Should I self-publish my novella on Amazon or try my luck getting publishers?How does the 10,000 hour rule apply to writing?Pros and Cons of different styles of publishingWhat's the distinction between “vanity publishing” and “self publishing”?Does self publishing via Amazon or similar services make your book ineligible for later acceptance by a publisher?which genres are more successful, publication figures?How to self-publish?Self-publishing on AmazonHow to self-publish for free?Is There a Legal Age to Publish a Manga/Comic?Self Publishing vs Mainstream PublisherHow overcome the budget constraint while building a fiction writing career?Simultaneous querying to publishers and agents

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Should I self-publish my novella on Amazon or try my luck getting publishers?


How does the 10,000 hour rule apply to writing?Pros and Cons of different styles of publishingWhat's the distinction between “vanity publishing” and “self publishing”?Does self publishing via Amazon or similar services make your book ineligible for later acceptance by a publisher?which genres are more successful, publication figures?How to self-publish?Self-publishing on AmazonHow to self-publish for free?Is There a Legal Age to Publish a Manga/Comic?Self Publishing vs Mainstream PublisherHow overcome the budget constraint while building a fiction writing career?Simultaneous querying to publishers and agents






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








32















I have completed my novellas first draft which is 32k words long. For all the reasons, I was doing research as to whether self-publish or try my luck getting a publisher.



I should tell you that I am a complete novice at writing fiction books and publishing. This is my first book. The genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.



This blog answer (Vic Connor) says, (also I read many similar answers on the internet)




So if you have a choice between publishing now, or entering the query
/ twiddle your thumbs / get rejected carousel, then publish now.




So, what is my best bet as far as getting readers to read my story? What should I aim at before proceeding to proofread (probably paid) and designing the cover and importantly learn the book publishing game?



I want to make a decision now, whether self-publish or find a publisher?










share|improve this question





















  • 30





    I don't have an answer for your direct question, but I have a suggestion. If your goal is publication, I think at minimum you should get beta readers and then go through another draft of your book. Proofreading for errors now without that step would be like using a fine-grit sandpaper right after your wood has gone through a table saw. You'll get the grammatical errors out but will not have addressed any structural issues.

    – wordsworth
    Aug 7 at 14:08











  • Just thought I'd stress this: the answer for a novella might be different from an answer regarding a novel, or a short story. Also, your genre might be relevant. What genre are you writing in?

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 14:09











  • @Galastel the genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.

    – Bodhisagar
    Aug 7 at 14:26






  • 6





    This is a good question but one that's been asked before. I'm going to hold off on a VTC as a duplicate solely because your work being a novella might make a difference. But I'd like to see what the community thinks. This question is very similar and the answers should be quite helpful to you. Congrats on finishing your first draft. writing.stackexchange.com/questions/3612/…

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:31

















32















I have completed my novellas first draft which is 32k words long. For all the reasons, I was doing research as to whether self-publish or try my luck getting a publisher.



I should tell you that I am a complete novice at writing fiction books and publishing. This is my first book. The genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.



This blog answer (Vic Connor) says, (also I read many similar answers on the internet)




So if you have a choice between publishing now, or entering the query
/ twiddle your thumbs / get rejected carousel, then publish now.




So, what is my best bet as far as getting readers to read my story? What should I aim at before proceeding to proofread (probably paid) and designing the cover and importantly learn the book publishing game?



I want to make a decision now, whether self-publish or find a publisher?










share|improve this question





















  • 30





    I don't have an answer for your direct question, but I have a suggestion. If your goal is publication, I think at minimum you should get beta readers and then go through another draft of your book. Proofreading for errors now without that step would be like using a fine-grit sandpaper right after your wood has gone through a table saw. You'll get the grammatical errors out but will not have addressed any structural issues.

    – wordsworth
    Aug 7 at 14:08











  • Just thought I'd stress this: the answer for a novella might be different from an answer regarding a novel, or a short story. Also, your genre might be relevant. What genre are you writing in?

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 14:09











  • @Galastel the genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.

    – Bodhisagar
    Aug 7 at 14:26






  • 6





    This is a good question but one that's been asked before. I'm going to hold off on a VTC as a duplicate solely because your work being a novella might make a difference. But I'd like to see what the community thinks. This question is very similar and the answers should be quite helpful to you. Congrats on finishing your first draft. writing.stackexchange.com/questions/3612/…

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:31













32












32








32


8






I have completed my novellas first draft which is 32k words long. For all the reasons, I was doing research as to whether self-publish or try my luck getting a publisher.



I should tell you that I am a complete novice at writing fiction books and publishing. This is my first book. The genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.



This blog answer (Vic Connor) says, (also I read many similar answers on the internet)




So if you have a choice between publishing now, or entering the query
/ twiddle your thumbs / get rejected carousel, then publish now.




So, what is my best bet as far as getting readers to read my story? What should I aim at before proceeding to proofread (probably paid) and designing the cover and importantly learn the book publishing game?



I want to make a decision now, whether self-publish or find a publisher?










share|improve this question
















I have completed my novellas first draft which is 32k words long. For all the reasons, I was doing research as to whether self-publish or try my luck getting a publisher.



I should tell you that I am a complete novice at writing fiction books and publishing. This is my first book. The genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.



This blog answer (Vic Connor) says, (also I read many similar answers on the internet)




So if you have a choice between publishing now, or entering the query
/ twiddle your thumbs / get rejected carousel, then publish now.




So, what is my best bet as far as getting readers to read my story? What should I aim at before proceeding to proofread (probably paid) and designing the cover and importantly learn the book publishing game?



I want to make a decision now, whether self-publish or find a publisher?







publishing self-publishing novella






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 7 at 15:27









Cyn

28.7k3 gold badges65 silver badges130 bronze badges




28.7k3 gold badges65 silver badges130 bronze badges










asked Aug 7 at 13:52









BodhisagarBodhisagar

1,1116 silver badges24 bronze badges




1,1116 silver badges24 bronze badges










  • 30





    I don't have an answer for your direct question, but I have a suggestion. If your goal is publication, I think at minimum you should get beta readers and then go through another draft of your book. Proofreading for errors now without that step would be like using a fine-grit sandpaper right after your wood has gone through a table saw. You'll get the grammatical errors out but will not have addressed any structural issues.

    – wordsworth
    Aug 7 at 14:08











  • Just thought I'd stress this: the answer for a novella might be different from an answer regarding a novel, or a short story. Also, your genre might be relevant. What genre are you writing in?

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 14:09











  • @Galastel the genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.

