Last week we discussed the first few things aspiring writers needed to know about this business. Let’s recap:
- Write
- Decide if this is a career or a hobby.
- Decide your genre
- Decide the medium you want to be published in. Traditional Publishers are falling flat, e-pubs aren’t. Ultimately, you will probably end up in both if you sell well.
The next step I’d take as a new writer would be to learn my craft. Through our first step, we tell stories. Next up, we need to find critique groups. Again, this being geared towards romance writers, I’d suggest Charlotte Dillon’s Resource Page for starters. It’s a good primer for research, getting down formulas for query/synopsis letters and again, that all important aspect: the actual writing.
I’d also suggest you visit the Erotica Readers and Writers Association. They have very active mailing lists. You’ll learn craft, network, and find out about upcoming calls for submissions. Obviously this blog will help you here a great deal too ;)
At this point we have our target market, we’ve received some feedback, we’re ready we think to submit to publishers. If we went the e-route, an agent like Saritza Hernandez may be a good idea but isn’t required. More on why I chose her later. Most of the old standby e-publishers do not require agents to query the way many traditional print publishers do but turnaround time is lengthy in some cases. After you submit your manuscript to an e-publisher they’ll evaluate it in the SAME MANNER as a traditional publisher will. Upon acceptance, a contract is issued, signed by both parties and then the process of taking your story from your fingers to your readers for a profit begins.
While you’re waiting for acceptance (or that dreaded rejection) on one story you ARE still working on another one, right?
Of course you are. You’re improving; you’re learning your craft. Each book gives us a new skill, lesson or piece of the puzzle that helps us become better writers. At the same time you’re crafting your environment and figuring out just how you write best. You’re doing more research on your characters, growing your story lines; do you see a pattern here? And then you’re submitting your finished stories to other publishers.
If you went the traditional route, the only step not included would be the solicitation of an agent who would represent your story or perhaps your entire line of work. Some agents will only pick up the one book from you and gauge future representation based on your track record and how well you work together.
In the end, this is a team effort. Your agent, publicist, publisher(s) all have one goal. See you succeed.
The two books in question:
Fang Bangers: An Erotic anthology of Fangs, Claws, Sex and Love at Amazon
Caressing Caitlyn - A sweet, erotic short story at Amazon
This is a nice intro to how to get published. Critique partners are so important but difficult to find.
ReplyDeleteThanks. Charlotte Dillon, historical romance author, runs a list that does such a thing and if it's still active is a good group.
ReplyDeleteAfter three books with small publishers, I am still trying to find that perfect CP.
ReplyDeleteHave you found a critique partner that is consistent and has worked for you? And how? I am beginning to think, its like everyone else in this writing thing, its either lucky or not :P
Allison Brenson
www.allymassbrenson.com
Bless google.
ReplyDeleteThis is exactly what Ineeded to read today. Have three non-fiction books published but crossing over into a whole new world of erotica. Looking forward to the challenge and awesome that I have a place to seek advice.