By Elaine Viets
The Internet is abuzz with authors handing out useless, outdated and downright wrong information about writing. Why should the Lipstick Chronicles be any different? In the next few weeks, our mystery writers will take a stab at these literary questions.
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(1) What was your worst mistake?
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I didnât have a lawyer go over my first agentâs contract. I was so thrilled to get a big-time agent, I signed it.
A year later, when the agent hadnât sold anything and didnât answer my letters, I wanted out of the contract. Thatâs when I went to a lawyer. I found out the agent was entitled to commissions on all my work "in perpetuity" â whether heâd sold it or not.
It took $2000 in legal bills to get out of that contract. It would have only cost a couple hundred if Iâd gone to a lawyer in the first place.
That agent has gone to his reward (I hope heâs somewhere even hotter than South Florida) and canât do you any harm. But there are plenty of scams for unwary writers, including agents who recommend dubious "editorial services" and rake off tidy commissions
If youâre thinking about signing with an agent, check out Predators & Editors, a site every professional writer should bookmark.
Want to know how an ethical literary agent should behave? Check out the Association of Authorsâ Representatives at
aar-online.org
My agent belongs to AAR, but he made me swear on my next royalty check that I wonât reveal his name.
Want to know how a real literary agent thinks? Read Miss Snarkâs blog at
misssnark.blogspot.com>
(2) What advice do you wish someone had given you?
Keep reinventing yourself.
If you want a long-term career in publishing, youâll have highs and lows. Thereâs a good chance your series will be dropped, youâll be asked to write a stand-alone or start a second series.
Donât cling to your first character as if youâll never invent another. Embrace change. Youâre a creative writer. Remember, theyâre killing your series, not you.
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(3) Who told you you'd never be published, and what would you like to do/say to them now?
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A college English teacher gave me a C on an essay. He said I should give up writing because I had no talent. The prof turned out dusty academic prose but fancied himself a "popular writer" because he reviewed for the local paper. Gossip said he was looking for a New York publisher, but they werenât looking for him.
When my first hardcover, MURDER UNLEASHED, tied with Harlan Coben on the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association list, I wanted to send the prof a copy.
But that would be petty.
I have only three words to say to him: Neener, neener, neener.
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(4) If you could steal ideas from someone, who would it be?
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Sue Grafton.
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(5) Commas -- does anyone really care anymore?
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I love commas. Theyâre the cashews of punctuation. I sprinkle them generously throughout my work. The copy editors at my publishing house regard them as cockroaches, and ruthlessly stamp them out.
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(6) What do you do when your career isn't going well?
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Whine and blame the publisher.
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(7) If you could start all over again, what would you do?
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Everything right.
This time, I would understand that writing is a business as well as an art.
The first time, I thought when I turned in my novel, my work was done. Now I know itâs just started.
I didnât have a marketing plan. I didnât know what my sell-through was. I didnât visit enough bookstores. I didnât go to the big mystery conventions until after my book came out. And when I did go, I attended all the panels and avoided the bar.
I learned everything the hard way.