    – Bodhisagar
    Aug 7 at 14:26






  • 6





    This is a good question but one that's been asked before. I'm going to hold off on a VTC as a duplicate solely because your work being a novella might make a difference. But I'd like to see what the community thinks. This question is very similar and the answers should be quite helpful to you. Congrats on finishing your first draft. writing.stackexchange.com/questions/3612/…

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:31












  • 30





    I don't have an answer for your direct question, but I have a suggestion. If your goal is publication, I think at minimum you should get beta readers and then go through another draft of your book. Proofreading for errors now without that step would be like using a fine-grit sandpaper right after your wood has gone through a table saw. You'll get the grammatical errors out but will not have addressed any structural issues.

    – wordsworth
    Aug 7 at 14:08











  • Just thought I'd stress this: the answer for a novella might be different from an answer regarding a novel, or a short story. Also, your genre might be relevant. What genre are you writing in?

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 14:09











  • @Galastel the genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.

    – Bodhisagar
    Aug 7 at 14:26






  • 6





    This is a good question but one that's been asked before. I'm going to hold off on a VTC as a duplicate solely because your work being a novella might make a difference. But I'd like to see what the community thinks. This question is very similar and the answers should be quite helpful to you. Congrats on finishing your first draft. writing.stackexchange.com/questions/3612/…

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:31







30




30





I don't have an answer for your direct question, but I have a suggestion. If your goal is publication, I think at minimum you should get beta readers and then go through another draft of your book. Proofreading for errors now without that step would be like using a fine-grit sandpaper right after your wood has gone through a table saw. You'll get the grammatical errors out but will not have addressed any structural issues.

– wordsworth
Aug 7 at 14:08





I don't have an answer for your direct question, but I have a suggestion. If your goal is publication, I think at minimum you should get beta readers and then go through another draft of your book. Proofreading for errors now without that step would be like using a fine-grit sandpaper right after your wood has gone through a table saw. You'll get the grammatical errors out but will not have addressed any structural issues.

– wordsworth
Aug 7 at 14:08













Just thought I'd stress this: the answer for a novella might be different from an answer regarding a novel, or a short story. Also, your genre might be relevant. What genre are you writing in?

– Galastel
Aug 7 at 14:09





Just thought I'd stress this: the answer for a novella might be different from an answer regarding a novel, or a short story. Also, your genre might be relevant. What genre are you writing in?

– Galastel
Aug 7 at 14:09













@Galastel the genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.

– Bodhisagar
Aug 7 at 14:26





@Galastel the genre is general fiction, a self-help book with a side story of suspense.

– Bodhisagar
Aug 7 at 14:26




6




6





This is a good question but one that's been asked before. I'm going to hold off on a VTC as a duplicate solely because your work being a novella might make a difference. But I'd like to see what the community thinks. This question is very similar and the answers should be quite helpful to you. Congrats on finishing your first draft. writing.stackexchange.com/questions/3612/…

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:31





This is a good question but one that's been asked before. I'm going to hold off on a VTC as a duplicate solely because your work being a novella might make a difference. But I'd like to see what the community thinks. This question is very similar and the answers should be quite helpful to you. Congrats on finishing your first draft. writing.stackexchange.com/questions/3612/…

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:31










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















48














Unfortunately, the word count of your work means that traditional publishers will not be interested. Even well-established authors like Stephen King publish their novella-length work only as part of larger collections, not as stand-alone works. Also unfortunately, a self-published novella by an unknown author will vanish without a trace on Amazon, unless you just so happen to be an amazing self-promoter.



Does this mean there's no hope for your book or for your writing career? No, you have many options:




  • Make it shorter or cut it up. Maybe, with some great editing, you could cut away all the flab and carve a really solid, impressive short story out of this (around 7500 words or less). Maybe you could even get two or more out of it. Short stories have many potential markets, and are often a better way for a new writer to break into the market.


  • Make it longer, or combine it with something else. Maybe this could be expanded into a full-length novel. Or, if not, maybe you could write another novella --particularly if they are related --and try to sell them together. There are many successful books that are essentially two or more related novellas packaged together, and Stephen King's noted collection Different Seasons contained three (unrelated) novellas that each became blockbuster movies.


  • Change the format. Maybe your story would make a great screenplay, or script for a graphic novel, both of which are much shorter than the typical novel in terms of written material.


  • Target a younger audience. If your book is appropriate for children, sell it as a children's novel. These are sometimes the same length as adult novels, but can often be considerably shorter. Would the same storyline work if you made the protagonist a child or a teenager?


  • Chalk this one up as a learning experience. We all think we're going to be that one person who writes an eternal bestseller on the first time out of the gate --that was certainly my expectation. But that's not most people's experience. I have several completed, unpublished novels. I'm not sorry I wrote them, but by this point, I'm glad they never made it out into the world with my name on them.


  • Build a reputation. Self-publishing can work --if people know who you are. Conversely, if you have a good reputation, publishers will take a chance on projects they would turn down from an unknown. So how do you become known? Write a lot.

    • Becoming known as a great short-story writer first has been the avenue towards novels for many authors, particularly in science fiction.

    • There's a book called Write. Publish. Repeat. that shows how just being prolific can lead to reliable success in self-publishing.

    • Many writers have gone onto success after honing their skills and building a fan-base by participating frequently in fan-fiction writing communities.

    • If you write a lot, you'll become a better writer, and more in control of your craft. That, in turn, may expand your options on what to do with your existing novella.






share|improve this answer






















  • 15





    Yes! An answer that is targeted for novellas.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 17:32






  • 5





    @cool_bodhi That should be a new question. (You can certainly quote from other works but 10% seems too much in normal circumstances.)

    – Raidri
    Aug 8 at 14:42






  • 5





    If you're asking my advice, I would NOT move forward with this project at all. Treat it as a learning experience, and start on the next book. 32K words, and 15% of that is copied from other sources? That's not a book, that's some excerpts bridged together... And if you get a reputation for plagiarism, you can forget about ever publishing again. It's one of the biggest crimes in the literary world.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 8 at 15:03







  • 1





    @Blueriver I have finished, rejected novels. For me the problem is by finishing the novel, the fire is out for a rewrite. I've gotten other ideas, and though I was obsessed with those stories when I wrote them, I am more excited by new ideas that would be new works of art. If I were the type of writer that could follow an outline, I might outline them and start over, but following an outline just isn't fun for me, it turns into a chore.

    – Amadeus
    Aug 8 at 22:38






  • 1





    @Blueriver - I'm still working my way towards a publishable novel. I hope it will be the one I'm currently working on. I shopped most of the earlier ones around to publishers and agents, but unsuccessfully. I reworked some of the previous ones for years until I felt it was no longer productive. None of that is to say I might not revisit them in the future. The current project is based on ideas I've been thinking about for more than a decade now.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 9 at 13:29


















28














I will disagree with the advice you received.



The vast majority of self-published fiction earns nothing, or at best some friend and family sympathy purchases. The case is even worse for un-marketed self-published fiction.



