I've been thinking about success a lot lately because my novel debuts this fall. I have many writer friends with varying degrees of success. They range from Alex Flinn, whose novel BEASTLY was turned into a movie, to critique mates still trying to land that first contract. Truthfully, lots of my friends are somewhere in between these two extremes, and finding it just as hard to place that second or third book as it was to sell the first one.
My novel, THE BALLAD OF JESSIE PEARL, just moved from the copyediting phase to typesetting and design. When I read the copyedited version over the weekend, I started to cry. I almost couldn't believe that I had written something this beautiful, (albeit with lots of help from a brilliant editor and a talented copyeditor). In that moment, the enormity that my manuscript was going to become a published book was simply overwhelming, but soon mine won't be the only opinion that matters. Professional reviewers will likely write about my book and to some of them it may not pass muster. Readers may write about my book on Goodreads and it may be a book that some of them don't particularly enjoy. I'm trying to grow a thick skin now and know this is simply part of being a writer.
So what would success look like for THE BALLAD OF JESSIE PEARL?
- I want my family to like it. This novel is based on a family story and I hope my relatives will feel pride in our heritage when they read it.
- I would love to do an author visit to Forbush High School, my alma mater.
- I hope some young girl, wherever she may be, sees a little of herself in Jessie and writes to tell me so.
- I have my fingers crossed that reviewers will like my book so that it'll be used by history teachers.
- But mostly, I need for JESSIE to sell enough copies that I'm not a "one hit wonder!"
Soon I'll start marketing THE BALLAD OF JESSIE PEARL. If you have any marketing tips, leave a comment and help me make JESSIE a success!