Below are the 8 stages of birthing a novel, and why fiction
writers drink.
THE STAGE OF:
JOY – You are finished your manuscript. Damn, it’s good! The best thing you’ve written, and it’s ALL
DONE! Time to open the Glenlivet.
ANGST - You submit manuscript to your publisher. Yes, even though they’ve already published 5
of your novels, you still don’t know if they will publish this one. Will they like it? Is it as funny as you think it is? Is it garbage? Glenlivet is required to get through the next
few days/weeks.
RELIEF - They send you a contract –
YAY! You are not a has-been! Your baby, which was a year in the making
(not merely 9 months) will have a life!
Glenlivet is required to celebrate.
ASTONISHMENT – The first round of edits
come back. What do you mean you have
substantive changes to make? That story
was PERFECT, dammit! This is the 15th
draft, not the 1st.
Commiserate with other writers over Glenlivet in the bar at the Drake.
CRIPPLING SELF-DOUBT – The changes they
require are impossible. You’ll never be
able to keep it funny/full of high tension, by taking out or changing that
scene. What about the integrity? Motivation? And what’s so darn bad about
being ‘too slapstick,’ anyway? This is
comedy!
Can’t sleep. Look for Glenlivet.
ACCEPTANCE – Okay, you’re rewriting, and somehow
it’s working. Figured out how to work
around their concerns. New scene is not
bad. Not as good as the original, of
course (why couldn’t they see that) but still a good scene. Phew.
You’re still a professional.
Professionals drink Glenlivet, right?
JOY
– They accept all your changes!
YAY! All systems go. This baby
will have a life.
Celebrate the pending birth with a wee dram
of Glenlivet.
ANGST -
Are they kidding? THAT’S the
cover?
Awsom as usual.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tim!
ReplyDelete