To self-publish, you are responsible for developing the marketing materials and artwork, for figuring out where to post ads, for paying for ads, for figuring out how to produce and distribute your work, for making yourself a website that takes payments, and even many people that have accomplished all of that still languish in the single-digit sales per month, and many spend more selling their work than they earn from selling it. It becomes a maintenance nightmare, and the most likely result is you are running a failing business instead of writing.



Agents are free, publishers are free. Going the traditional route costs you nothing but time. It is very true that your chances here are also very low, BUT it doesn't have to cost you a dime, not even postage anymore, all it costs is time learning to write a query, synopsis, and where to find agents. You might get some feedback, and you shouldn't be "twiddling your thumbs" on anything but the space bar, you can be writing while you wait and trying to improve your craft.



If you don't find representation, self-publishing is an option in your back pocket. But if you get professionally published in some venue, you have partners that are professionals and will pitch in time and money in getting your work out there. The business end IS their business (both the agent and publisher), and that frees you up to write, which I presume you enjoy.



Try to go the traditional route first. Self-publishing is for the ego-trip.



If you get published you will get an advance, and if you sell more than 3000 copies you will be considered a success by the agent and publisher and they will want to publish your next (equally good) novel, because now you have name recognition amongst a small group, which they hope to grow. And unlike yourself, they are professionals with centuries of experience, collectively, at marketing books and growing an author's audience.






share|improve this answer






















  • 6





    Self-publishing can also be for very established writers with a strong following (especially online). But yeah, it's not a good first choice in most cases.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:58











  • "Self-publishing is for the ego-trip." yep, but worth pointing out that itself can be very enjoyable, and depending on the genre/niche, the only possible way to get published.

    – Orangesandlemons
    Aug 9 at 13:46


















20














You say that this is your first book.



About 16% of writers manage to get their first novel published traditionally (i.e. through a publisher). The other 84% write between one and twenty books before they achieve the quality necessary to get published traditionally (source).



And those that get published – no matter if it's their first attempt or their fifth – usually have been working with language for years before they do. Many published fiction authors have been writing in other genres before they get published. They have polished their writing skills by being journalists, lawyers, scholars, and working in many other jobs where they have to write.



But writers do not only need to train their writing skills before they achieve mastery (and publishability), they apparently also need maturity. The majority of writers don't get published before they reach 30 years of age, the mean age being somewhere around 40 years old (source), and many don't get published before the second half of their lives.



I don't know your level of life experience, and I don't know how well you write, but it is quite likely that your first effort isn't good enough to be published. In writing, as in every other art, craft, or skill, the first efforts are usually failures. Few people can draw a human likeness on their first attempt, few people manage to play the violin without many hours of learning, few people can drive a car without taking lessons. Writing isn't different. Many aspiring writers confuse the ability to produce written text with the skill required to write fiction. It is not the same. And you need to learn it.



So, what do I recommend, not having read your work?



  1. Get feedback from some critical and competent beta readers. If they shower you in praise, submit your manuscript to relevant publishers. If not:


  2. Do not self-publish. One of my country's most popular authors has given me this advice: Do not waste great ideas on premature self-publications. If your beta readers tell you that your writing sucks, self-publishing will not make it better, and no one will buy your failed first attempt. But after a few more books written as practice, you'll have the skill to rewrite that great idea and get it published. Because, while ideas are cheap, ideas that are close to your heart are rare and shouldn't be wasted.


  3. So either re-write and re-write and re-write your first book until your beta readers shower you in praise, or write the next book and the next and the next, until they do. Either way, keep on writing until you achieve mastery.


  4. Then publish. And when you are ready, it doesn't matter whether you self-publish or publish traditionally. The only difference is the amount of work you'll have to put into marketing. If you're good at that, self-publish. If not, not.






share|improve this answer






















  • 1





    I love how you imply that the "second half" of life doesn't start until well past 40. Though I upvoted it for other reasons (mostly the stats).

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:33






  • 1





    @Cyn Average lifespan in developed countries is ~80. Past 40 would be exactly the "second half". I rather prefer thinking of "past 60" as "second half", but that's me. :)

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 15:52











  • @Galastel Maybe I spend too much time with teenagers (DD and friends) :-)

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:55













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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









48














Unfortunately, the word count of your work means that traditional publishers will not be interested. Even well-established authors like Stephen King publish their novella-length work only as part of larger collections, not as stand-alone works. Also unfortunately, a self-published novella by an unknown author will vanish without a trace on Amazon, unless you just so happen to be an amazing self-promoter.



Does this mean there's no hope for your book or for your writing career? No, you have many options:




  • Make it shorter or cut it up. Maybe, with some great editing, you could cut away all the flab and carve a really solid, impressive short story out of this (around 7500 words or less). Maybe you could even get two or more out of it. Short stories have many potential markets, and are often a better way for a new writer to break into the market.


  • Make it longer, or combine it with something else. Maybe this could be expanded into a full-length novel. Or, if not, maybe you could write another novella --particularly if they are related --and try to sell them together. There are many successful books that are essentially two or more related novellas packaged together, and Stephen King's noted collection Different Seasons contained three (unrelated) novellas that each became blockbuster movies.


  • Change the format. Maybe your story would make a great screenplay, or script for a graphic novel, both of which are much shorter than the typical novel in terms of written material.


  • Target a younger audience. If your book is appropriate for children, sell it as a children's novel. These are sometimes the same length as adult novels, but can often be considerably shorter. Would the same storyline work if you made the protagonist a child or a teenager?


  • Chalk this one up as a learning experience. We all think we're going to be that one person who writes an eternal bestseller on the first time out of the gate --that was certainly my expectation. But that's not most people's experience. I have several completed, unpublished novels. I'm not sorry I wrote them, but by this point, I'm glad they never made it out into the world with my name on them.


  • Build a reputation. Self-publishing can work --if people know who you are. Conversely, if you have a good reputation, publishers will take a chance on projects they would turn down from an unknown. So how do you become known? Write a lot.

    • Becoming known as a great short-story writer first has been the avenue towards novels for many authors, particularly in science fiction.

    • There's a book called Write. Publish. Repeat. that shows how just being prolific can lead to reliable success in self-publishing.

    • Many writers have gone onto success after honing their skills and building a fan-base by participating frequently in fan-fiction writing communities.

    • If you write a lot, you'll become a better writer, and more in control of your craft. That, in turn, may expand your options on what to do with your existing novella.






share|improve this answer






















  • 15





    Yes! An answer that is targeted for novellas.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 17:32






  • 5





    @cool_bodhi That should be a new question. (You can certainly quote from other works but 10% seems too much in normal circumstances.)

