Since then, I've gotten a lot of positive feedback, and I'm scheduled to speak about my experience at a local college. The ripples keep spreading.
Also, I continue to work on my book. The popular perception is that authors sit down once a week and write 40 or 50 pages, but actually, I've read that authors might just write 400-500 words a day, and over time, the pages add up. The secret, though, is to write every day. That's the hard part.
For over a month, my daily routine has been to get to work two hours before school begins to take care of lesson plans for my classes and then spend each evening writing after work. I've gained newfound respect for the work of authors. It isn't easy writing each day, especially when a person is tired or would rather watch mindless television.
I've made a lot of progress and hope to have my first draft done by the end of the month.
One of the things I learned in
I'm hoping that six degrees of separation comes through for me. Six degrees of separation is the theory that any person in the world is connected to any other person in the world through at most five acquaintances. If that's true, then someone reading my blog is either a publisher or connected through a friend of a friend of a friend to a publisher.
Let's see what happens. Life's short. Why not be bold.
Recommendation: Get a copy of Writer's Market or read it at your library. It will take you step-by-step through the process of finding a publisher. (That might be a little more efficient than sending a call into the universe, but who knows...)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the recommendation. I do plan on getting a copy of Writer's Market, but after my experiences this summer, I thought it would also be advantageous to send out a request on my blog.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your helpful comment.