There was a time when I took editorial rejection personally, allowing Dear Writer letters send me into a tailspin of despair. Having my work passed – even with praise – was so painful, that for a while I stopped submitting entirely – and delayed becoming published as a result.
Then, at a dinner party, I met a writer who had made it his goal to amass one hundred rejections in a single year. In the process, he placed eight stories.
By then, I was no longer writing short stories, but novels, and was seeking an agent. I researched likely matches, queried several at a time, received multiple requests for my manuscript, and eventually had two different agents interested in my work. Suddenly, I had a choice.
In hindsight, I can now see that in those early days of sending out short stories, I made three critical mistakes.
- I sent out too few submissions;
- I didn’t follow up on passes with personal notes;
- I took the rejections personally.
TOO FEW SUBMISSIONS
I sent my short stories to five journals total, rather than five journals at a time. Simultaneous submissions are nearly universally accepted these days, and there are many journals, both print and on-line, that accept them. But the truth is, many are inundated with submissions, and response time can be long. So it’s a good practice to identify up to a dozen or so journals that would be a good match for your work. It even helps to think of the editors as your audience. In fact, they are. Whatever you do to make their job easier increases your changes of having your work read.
Three simple ways to please a first reader include:
- Send only the kind of work their magazine asks for;
- Follow their submission guidelines exactly;
- Make sure your work is not only your best, but also properly formatted. (I’ve judged contests, and I can tell you: formatting matters).
Because editors are often inundated with submissions, because reading is subjective, and because journals may have specific needs, your submission might not make the cut this time. As soon as you hear from one magazine, send the story out to another. Have a list of suitable places for each story, and keep the story in circulation until either it places or you exhaust your initial list.
FOLLOW UP ON PERSONAL NOTES
Most of my stories were rejected with personal notes from editors who said something positive about my work. Rather than send them another story while my work was fresh in the editor’s mind, I wallowed in self-pity, which felt good at the time. But it’s really self-indulgent and counterproductive.
Especially at the beginning of the submission process, before you have any stories published, it’s good to think of sending out stories as a way of introducing yourself to the journals you’ve identified as a good fit for your voice. Consider submissions as a kind of networking, and when an editor responds, follow up with more work. Editors are human, and relationships matter.
DON’T TAKE REJECTIONS PERSONALLY
Reading is personal; selection for publication subjective. Just because a journal didn’t take your short story doesn’t mean it’s not any good; it really means it’s not right for that journal at that moment in time.
That said, if you strike out a dozen times with one story, read it again. Ask others to read it. And if you ask others for feedback, listen to what they have to say.
One of the hardest and most important skills to develop as a writer is listening to your readers’ responses without defending your work. But that’s the subject of another post.
Deborah Lee Luskin started submitting in the snail mail era, and amassed enough rejection slips to wallpaper a small house. Learn more at www.deborahleeluskin.com
alifeofmentalillness says
Getting published, and writing a blog, are numbers games. Just like sales, the more contacts and submissions made, the more acceptances. We writers who want to get published, or host good blogs, just have to keep submitting and posting.
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Yes, we have to keep submitting and posting. But it’s not just a numbers game; quality counts.
Thanks for your comment.
Chris White says
Ah yes … snail mail and rejection slips. Sheer torture. I’ve not submitted online yet but the reading queues must be enormous.
All the best. Really enjoy your blog. Kris.
http://www.awritersden.wordpress.com
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Don’t worry about the length of the queue; just submit your best work – and keep writing!
برمجة مواقع says
great
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Thanks.
Emi says
I used to give my stories to my friends and family to read and I can say it is the worst thing you can do because they love you and everything you do is good to them. It wasn’t until I gave my work to people who are writing themselves and are not close to me that I realised what I was doing wrong. So that would be my suggestion even though it may hurt your feelings a little bit. But it’s better to do that than to get rejected by publishers and wonder why.
Thank you for your post. Emilia.
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Learning how to get useful response is clearly a topic for a future post. And there are ways to make it helpful rather than hurtful. Thanks for reading the blog.
ReadersDoor says
yes true !
wheremyfeetare says
I like the goal of 100 rejections in a year. I remember hearing an interview on NPR about a cartoonist who submitted a carton to the New Yorker every week. I think he submitted something like 550 cartoons before the next one was accepted. I haven’t submitted anything in quite awhile but will refer back to this post when I do. Thanks!
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Persistence!
blackntopeka says
Thank you for such great advice! I have been trying to get published, but I have not submitted to very many places. I’m hoping that my blog will help me to build up my platform and my confidence.
Deborah Lee Luskin says
You’re welcome. Platform and confidence are important – as is practice and craft. Keep writing!
Russell J. Fellows says
Great advice. I hadn’t really thought about sending to multiple places at a time or to send more work after a rejection email. Thanks.
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Glad you found the post helpful. Thanks for reading it.
Katie Robles says
You chose the wrong title for this post, Deborah. These are good tips for working through rejection, not accepting it! Good advice.
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Glad you found the post helpful, even if you don’t like the title!
Roly Andrews says
Thanks for the blog – my first first novel pitched attracted 150 rejections – my second 250 – but that was 15 years ago (and please don’t tell anyone – but in hindsight they weren’t that good!). But the rejections taught me to be resilient, be ballsy and brave and to be a better writer. Keep at it and trust in your abilities.
Deborah Lee Luskin says
Isn’t hindsight wonderful?! Yes, keep at it – it’s your best chance for improvement and readers. Thanks for your comment.
rebeccawalden says
Reblogged this on Rebirth of Whimsy and commented:
Read and be hopeful writers! We can do this, keep the submission emails aflying!
Lynda McKinney Lambert says
What good advice, Chris.
sponny29 says
Very interesting read! Very good read! I am in my mid 30’s and have gotten off to a late start due to military service and education. I love to write but do not know how to get started or who to contact. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Andrew says
I am going to start on that first goal of 100 rejections.
amcmulin914 says
Wonderful advice
D.G.Kaye says
Thanks for sharing this wonderful post full of helpful info Deborah. 🙂