    – Raidri
    Aug 8 at 14:42






  • 5





    If you're asking my advice, I would NOT move forward with this project at all. Treat it as a learning experience, and start on the next book. 32K words, and 15% of that is copied from other sources? That's not a book, that's some excerpts bridged together... And if you get a reputation for plagiarism, you can forget about ever publishing again. It's one of the biggest crimes in the literary world.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 8 at 15:03







  • 1





    @Blueriver I have finished, rejected novels. For me the problem is by finishing the novel, the fire is out for a rewrite. I've gotten other ideas, and though I was obsessed with those stories when I wrote them, I am more excited by new ideas that would be new works of art. If I were the type of writer that could follow an outline, I might outline them and start over, but following an outline just isn't fun for me, it turns into a chore.

    – Amadeus
    Aug 8 at 22:38






  • 1





    @Blueriver - I'm still working my way towards a publishable novel. I hope it will be the one I'm currently working on. I shopped most of the earlier ones around to publishers and agents, but unsuccessfully. I reworked some of the previous ones for years until I felt it was no longer productive. None of that is to say I might not revisit them in the future. The current project is based on ideas I've been thinking about for more than a decade now.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 9 at 13:29















48














Unfortunately, the word count of your work means that traditional publishers will not be interested. Even well-established authors like Stephen King publish their novella-length work only as part of larger collections, not as stand-alone works. Also unfortunately, a self-published novella by an unknown author will vanish without a trace on Amazon, unless you just so happen to be an amazing self-promoter.



Does this mean there's no hope for your book or for your writing career? No, you have many options:




  • Make it shorter or cut it up. Maybe, with some great editing, you could cut away all the flab and carve a really solid, impressive short story out of this (around 7500 words or less). Maybe you could even get two or more out of it. Short stories have many potential markets, and are often a better way for a new writer to break into the market.


  • Make it longer, or combine it with something else. Maybe this could be expanded into a full-length novel. Or, if not, maybe you could write another novella --particularly if they are related --and try to sell them together. There are many successful books that are essentially two or more related novellas packaged together, and Stephen King's noted collection Different Seasons contained three (unrelated) novellas that each became blockbuster movies.


  • Change the format. Maybe your story would make a great screenplay, or script for a graphic novel, both of which are much shorter than the typical novel in terms of written material.


  • Target a younger audience. If your book is appropriate for children, sell it as a children's novel. These are sometimes the same length as adult novels, but can often be considerably shorter. Would the same storyline work if you made the protagonist a child or a teenager?


  • Chalk this one up as a learning experience. We all think we're going to be that one person who writes an eternal bestseller on the first time out of the gate --that was certainly my expectation. But that's not most people's experience. I have several completed, unpublished novels. I'm not sorry I wrote them, but by this point, I'm glad they never made it out into the world with my name on them.


  • Build a reputation. Self-publishing can work --if people know who you are. Conversely, if you have a good reputation, publishers will take a chance on projects they would turn down from an unknown. So how do you become known? Write a lot.

    • Becoming known as a great short-story writer first has been the avenue towards novels for many authors, particularly in science fiction.

    • There's a book called Write. Publish. Repeat. that shows how just being prolific can lead to reliable success in self-publishing.

    • Many writers have gone onto success after honing their skills and building a fan-base by participating frequently in fan-fiction writing communities.

    • If you write a lot, you'll become a better writer, and more in control of your craft. That, in turn, may expand your options on what to do with your existing novella.






share|improve this answer






















  • 15





    Yes! An answer that is targeted for novellas.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 17:32






  • 5





    @cool_bodhi That should be a new question. (You can certainly quote from other works but 10% seems too much in normal circumstances.)

    – Raidri
    Aug 8 at 14:42






  • 5





    If you're asking my advice, I would NOT move forward with this project at all. Treat it as a learning experience, and start on the next book. 32K words, and 15% of that is copied from other sources? That's not a book, that's some excerpts bridged together... And if you get a reputation for plagiarism, you can forget about ever publishing again. It's one of the biggest crimes in the literary world.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 8 at 15:03







  • 1





    @Blueriver I have finished, rejected novels. For me the problem is by finishing the novel, the fire is out for a rewrite. I've gotten other ideas, and though I was obsessed with those stories when I wrote them, I am more excited by new ideas that would be new works of art. If I were the type of writer that could follow an outline, I might outline them and start over, but following an outline just isn't fun for me, it turns into a chore.

    – Amadeus
    Aug 8 at 22:38






  • 1





    @Blueriver - I'm still working my way towards a publishable novel. I hope it will be the one I'm currently working on. I shopped most of the earlier ones around to publishers and agents, but unsuccessfully. I reworked some of the previous ones for years until I felt it was no longer productive. None of that is to say I might not revisit them in the future. The current project is based on ideas I've been thinking about for more than a decade now.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 9 at 13:29













48












48








48







Unfortunately, the word count of your work means that traditional publishers will not be interested. Even well-established authors like Stephen King publish their novella-length work only as part of larger collections, not as stand-alone works. Also unfortunately, a self-published novella by an unknown author will vanish without a trace on Amazon, unless you just so happen to be an amazing self-promoter.



Does this mean there's no hope for your book or for your writing career? No, you have many options:




  • Make it shorter or cut it up. Maybe, with some great editing, you could cut away all the flab and carve a really solid, impressive short story out of this (around 7500 words or less). Maybe you could even get two or more out of it. Short stories have many potential markets, and are often a better way for a new writer to break into the market.


  • Make it longer, or combine it with something else. Maybe this could be expanded into a full-length novel. Or, if not, maybe you could write another novella --particularly if they are related --and try to sell them together. There are many successful books that are essentially two or more related novellas packaged together, and Stephen King's noted collection Different Seasons contained three (unrelated) novellas that each became blockbuster movies.


  • Change the format. Maybe your story would make a great screenplay, or script for a graphic novel, both of which are much shorter than the typical novel in terms of written material.


  • Target a younger audience. If your book is appropriate for children, sell it as a children's novel. These are sometimes the same length as adult novels, but can often be considerably shorter. Would the same storyline work if you made the protagonist a child or a teenager?


  • Chalk this one up as a learning experience. We all think we're going to be that one person who writes an eternal bestseller on the first time out of the gate --that was certainly my expectation. But that's not most people's experience. I have several completed, unpublished novels. I'm not sorry I wrote them, but by this point, I'm glad they never made it out into the world with my name on them.


  • Build a reputation. Self-publishing can work --if people know who you are. Conversely, if you have a good reputation, publishers will take a chance on projects they would turn down from an unknown. So how do you become known? Write a lot.

    • Becoming known as a great short-story writer first has been the avenue towards novels for many authors, particularly in science fiction.

    • There's a book called Write. Publish. Repeat. that shows how just being prolific can lead to reliable success in self-publishing.

    • Many writers have gone onto success after honing their skills and building a fan-base by participating frequently in fan-fiction writing communities.

