One of the hardest things about being an author is putting myself out there. It goes against every self-protective gene in my body. Not to mention coughing up a big loogey on my mother’s manners curriculum.
Today, I’m over on a fellow author’s blog. She’s someone I admire. I have fan-girled over her books on this blog.
Because of that, she’s asked me to read the next book in her young adult science fiction series and it’s a pulse-pounder. I’ve also been privy to a book she’s begun marketing that’s written for adults.
I’m happy to give her partial credit for my acceptance in the anthology she’s helping me promote today. She read the first chapter and shredded it.
When I sent her the rewritten scene, she praised it. Talk about making a writer feel pretty good.
“An amazing author in this genre thinks this is great.” *dancing around the room*
But I’m getting off the topic. There’s two ways that putting myself out there is most difficult.
Putting Stories from my Heart in Harm’s Way
Some of the stories I write are turned out in days for a specific reason. Although there is an element of “me” in them, my heart isn’t fully vested.
A novel that has taken months to write, rewrite, revise and edit? There’s a huge investment of my heart, soul and mind on those pages.
And then the agent rejects them.
The publisher criticizes the story line.
Readers rip on the characters in a review.
Or worse…people read it and then *crickets*
And I don’t want to ask, “What did you think of my book?”
Because if they aren’t bubbling over about it, the words that will answer that inquiry will wound me. Even if they’re spoken kindly.
Bragging about my Books so People Buy Them
Okay, I don’t think I really ever brag about my books.
But I do post links on social media so people can buy them. I run ads. I carry boxes in my car.
I’m eager to make a sale.
And not for the money.
But so I can return to the position mentioned under number one. Because I want my story to burrow into the hearts and minds of readers.
If I had a dozen real fans (meaning they aren’t related to me and probably have never met me in person), I would hyperventilate. A dozen?
That’s how pathetic I am. Because all the big indie book marketers know you need 1000 readers to have a “successful” book.
And your inner circle of dedicated fans should be at least 100 so they will make your next book release amazing. After all, hitting high rankings on Amazon is what it’s all about, right?
Wrong.
And that’s why putting myself out there still feels like walking naked on the stage at high school graduation (not that I KNOW how that feels).
Cold. Embarrassing. Terrifying.
So, if you can give Jennifer a little love today by clicking through and leaving a comment on her blog, that would be like dropping a robe over my shoulders.
If you shared this post with your group of friends on Facebook or Google, this writer couldn’t get more fully clothed.
Have you ever put yourself out there? What was hardest about it?
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