I received this letter in my askbetsy box: Dear Ms. Lerner, I’m a writer and blogger, and I’m doing my best to promote my work, get an agent, and move to the next level. Can you tell me why it’s so hard to market and sell a literary novel these days, especially for a nobody like me? I think that writer’s today needs fan’s of their work, people who will fight for them no matter what, but how do you get that to happen?
I’ve had several conversations on my blog about this very issue, if you’d like to check it out. But for someone who has been writing for ten years, building an audience, shaping his work, getting footholds in the literary ezine market… what advice, besides “don’t give up” or “you just have to get lucky” would you give a writer trying to break in for the first time, in this economic climate. Go to graduate school in Iowa, sell a kidney to get into Yaddo, pay a huge fee to go to Breadloaf?
In other words, who do you have to blow around here?
Dear Writer: You’re tired of hearing “don’t give up.” Okay, try this: give up. Walk away. Get out while you’re young cause tramps like us, baby we were born to run. Did I say run? Run like the wind.
I could tell you all the economic reasons why it’s so hard to publish literary fiction. I could tell you about a novel I sent to 32 publishers and couldn’t sell and truly believe it to be the best work of fiction I’ve had the good fortune to work on. That and a token. It’s not hard, it’s nigh impossible. Ask any local bookseller what people are buying, if they’re buying.
Your anguish, frustration, and pain are very real to me. Much of an agent’s work is picking up the pieces (it’s often just as shattering to be published, but that’s a little like telling a single person who wants to get married what a bummer being married can be). But, you know, ten years isn’t really that long. You have to practice the piano longer than that to get to Carnegie Hall.
Is it all about fancy conferences and connections? No, not really. Mostly no. It’s more about luck if you ask me. And since you’re asking, you create your luck. And you’re doing that with your blog, the zine world, etc. Another writer, sitting under a rock, would marvel at your literary life. Everything you’re doing is right.
You may feel that the light is permanently yellow, but it will change. It always does.
Filed under: Rejection, The End of the World as We Know It, Writers |





I am in a very similar situation to your correspondent and I am enjoying it hugely. Everyday brings a new thought, a new revelation, a new inspiring email or comment, tiny breakthroughs. There is no destination, just an amazing journey.
I think publishing success in any genre is a cocktail consisting of a cryptic mixture of talent, tenacity, contacts, timing and luck. Mix well. Drink often.
The real writer is one
who really writes. Talent
is an invention like phlogiston
after the fact of fire.
Work is its own cure. You have to
like it better than being loved.
For the young who want to
Marge Piercy
The Moon is Always Female
Alfred A. Knopf
1981
Evidently, you now have to like it better than being published as well.
“…a novel I sent to 32 publishers and couldn’t sell and truly believe it to be the best work of fiction I’ve had the good fortune to work on.” If this is 100% accurate with no exaggeration, I feel sick.
OK: I wasn’t going to say anything, but since nobody else has mentioned it:
To Yon Blogger Who Wants To Write A Literary Masterpiece, Tip No. 1: Learn the difference between a possessive and a plural. I beg you.
Ha! Wanted to mention that myself, but figured I’m just anal.