    • If you write a lot, you'll become a better writer, and more in control of your craft. That, in turn, may expand your options on what to do with your existing novella.






share|improve this answer















Unfortunately, the word count of your work means that traditional publishers will not be interested. Even well-established authors like Stephen King publish their novella-length work only as part of larger collections, not as stand-alone works. Also unfortunately, a self-published novella by an unknown author will vanish without a trace on Amazon, unless you just so happen to be an amazing self-promoter.



Does this mean there's no hope for your book or for your writing career? No, you have many options:




  • Make it shorter or cut it up. Maybe, with some great editing, you could cut away all the flab and carve a really solid, impressive short story out of this (around 7500 words or less). Maybe you could even get two or more out of it. Short stories have many potential markets, and are often a better way for a new writer to break into the market.


  • Make it longer, or combine it with something else. Maybe this could be expanded into a full-length novel. Or, if not, maybe you could write another novella --particularly if they are related --and try to sell them together. There are many successful books that are essentially two or more related novellas packaged together, and Stephen King's noted collection Different Seasons contained three (unrelated) novellas that each became blockbuster movies.


  • Change the format. Maybe your story would make a great screenplay, or script for a graphic novel, both of which are much shorter than the typical novel in terms of written material.


  • Target a younger audience. If your book is appropriate for children, sell it as a children's novel. These are sometimes the same length as adult novels, but can often be considerably shorter. Would the same storyline work if you made the protagonist a child or a teenager?


  • Chalk this one up as a learning experience. We all think we're going to be that one person who writes an eternal bestseller on the first time out of the gate --that was certainly my expectation. But that's not most people's experience. I have several completed, unpublished novels. I'm not sorry I wrote them, but by this point, I'm glad they never made it out into the world with my name on them.


  • Build a reputation. Self-publishing can work --if people know who you are. Conversely, if you have a good reputation, publishers will take a chance on projects they would turn down from an unknown. So how do you become known? Write a lot.

    • Becoming known as a great short-story writer first has been the avenue towards novels for many authors, particularly in science fiction.

    • There's a book called Write. Publish. Repeat. that shows how just being prolific can lead to reliable success in self-publishing.

    • Many writers have gone onto success after honing their skills and building a fan-base by participating frequently in fan-fiction writing communities.

    • If you write a lot, you'll become a better writer, and more in control of your craft. That, in turn, may expand your options on what to do with your existing novella.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 7 at 17:14

























answered Aug 7 at 17:09









Chris SunamiChris Sunami

40.6k3 gold badges55 silver badges152 bronze badges




40.6k3 gold badges55 silver badges152 bronze badges










  • 15





    Yes! An answer that is targeted for novellas.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 17:32






  • 5





    @cool_bodhi That should be a new question. (You can certainly quote from other works but 10% seems too much in normal circumstances.)

    – Raidri
    Aug 8 at 14:42






  • 5





    If you're asking my advice, I would NOT move forward with this project at all. Treat it as a learning experience, and start on the next book. 32K words, and 15% of that is copied from other sources? That's not a book, that's some excerpts bridged together... And if you get a reputation for plagiarism, you can forget about ever publishing again. It's one of the biggest crimes in the literary world.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 8 at 15:03







  • 1





    @Blueriver I have finished, rejected novels. For me the problem is by finishing the novel, the fire is out for a rewrite. I've gotten other ideas, and though I was obsessed with those stories when I wrote them, I am more excited by new ideas that would be new works of art. If I were the type of writer that could follow an outline, I might outline them and start over, but following an outline just isn't fun for me, it turns into a chore.

    – Amadeus
    Aug 8 at 22:38






  • 1





    @Blueriver - I'm still working my way towards a publishable novel. I hope it will be the one I'm currently working on. I shopped most of the earlier ones around to publishers and agents, but unsuccessfully. I reworked some of the previous ones for years until I felt it was no longer productive. None of that is to say I might not revisit them in the future. The current project is based on ideas I've been thinking about for more than a decade now.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 9 at 13:29












  • 15





    Yes! An answer that is targeted for novellas.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 17:32






  • 5





    @cool_bodhi That should be a new question. (You can certainly quote from other works but 10% seems too much in normal circumstances.)

    – Raidri
    Aug 8 at 14:42






  • 5





    If you're asking my advice, I would NOT move forward with this project at all. Treat it as a learning experience, and start on the next book. 32K words, and 15% of that is copied from other sources? That's not a book, that's some excerpts bridged together... And if you get a reputation for plagiarism, you can forget about ever publishing again. It's one of the biggest crimes in the literary world.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 8 at 15:03







  • 1





    @Blueriver I have finished, rejected novels. For me the problem is by finishing the novel, the fire is out for a rewrite. I've gotten other ideas, and though I was obsessed with those stories when I wrote them, I am more excited by new ideas that would be new works of art. If I were the type of writer that could follow an outline, I might outline them and start over, but following an outline just isn't fun for me, it turns into a chore.

    – Amadeus
    Aug 8 at 22:38






  • 1





    @Blueriver - I'm still working my way towards a publishable novel. I hope it will be the one I'm currently working on. I shopped most of the earlier ones around to publishers and agents, but unsuccessfully. I reworked some of the previous ones for years until I felt it was no longer productive. None of that is to say I might not revisit them in the future. The current project is based on ideas I've been thinking about for more than a decade now.

    – Chris Sunami
    Aug 9 at 13:29







15




15





Yes! An answer that is targeted for novellas.

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 17:32





Yes! An answer that is targeted for novellas.

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 17:32




5




5





@cool_bodhi That should be a new question. (You can certainly quote from other works but 10% seems too much in normal circumstances.)

– Raidri
Aug 8 at 14:42





@cool_bodhi That should be a new question. (You can certainly quote from other works but 10% seems too much in normal circumstances.)

– Raidri
Aug 8 at 14:42




5




5





If you're asking my advice, I would NOT move forward with this project at all. Treat it as a learning experience, and start on the next book. 32K words, and 15% of that is copied from other sources? That's not a book, that's some excerpts bridged together... And if you get a reputation for plagiarism, you can forget about ever publishing again. It's one of the biggest crimes in the literary world.

– Chris Sunami
Aug 8 at 15:03






If you're asking my advice, I would NOT move forward with this project at all. Treat it as a learning experience, and start on the next book. 32K words, and 15% of that is copied from other sources? That's not a book, that's some excerpts bridged together... And if you get a reputation for plagiarism, you can forget about ever publishing again. It's one of the biggest crimes in the literary world.

– Chris Sunami
Aug 8 at 15:03





1




1





@Blueriver I have finished, rejected novels. For me the problem is by finishing the novel, the fire is out for a rewrite. I've gotten other ideas, and though I was obsessed with those stories when I wrote them, I am more excited by new ideas that would be new works of art. If I were the type of writer that could follow an outline, I might outline them and start over, but following an outline just isn't fun for me, it turns into a chore.

