Gabrielle Wang, as well as being a great writer for kids in her own right, is running a series of guest blogs on how different writers write. Go have a look !
How did you got your first book published?
I made a decision to write seriously – for publication – at the beginning of 1986. I experimented with all sorts of things that year, including Mills & Boon, arrogantly supposing that they would be easy. After all, I’d read a chapter of one when I was babysitting, several years earlier After the rejection of my first 3 sample chapters, I did deign to read five complete romances, but still found it difficult to stick to their formula without irony, and their next rejection letter told me that I did not have ’the magic required for a Mills & Boon romance.” So I decided to stick to writing things I want to write – a resolve that has stood me in good stead.
In November that year I saw an Ashton Scholastic competition for a picture book text. I’d never realised that one could write a picture book text without doing, or organising, the art. My children were still picture book age, and I also used them at work, so as well as loving the genre, I was used to the rhythm and form. I wrote Amanda’s Dinosaur which shared first place and was published in 1988, after I’d rewritten the ending. I think it stayed in print till about 2005, here and in the USA and Canada.
However my Scholastic editor left shortly after takingAmanda’s Dinosaur, and I had about 18 months of rejection letters after that, as well as having a reading scheme accept about 10 books – and return them all when the managing editor was replaced. (In the end they requested and published three of the ten, but it was a very unpleasant experience.) Then I sent The Tin Can Puppy to HarperCollins, where it was read and accepted by my first Scholastic editor! I published eight books with them, including two CBC shortlisted titles:Leaving it to You, and Ark in the Park, which won in 1995.
Did you have a mentor?
The good part about the disastrous reading scheme was that I worked with a couple of excellent editors, who were extremely supportive as well as knowledgeable – I often felt it was a wonderful apprenticeship, and my grief over their being fired was even worse than having the books rejected.
I’ve been writing full time since 1991, and although that decision was forced on me because of
2 Comments on Wendy Orr on How Writers Work | Gabrielle Wang, last added: 11/15/2011
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Wendy,
This is very inspiring. To read about the difficulties you have experienced in publishing makes me feel better about enduring my own, and persisting. I looked for Peeling The Onion today - I work next door to a bookshop (heaven!)- it was not on the shelf but I ordered it. I did get Raven's Mountain, though! I'm looking forward to it.
Thanks again for this great piece.
I hope you enjoy them both – and good luck on your own publishing ventures!