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Monday
Jan122009

Realistic Writing Goals

I'm stealing the idea for this blog post outright from CJLA client Mary Ann Scott. I haven't told her quite yet that I am doing so, but I'll probably cave before this goes live, just because I'm a nice person. That and, you know, we work in an era of intellectual property being a good thing to keep an eye on, so I'd hate to cross any lines. You can even go read her post first before hearing my thoughts. In any event, Mary Ann saw an announcement about a book deal on a writers' message board that also happened to speak to the writer's goal of being published in her 20s. It's definitely very impressive--and I myself can claim to have a twinge of jealousy about that one. But of course, there are a lot of factors at play: talent, hard work, and luck. I'm not going to talk about luck, because it's obviously the most elusive factor whether it's trying to get published, or getting a job, or finding the love of your life. Talent can also only get you so far, though. Sure, we hope a certain amount is present that spawns the whole endeavor in the first place. All the luck in the world can't save something that has no spark. And just because it has a spark, doesn't mean it's refined enough to fly. So really it's the work you put in that determines the kind of writer you will be. It's the work that can make the talent really something. And the work that can put you in the right place at the right time (which is the real definition of luck, right?). My grandmother always likes to say, "If you don't put it in, you can't take it out." No effort = no results. Like a diet.  Which means you need goals. Getting published in your 20s might not be a realistic goal, unless you're the most gifted and lucky person on the planet and you start at age 18. And it doesn't pay to take short-cuts either. That why we agents spend so much time hounding you about queries and plot and voice. We want the real deal. Talent AND hard work. The luck part we try to handle for you. So decide what realistic goals are. And don't start with "Getting published." How about:  - writing a book-length work, even if no one sees it ever?  -  perfecting your dialogue?  - getting your narrator to become a three-dimensional character?  - if you're writing a historical novel, how about perfecting your knowledge of that time period? At the end of the day, it's not about how many conferences you go to, or how many agents you query. It's about the product you create, which means you need those craft-based goals. And the hard work should happen before you start querying and continue long after you first get published. To circle back to the beginning of this post, Mary Ann may not have been published in her twenties, but her other goals have certainly gotten her where she is now. Without all that attention to craft, her writing wouldn't be something for me to fall in love with. And trust me, when you read her book (which I promise you will), you'll see that her goals were worth it.  Now...use the comments section to drop in some of your writing goals.

Reader Comments (7)

**Blush** Thanks for the kind words, Elana. And you are dead right about hard work being the key. We always here that persistence is essential, but it must be a dedication to the craft and a persistence in learning about writing and about the business of writing as well. Great post!

January 12, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterghostgirlwrites

My goal for this year is to improve my revision techniques. I have no trouble getting the initial story down, and the second run through goes well, trimming the fat, etc. but I need to get better perspective on how to get to that final, 'as good as I can get it', stage. Cheryl Klein has a great TRUCKS method on her website so I'm in the midst of going through the various stages she suggests from the global picture to the line by line editing.

Very, very helpful.

January 12, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterHelene Boudreau

Okay...I have to laugh at my typo! (see...hard work!) "hear" not "here" Should I add proofreading? LOL

January 12, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterghostgirlwrites

My personal goal was to be published before I hit the big-30 and I did it... but it took a LOT of work. But I digress. Main reason for commenting is that having specified goals is the best way to achieve things but also KNOW that what you've achieved is a real achievement, not something that happened 'by chance'.

January 12, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKate Nash

This is some good insight. I sometimes have a problem with giving myself unrealistic goals. The good thing is I eventually realize that and adjust as needed. I'm due for a second baby in a week and a half and told myself I'd have my new WIP's first draft finished mid March. Haha. Hahaha. I realize now as the baby nesting stage has hit really hard how ridiculous of a goal that is. So I've pushed it to May.

Also wanted to say great post earlier about the queries. I mentioned it on my blog a week ago. Have a great week!

January 12, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterChristaCarol

Great post!

Right now mine would be to finish one and start on another manuscript sometime this year. At this point, I'm not sure how realistic that is. The sad thing is that it's only January.

:-)

January 13, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKat

[...] Roth at Caren Johnson Lit Agency blogged about Writing Realistic Goals…and referenced a great post by Mary Ann Scott. I’m actually part of a goals group (hey [...]

January 16, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLuv YA

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