know now, almost a year later, is that I did the right thing and anything else would have been against everything I stand for as a person. I believe myself to be ethical and I tell the truth and anything else would have gone against everything I am. In the end, I know I did the right thing. I know in my heart that it was not me, it was them. This has brought me some comfort over the past year, but I still find sadness once in a while and I still dream horrible dreams at night sometimes, sitting in front of a bunch of suits as they tell me that I just wasn't meant for the job, that I just wasn't good enough. Those dreams are getting less now and I find myself still happy and upbeat for the most part. I still sit here without a job or a career in what I deem the worst times the United States has seen since the Great Depression, but I am still me and depression and heartache haven't won the battle. I get up, I get dressed, and I do something with my days. I have never let the darkness take control of my life.
Since I was a little girl, I have wanted to write. I have written poems and short stories over the years, but never anything very serious. On June 23, 2009, I began to write a story. It was meant to be just a story to read to my little boys before bed at night. Soon, I found myself consumed with putting words to paper and making sense out of the things I was writing. I needed to write, and write, and write. I rose at 7:00 a.m. each morning to get my boys up and off to school. I would kiss them good bye and kiss my husband good bye and they would vanish out the back door to meet their day head on. The minute they were out of the house, I would sit down in front of the computer and begin where I had left off the day before. I would write and write. I would go to bed at night only to find myself thinking about the story that was consuming my mind. I would lay awake and think of ways that I could make it better. I would rise again in the middle of the night to find my way to the computer in the dark and I would sit down and write until the early hours of the morning. I created a wonderful make believe world where beasts lived in harmony with the earth. The story is based on two little boys that find this world of course, what else could the story be based on?
I continued to write and soon I had a book. It was 79,000 words long and it was incredible! It brought so much satisfaction to me. I spent a couple more months tweaking it and making it better. I self edited it about 30 times. I had others read it and give me advice. I began reading it to my boys and they always wanted to hear more when I had completed a chapter. I would have to argue with them that we would read more tomorrow, but it was bedtime for now. This went on until I finished reading the book to them, they LOVED it. You know what else? That nagging feeling that I was supposed to be doing something else finally went away. I finally felt that I had peace in my life. I found what was missing all those years and I finally had tamed the lion. My insides were at rest and I had found that something else that I was intended to do. Every time I turned around I would see a sign, a passage in a book, a scene in a movie. Everything in my life was telling me to write this story. I went to the eye doctor the day after I got fired from my job, June 16, 2009. I picked up the Reader's Digest and the cover looked like this...
Well, I was absolutely compelled to read it! I had to see how you could bounce back from anything. I picked it up and flipped through the pages. I found the article I was looking for. It began with J. K. Rowling giving a graduation speech. She told of being a single mom who had lost her job and the only thing she really had was a typewriter. She began writing Harry Potter and the rest is history. I tucked that Reader's Digest away in my purse and I have it still to this day. As I said, everywhere I turned there was a sign. The first scene in the Kite Runner, which I had been wanting to see, was a man opening a box of books on the kitchen table. It turns out that the box contained the book that he had written! There were signs everywhere telling me to do it, to take a chance and do something unorthodox, out of the box that I had put myself into. Everything I looked at told me to write and that I was doing what I was supposed to be doing. It all became very clear to me.
I completed my first book officially on September 22, 2009. After I completed the book, I decided to see if I could get it published. I worked on it here and there and I wrote a query letter and a synopsis, all the things you are supposed to do to be able to submit a manuscript. It was hard work, much harder than writing the manuscript itself. I kept at it, perfecting it, re-writing it. I finally had a query letter and a synopsis that I felt were worthy of sending out to the publishers. I found Arthur A. Levine Books. This became my first goal, to send it out to them. I finally got the nerve and sent the manuscript out to them. A couple months later, I received the rejection letter. This dashed my hopes for a little while. I knew that it was destined to happen, no one gets published right out of the gate, but I had high hopes for myself. I wanted it to be. At this stage, I had already began writing my second book. I was well into it, but now I was unsure. I had doubts, what if I never get published? What am I doing? If I can't get published, then why am I doing this? I have yet to finish the second book. I know exactly what happens and I only have a couple more chapters to go and I will finish, but I need to do it when I am ready to carry on.
Since Arthur A. Levine books, I have found 2 more publishers. I sent it out to one, only to find out that they are a POD, or Print on Demand. This is not what I want for my book. I want a traditional publisher, one that prints it and markets it and pushes it. After strike 2, I found the 2010 edition of the Writer's Market. I began researching the pages to find the perfect publisher, one that would do the things that I needed it to do. I found Black Rose Writing. I submitted my manuscript online to them and got a response. They wanted to read the whole manuscript! I was so excited! I called all of my friends, I jumped up and down in my living room for an hour! I was ecstatic! Then I went online and began a little research of this publishing company. I found some things that I didn't necessarily like. I won't go into the details, as I believe that they would be a good company if they are what you are interested in. As I have said before, I want a traditional publisher that will take my book and provide great illustrations and market it. My hopes were dashed once again.
I began to research online more. I found the 2010 Children's Writer's and Illustrator's Market. I ordered it and when I got it, I began another search, a little more carefully this time. I found Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. tucked away in the pages. I submitted my manuscript to them on April 6, 2010. They respond in three months. This brings me to here, now, today. I am still waiting to hear from this company, but I have my fingers crossed. I will not give up until I have exhausted every single avenue that I go down. Every time I hit a brick wall, I seem to find my way around it. I still get signs that this is what I was intended to do, so I am not giving up. I will continue to write the second book and I will continue to look for the publisher that is right for me. I will continue this and I will take you all along with me, if you are willing to go. One day, you may just be able to say, "I knew her before she was famous!"