When
I first started, long, long ago, I sent bad plays to the BBC, which returned
them with personalised (not standard) rejection letters which told me they
weren’t quite right for them. But always, somewhere in the letter, there was
some sort of encouragement – with some they liked the dialogue or characters,
saw promise in the plot of others, praised my sense of humour. It was always
enough to make me think ‘OK, I’ll try again’. And, one day, it worked and they
broadcast the next five. Then came the novels and, once again, I sent the first
one I wrote to an agent, who liked it and signed me up. He didn’t manage to
place it but I wrote another and he liked that, too. But still there were no
takers. And (unbelievably to me now), I changed agents – just like that. And
the second agent got my third and fourth novels published.
So
that’s what it was like in the good old days.
Today,
the planet is full of writers, some of whom should definitely not quit the day
job but thousands more who are very, very good and deserve to be published. But
driven, understandably, by the need to make a living, agents and publishers don’t
seem to have the time, patience or courage to take on individuals who have no
proven track record. I was told that, if an agent tells a publisher ‘My client
has already had books published’, the response is not ‘Are they any good?’ but
‘Did they sell?’ And so the whole climate is forcing writers to become PR and
marketing specialists and generally whore themselves around.
Which
is fine. In the halcyon days, many writers were unrealistic. They assumed that
society owed them a living. Today, however, we have to resort to different stratagems
such as the FaceBook fan page. I’m not sure how long this has been going on but
there’s now a fad for them. I’m a fan of lots of writers whom I admire there
and I started wondering whether I should start a fan page myself but realised
that all I was doing was duplicating the page I already had.
Instead,
I’ve taken to a marketing strategy which is probably backfiring badly, in part
because of the differences between British and American humour. Brits, as I may
have said before, find it hard to blow their own trumpets, wave flags and
generally talk up things they’ve done, so my way of overcoming that was to
accentuate the negative. For example, for my spoof crime novel, The Sparrow Conundrum, I quoted some
actual comments taken from a peer review of it on a website. They were:
“Your adverbs look corny and misplaced.”
“Your story does not stand up in this
century.”
“You show clearly you know nothing
about IT, mobile phones or modern crime.”
“My personal opinion of your story is
that it is not particularly funny or even marketable.”
The
idea of course, was to suggest that my willingness to relay these opinions was
evidence of how confident I was that they’re wrong. In fact, the book has done
rather well and, at the end of last year, won first prize in the Forward
National Literature Awards for Humor. But I’m still not sure that a marketing
campaign based on bad-mouthing your own product is effective, except in
ensuring that no-one buys it.
5 comments:
Bill, someone said, "Half of all you do to promote works. Problem is, no one knows which half." That doesn't make it easier to decide which routes to take. Best we can do is try them all.
True, Earl. It's beginning to seem, though, that more than half my time is spent (wasted?) on networking and the rest, so I suspect I do know which 'half' is spent on writing - the smaller one.
I know the feeling, Bill--and the frustration. That fear of blowing my own trumpet is why I like sharing books signings with other authors, usually Chester. That way, I can direct people to his books and say how great they are (which they are). Then at the end, I gesture vaguely toward my own and mumble, "Oh, and I wrote that one."
Fortunately, Chester and his lovely wife, Sarah, are generous about drawing attention to mine too.
It may be sacrilegious to suggest this, Beth, but your reticence to flaunt yourself sounds suspiciously British.
Equally, though, I'm always pleasantly surprised at how generous most writers are to one another and the interaction between you and Chester is yet another proof.
I have always been something of an Anglophile, Bill, so I take that as a compliment.
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