Your Fiction Story
I have yet to meet a newbie writer who does not want be a published author, and in the same breath declares their book would make a very good film.
The aspiration, the goals, the glittering success, afternoons spending money we don’t have, building the ultimate home in our day dreams. I do encourage you to keep those crazy dreams, marry the prince, set up a kick starter campaign, do what you need to do. But don’t expect a book deal to get you there.
After a conversation, fueled by too much caffeine, with an agented/ published/book advanced/film optioned author, I suggest that at its core, a book is not a product – it is your heart and soul. For that, it is valuable. Because of that, it is the work itself, not its outcome, that is precious.
My friend told the story of how she had just been dropped from a critic group. She had joined at the invitation of a friend who founded the group. But the endeavor was quickly dominated by two successful authors who were more interested in cultivating a worshipful court than helping the next author achieve either their dream of landing an agent or their dream of creating a coherent plot.
Worship, if you have little else to do, is fine. Boring, but fine. My friend dropped the group because apparently, she was not sufficiently impressed with these two mean girls, and she committed the largest crime possible: she suggested that these authors were not successful because they were brilliant, they were just lucky.
They were not pleased. She was banished from the kingdom.
But she is right.
Between the two of us, we could immediately name many authors, brilliant authors with fabulous books, who never could catch a break. We equally could name okay authors, mediocre authors, who did see their book’s published, caught the break, were lucky.
As much as I want my success to be all about me, my talent and acknowledgment of (finally!) my hard work, it won’t be. Success, particularly in the publishing industry, is about luck. This is a difficult idea to bear, especially if you are not lucky. But I believe it’s far more damaging to not acknowledge the randomness that lies in black heart of book publication. While the Muse will show up on time and consistently, success does not. In fact, there is no god for success, perhaps because success is so difficult to pin down, let alone stand still long enough to model for a marble statue.
When I was younger, every time I head a famous author admit, “I was lucky” I felt it dismissed my own efforts and hard labor. I now know that it’s the bald truth. I was lucky.
Luck is when your book arrives on a Wednesday instead of a Tuesday and the agent is in a much better mood. Luck is when you send in a book on Zombies the minute the publishing team announces they are tired of vampires. Luck is when your book launches September 10th not September 11th. Luck is when you’ve labored for five years to produce a work that hits a public nerve, or captures a gestalt that no one can ever predict.
Ask an author, famous, infamous, obscure, what they are doing. Publication is not the first word on their lips. Writing is.
- I’m writing again.
- I’m working on something new.
- I’m working.
- I’m creating.
- I’m happy.
In the end, writing is all authors have because it’s what we do. How much better to embrace work fully, be creative, not commercial, be passionate, not promotional. Writing is your art and art makes our lives better, fuller, happier. And if that creative work reaches an audience – lucky you.