– Amadeus
Aug 8 at 22:38





@Blueriver I have finished, rejected novels. For me the problem is by finishing the novel, the fire is out for a rewrite. I've gotten other ideas, and though I was obsessed with those stories when I wrote them, I am more excited by new ideas that would be new works of art. If I were the type of writer that could follow an outline, I might outline them and start over, but following an outline just isn't fun for me, it turns into a chore.

– Amadeus
Aug 8 at 22:38




1




1





@Blueriver - I'm still working my way towards a publishable novel. I hope it will be the one I'm currently working on. I shopped most of the earlier ones around to publishers and agents, but unsuccessfully. I reworked some of the previous ones for years until I felt it was no longer productive. None of that is to say I might not revisit them in the future. The current project is based on ideas I've been thinking about for more than a decade now.

– Chris Sunami
Aug 9 at 13:29





@Blueriver - I'm still working my way towards a publishable novel. I hope it will be the one I'm currently working on. I shopped most of the earlier ones around to publishers and agents, but unsuccessfully. I reworked some of the previous ones for years until I felt it was no longer productive. None of that is to say I might not revisit them in the future. The current project is based on ideas I've been thinking about for more than a decade now.

– Chris Sunami
Aug 9 at 13:29













28














I will disagree with the advice you received.



The vast majority of self-published fiction earns nothing, or at best some friend and family sympathy purchases. The case is even worse for un-marketed self-published fiction.



To self-publish, you are responsible for developing the marketing materials and artwork, for figuring out where to post ads, for paying for ads, for figuring out how to produce and distribute your work, for making yourself a website that takes payments, and even many people that have accomplished all of that still languish in the single-digit sales per month, and many spend more selling their work than they earn from selling it. It becomes a maintenance nightmare, and the most likely result is you are running a failing business instead of writing.



Agents are free, publishers are free. Going the traditional route costs you nothing but time. It is very true that your chances here are also very low, BUT it doesn't have to cost you a dime, not even postage anymore, all it costs is time learning to write a query, synopsis, and where to find agents. You might get some feedback, and you shouldn't be "twiddling your thumbs" on anything but the space bar, you can be writing while you wait and trying to improve your craft.



If you don't find representation, self-publishing is an option in your back pocket. But if you get professionally published in some venue, you have partners that are professionals and will pitch in time and money in getting your work out there. The business end IS their business (both the agent and publisher), and that frees you up to write, which I presume you enjoy.



Try to go the traditional route first. Self-publishing is for the ego-trip.



If you get published you will get an advance, and if you sell more than 3000 copies you will be considered a success by the agent and publisher and they will want to publish your next (equally good) novel, because now you have name recognition amongst a small group, which they hope to grow. And unlike yourself, they are professionals with centuries of experience, collectively, at marketing books and growing an author's audience.






share|improve this answer






















  • 6





    Self-publishing can also be for very established writers with a strong following (especially online). But yeah, it's not a good first choice in most cases.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:58











  • "Self-publishing is for the ego-trip." yep, but worth pointing out that itself can be very enjoyable, and depending on the genre/niche, the only possible way to get published.

    – Orangesandlemons
    Aug 9 at 13:46















28














I will disagree with the advice you received.



The vast majority of self-published fiction earns nothing, or at best some friend and family sympathy purchases. The case is even worse for un-marketed self-published fiction.



To self-publish, you are responsible for developing the marketing materials and artwork, for figuring out where to post ads, for paying for ads, for figuring out how to produce and distribute your work, for making yourself a website that takes payments, and even many people that have accomplished all of that still languish in the single-digit sales per month, and many spend more selling their work than they earn from selling it. It becomes a maintenance nightmare, and the most likely result is you are running a failing business instead of writing.



Agents are free, publishers are free. Going the traditional route costs you nothing but time. It is very true that your chances here are also very low, BUT it doesn't have to cost you a dime, not even postage anymore, all it costs is time learning to write a query, synopsis, and where to find agents. You might get some feedback, and you shouldn't be "twiddling your thumbs" on anything but the space bar, you can be writing while you wait and trying to improve your craft.



If you don't find representation, self-publishing is an option in your back pocket. But if you get professionally published in some venue, you have partners that are professionals and will pitch in time and money in getting your work out there. The business end IS their business (both the agent and publisher), and that frees you up to write, which I presume you enjoy.



Try to go the traditional route first. Self-publishing is for the ego-trip.



If you get published you will get an advance, and if you sell more than 3000 copies you will be considered a success by the agent and publisher and they will want to publish your next (equally good) novel, because now you have name recognition amongst a small group, which they hope to grow. And unlike yourself, they are professionals with centuries of experience, collectively, at marketing books and growing an author's audience.






share|improve this answer






















  • 6





    Self-publishing can also be for very established writers with a strong following (especially online). But yeah, it's not a good first choice in most cases.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:58











  • "Self-publishing is for the ego-trip." yep, but worth pointing out that itself can be very enjoyable, and depending on the genre/niche, the only possible way to get published.

    – Orangesandlemons
    Aug 9 at 13:46













28












28








28







I will disagree with the advice you received.



The vast majority of self-published fiction earns nothing, or at best some friend and family sympathy purchases. The case is even worse for un-marketed self-published fiction.



To self-publish, you are responsible for developing the marketing materials and artwork, for figuring out where to post ads, for paying for ads, for figuring out how to produce and distribute your work, for making yourself a website that takes payments, and even many people that have accomplished all of that still languish in the single-digit sales per month, and many spend more selling their work than they earn from selling it. It becomes a maintenance nightmare, and the most likely result is you are running a failing business instead of writing.



Agents are free, publishers are free. Going the traditional route costs you nothing but time. It is very true that your chances here are also very low, BUT it doesn't have to cost you a dime, not even postage anymore, all it costs is time learning to write a query, synopsis, and where to find agents. You might get some feedback, and you shouldn't be "twiddling your thumbs" on anything but the space bar, you can be writing while you wait and trying to improve your craft.



If you don't find representation, self-publishing is an option in your back pocket. But if you get professionally published in some venue, you have partners that are professionals and will pitch in time and money in getting your work out there. The business end IS their business (both the agent and publisher), and that frees you up to write, which I presume you enjoy.



Try to go the traditional route first. Self-publishing is for the ego-trip.



If you get published you will get an advance, and if you sell more than 3000 copies you will be considered a success by the agent and publisher and they will want to publish your next (equally good) novel, because now you have name recognition amongst a small group, which they hope to grow. And unlike yourself, they are professionals with centuries of experience, collectively, at marketing books and growing an author's audience.






share|improve this answer















I will disagree with the advice you received.



The vast majority of self-published fiction earns nothing, or at best some friend and family sympathy purchases. The case is even worse for un-marketed self-published fiction.



To self-publish, you are responsible for developing the marketing materials and artwork, for figuring out where to post ads, for paying for ads, for figuring out how to produce and distribute your work, for making yourself a website that takes payments, and even many people that have accomplished all of that still languish in the single-digit sales per month, and many spend more selling their work than they earn from selling it. It becomes a maintenance nightmare, and the most likely result is you are running a failing business instead of writing.



