Is it the waiting? The editing? Getting the ideas to flow? The rejections? The research?
This urge to write came over me a few years ago. The inspirations came and I just wrote and wrote.
Along with writing children' s books, I also write the occasional short story.
I recently read a post about researching your market before submitting to avoid getting those dry, impersonal rejection letters on a story that you thought was great and sparkled with imagination.
Well, I usually do all the research. That is the part I dread the most. I have a number of stories, but stopping to do the research such as looking into books like the Book Markets for Children's Writers
and then going on line to their web sites and getting the most recent information about them is hard and sometimes heartbreaking. You think you've found just the right publisher for your manuscript, you go to the submission guidelines and find out that they are not accepting unsoliciated stories at this time. They are only accepting submissions from agents and they will not respond if not interested. So here starts the waiting game. How long do you wait before you assume they are not interested?
While waiting you can write or edit your other stories. Read, read and read books that are in your writing genre. . .
and continue to submit your other stories to publishers.
I sometimes wonder if it is worth it. I think, there are other things I could be doing, like keeping the house clean. But then I think back to that long list of writers and their numerous rejection letters on books that finally sold. I think back on the quote from Richard Bach that says "A professional writer is an amateur who didn't quit."
So I forget the house work and ignore the people who think writing a child's book is child's play, and stick with it.
Now that I've got all this off my chest, what is the hardest part for you as a writer?
Is it the waiting? The editing? Getting the ideas to flow? The rejections? The research?