Agents are free, publishers are free. Going the traditional route costs you nothing but time. It is very true that your chances here are also very low, BUT it doesn't have to cost you a dime, not even postage anymore, all it costs is time learning to write a query, synopsis, and where to find agents. You might get some feedback, and you shouldn't be "twiddling your thumbs" on anything but the space bar, you can be writing while you wait and trying to improve your craft.



If you don't find representation, self-publishing is an option in your back pocket. But if you get professionally published in some venue, you have partners that are professionals and will pitch in time and money in getting your work out there. The business end IS their business (both the agent and publisher), and that frees you up to write, which I presume you enjoy.



Try to go the traditional route first. Self-publishing is for the ego-trip.



If you get published you will get an advance, and if you sell more than 3000 copies you will be considered a success by the agent and publisher and they will want to publish your next (equally good) novel, because now you have name recognition amongst a small group, which they hope to grow. And unlike yourself, they are professionals with centuries of experience, collectively, at marketing books and growing an author's audience.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 8 at 10:02

























answered Aug 7 at 15:36









AmadeusAmadeus

73k7 gold badges98 silver badges241 bronze badges




73k7 gold badges98 silver badges241 bronze badges










  • 6





    Self-publishing can also be for very established writers with a strong following (especially online). But yeah, it's not a good first choice in most cases.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:58











  • "Self-publishing is for the ego-trip." yep, but worth pointing out that itself can be very enjoyable, and depending on the genre/niche, the only possible way to get published.

    – Orangesandlemons
    Aug 9 at 13:46












  • 6





    Self-publishing can also be for very established writers with a strong following (especially online). But yeah, it's not a good first choice in most cases.

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:58











  • "Self-publishing is for the ego-trip." yep, but worth pointing out that itself can be very enjoyable, and depending on the genre/niche, the only possible way to get published.

    – Orangesandlemons
    Aug 9 at 13:46







6




6





Self-publishing can also be for very established writers with a strong following (especially online). But yeah, it's not a good first choice in most cases.

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:58





Self-publishing can also be for very established writers with a strong following (especially online). But yeah, it's not a good first choice in most cases.

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:58













"Self-publishing is for the ego-trip." yep, but worth pointing out that itself can be very enjoyable, and depending on the genre/niche, the only possible way to get published.

– Orangesandlemons
Aug 9 at 13:46





"Self-publishing is for the ego-trip." yep, but worth pointing out that itself can be very enjoyable, and depending on the genre/niche, the only possible way to get published.

– Orangesandlemons
Aug 9 at 13:46











20














You say that this is your first book.



About 16% of writers manage to get their first novel published traditionally (i.e. through a publisher). The other 84% write between one and twenty books before they achieve the quality necessary to get published traditionally (source).



And those that get published – no matter if it's their first attempt or their fifth – usually have been working with language for years before they do. Many published fiction authors have been writing in other genres before they get published. They have polished their writing skills by being journalists, lawyers, scholars, and working in many other jobs where they have to write.



But writers do not only need to train their writing skills before they achieve mastery (and publishability), they apparently also need maturity. The majority of writers don't get published before they reach 30 years of age, the mean age being somewhere around 40 years old (source), and many don't get published before the second half of their lives.



I don't know your level of life experience, and I don't know how well you write, but it is quite likely that your first effort isn't good enough to be published. In writing, as in every other art, craft, or skill, the first efforts are usually failures. Few people can draw a human likeness on their first attempt, few people manage to play the violin without many hours of learning, few people can drive a car without taking lessons. Writing isn't different. Many aspiring writers confuse the ability to produce written text with the skill required to write fiction. It is not the same. And you need to learn it.



So, what do I recommend, not having read your work?



  1. Get feedback from some critical and competent beta readers. If they shower you in praise, submit your manuscript to relevant publishers. If not:


  2. Do not self-publish. One of my country's most popular authors has given me this advice: Do not waste great ideas on premature self-publications. If your beta readers tell you that your writing sucks, self-publishing will not make it better, and no one will buy your failed first attempt. But after a few more books written as practice, you'll have the skill to rewrite that great idea and get it published. Because, while ideas are cheap, ideas that are close to your heart are rare and shouldn't be wasted.


  3. So either re-write and re-write and re-write your first book until your beta readers shower you in praise, or write the next book and the next and the next, until they do. Either way, keep on writing until you achieve mastery.


  4. Then publish. And when you are ready, it doesn't matter whether you self-publish or publish traditionally. The only difference is the amount of work you'll have to put into marketing. If you're good at that, self-publish. If not, not.






share|improve this answer






















  • 1





    I love how you imply that the "second half" of life doesn't start until well past 40. Though I upvoted it for other reasons (mostly the stats).

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:33






  • 1





    @Cyn Average lifespan in developed countries is ~80. Past 40 would be exactly the "second half". I rather prefer thinking of "past 60" as "second half", but that's me. :)

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 15:52











  • @Galastel Maybe I spend too much time with teenagers (DD and friends) :-)

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:55















20














You say that this is your first book.



About 16% of writers manage to get their first novel published traditionally (i.e. through a publisher). The other 84% write between one and twenty books before they achieve the quality necessary to get published traditionally (source).



And those that get published – no matter if it's their first attempt or their fifth – usually have been working with language for years before they do. Many published fiction authors have been writing in other genres before they get published. They have polished their writing skills by being journalists, lawyers, scholars, and working in many other jobs where they have to write.



But writers do not only need to train their writing skills before they achieve mastery (and publishability), they apparently also need maturity. The majority of writers don't get published before they reach 30 years of age, the mean age being somewhere around 40 years old (source), and many don't get published before the second half of their lives.



I don't know your level of life experience, and I don't know how well you write, but it is quite likely that your first effort isn't good enough to be published. In writing, as in every other art, craft, or skill, the first efforts are usually failures. Few people can draw a human likeness on their first attempt, few people manage to play the violin without many hours of learning, few people can drive a car without taking lessons. Writing isn't different. Many aspiring writers confuse the ability to produce written text with the skill required to write fiction. It is not the same. And you need to learn it.



So, what do I recommend, not having read your work?



  1. Get feedback from some critical and competent beta readers. If they shower you in praise, submit your manuscript to relevant publishers. If not:


  2. Do not self-publish. One of my country's most popular authors has given me this advice: Do not waste great ideas on premature self-publications. If your beta readers tell you that your writing sucks, self-publishing will not make it better, and no one will buy your failed first attempt. But after a few more books written as practice, you'll have the skill to rewrite that great idea and get it published. Because, while ideas are cheap, ideas that are close to your heart are rare and shouldn't be wasted.


  3. So either re-write and re-write and re-write your first book until your beta readers shower you in praise, or write the next book and the next and the next, until they do. Either way, keep on writing until you achieve mastery.


  4. Then publish. And when you are ready, it doesn't matter whether you self-publish or publish traditionally. The only difference is the amount of work you'll have to put into marketing. If you're good at that, self-publish. If not, not.






share|improve this answer






















  • 1





    I love how you imply that the "second half" of life doesn't start until well past 40. Though I upvoted it for other reasons (mostly the stats).

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:33






  • 1





    @Cyn Average lifespan in developed countries is ~80. Past 40 would be exactly the "second half". I rather prefer thinking of "past 60" as "second half", but that's me. :)

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 15:52











  • @Galastel Maybe I spend too much time with teenagers (DD and friends) :-)

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:55













20












20








20







You say that this is your first book.



About 16% of writers manage to get their first novel published traditionally (i.e. through a publisher). The other 84% write between one and twenty books before they achieve the quality necessary to get published traditionally (source).



And those that get published – no matter if it's their first attempt or their fifth – usually have been working with language for years before they do. Many published fiction authors have been writing in other genres before they get published. They have polished their writing skills by being journalists, lawyers, scholars, and working in many other jobs where they have to write.



But writers do not only need to train their writing skills before they achieve mastery (and publishability), they apparently also need maturity. The majority of writers don't get published before they reach 30 years of age, the mean age being somewhere around 40 years old (source), and many don't get published before the second half of their lives.



I don't know your level of life experience, and I don't know how well you write, but it is quite likely that your first effort isn't good enough to be published. In writing, as in every other art, craft, or skill, the first efforts are usually failures. Few people can draw a human likeness on their first attempt, few people manage to play the violin without many hours of learning, few people can drive a car without taking lessons. Writing isn't different. Many aspiring writers confuse the ability to produce written text with the skill required to write fiction. It is not the same. And you need to learn it.



So, what do I recommend, not having read your work?



  1. Get feedback from some critical and competent beta readers. If they shower you in praise, submit your manuscript to relevant publishers. If not:


  2. Do not self-publish. One of my country's most popular authors has given me this advice: Do not waste great ideas on premature self-publications. If your beta readers tell you that your writing sucks, self-publishing will not make it better, and no one will buy your failed first attempt. But after a few more books written as practice, you'll have the skill to rewrite that great idea and get it published. Because, while ideas are cheap, ideas that are close to your heart are rare and shouldn't be wasted.


  3. So either re-write and re-write and re-write your first book until your beta readers shower you in praise, or write the next book and the next and the next, until they do. Either way, keep on writing until you achieve mastery.


  4. Then publish. And when you are ready, it doesn't matter whether you self-publish or publish traditionally. The only difference is the amount of work you'll have to put into marketing. If you're good at that, self-publish. If not, not.






share|improve this answer















You say that this is your first book.



About 16% of writers manage to get their first novel published traditionally (i.e. through a publisher). The other 84% write between one and twenty books before they achieve the quality necessary to get published traditionally (source).



And those that get published – no matter if it's their first attempt or their fifth – usually have been working with language for years before they do. Many published fiction authors have been writing in other genres before they get published. They have polished their writing skills by being journalists, lawyers, scholars, and working in many other jobs where they have to write.



But writers do not only need to train their writing skills before they achieve mastery (and publishability), they apparently also need maturity. The majority of writers don't get published before they reach 30 years of age, the mean age being somewhere around 40 years old (source), and many don't get published before the second half of their lives.



I don't know your level of life experience, and I don't know how well you write, but it is quite likely that your first effort isn't good enough to be published. In writing, as in every other art, craft, or skill, the first efforts are usually failures. Few people can draw a human likeness on their first attempt, few people manage to play the violin without many hours of learning, few people can drive a car without taking lessons. Writing isn't different. Many aspiring writers confuse the ability to produce written text with the skill required to write fiction. It is not the same. And you need to learn it.



So, what do I recommend, not having read your work?



  1. Get feedback from some critical and competent beta readers. If they shower you in praise, submit your manuscript to relevant publishers. If not:


  2. Do not self-publish. One of my country's most popular authors has given me this advice: Do not waste great ideas on premature self-publications. If your beta readers tell you that your writing sucks, self-publishing will not make it better, and no one will buy your failed first attempt. But after a few more books written as practice, you'll have the skill to rewrite that great idea and get it published. Because, while ideas are cheap, ideas that are close to your heart are rare and shouldn't be wasted.


  3. So either re-write and re-write and re-write your first book until your beta readers shower you in praise, or write the next book and the next and the next, until they do. Either way, keep on writing until you achieve mastery.


  4. Then publish. And when you are ready, it doesn't matter whether you self-publish or publish traditionally. The only difference is the amount of work you'll have to put into marketing. If you're good at that, self-publish. If not, not.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 7 at 16:41









Chris Sunami

40.6k3 gold badges55 silver badges152 bronze badges




40.6k3 gold badges55 silver badges152 bronze badges










answered Aug 7 at 15:30







user40570

















  • 1





    I love how you imply that the "second half" of life doesn't start until well past 40. Though I upvoted it for other reasons (mostly the stats).

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:33






  • 1





    @Cyn Average lifespan in developed countries is ~80. Past 40 would be exactly the "second half". I rather prefer thinking of "past 60" as "second half", but that's me. :)

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 15:52











  • @Galastel Maybe I spend too much time with teenagers (DD and friends) :-)

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:55












  • 1





    I love how you imply that the "second half" of life doesn't start until well past 40. Though I upvoted it for other reasons (mostly the stats).

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:33






  • 1





    @Cyn Average lifespan in developed countries is ~80. Past 40 would be exactly the "second half". I rather prefer thinking of "past 60" as "second half", but that's me. :)

    – Galastel
    Aug 7 at 15:52











  • @Galastel Maybe I spend too much time with teenagers (DD and friends) :-)

    – Cyn
    Aug 7 at 15:55







1




1





I love how you imply that the "second half" of life doesn't start until well past 40. Though I upvoted it for other reasons (mostly the stats).

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:33





I love how you imply that the "second half" of life doesn't start until well past 40. Though I upvoted it for other reasons (mostly the stats).

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:33




1




1





@Cyn Average lifespan in developed countries is ~80. Past 40 would be exactly the "second half". I rather prefer thinking of "past 60" as "second half", but that's me. :)

– Galastel
Aug 7 at 15:52





@Cyn Average lifespan in developed countries is ~80. Past 40 would be exactly the "second half". I rather prefer thinking of "past 60" as "second half", but that's me. :)

– Galastel
Aug 7 at 15:52













@Galastel Maybe I spend too much time with teenagers (DD and friends) :-)

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:55





@Galastel Maybe I spend too much time with teenagers (DD and friends) :-)

– Cyn
Aug 7 at 15:55

















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