By Cheryl Wilson Smart
Maybe getting writing
published comes easy for some, but it hasn’t for me. I didn’t sit down at
my laptop, write the lovely words, and send them away on golden butterfly wings
as the literary world shouted, “Yes! Yes!” The publications are
visible. What isn’t visible is the work that leads up to that first
publication, painstakingly climbing the ladder one rickety rung at a time, over
a period of months, even years. No rung can be over-stepped, some are
more rickety than others – study, read, write, research, strategize…submit your
work. Then rejection. Piles and piles of rejection, so much
rejection you wonder if you can even write at all (last time I checked, my
number was closing in on a hundred). It’s a long, slaving time before
that first story, essay, or poem hits. When it hits, other
publications follow you get noticed. Soon, there’s a flood of emails,
Facebook messages, texts and phone calls all geared toward one question –How’d
you do it?
The question of how I
did it was posed to me so often; I began teaching publishing tricks
one-on-one. I spent hours sitting across hopeful and attentive writers
picking my brain for the secret. Soon, I was holding
workshops, speaking to crowds, sharing my tricks for getting published. So, what gets writing published? Good writing, of course. Equally
important though is a savvy strategy for presenting your work.
The writing: It’s true that degrees open doors, particularly those
geared toward studying the craft of writing. But that’s not to say there
aren’t other avenues toward finding success in writing. If a formal
education in writing is not possible or desired, writing workshops and writing
groups are a valuable alternative, as well as a good companion to formal
education. Nothing strengthens writing like strong critique from other
writers. At least half of getting work published is to offer something
worthy of being published. The way to create something ready to be
published is to study writing and practice. A lot. And
revise. A lot.
Starting small: Every writer has those moments where
we’re sure we’ve written the most beautiful thing and surely the New
Yorker or the Atlantic or Southern Writers
Magazine (J)will publish it immediately! Slow down, amazing
writer person. You may get there, but it’s a process. Remember the
ladder? Say you’ve been climbing that ladder. You’ve studied your
craft, honed your writing skills, you have a polished draft to send out.
But where? Research! Literary journals are a tremendous resource to
emerging and established writers. Go to your library, read every lit
journal and magazine you can find (search in Unbound Periodicals), see which
ones are a good fit for your writing. Send your work there. If
you’re writing apples, but peddling your apples to orange dealers, you’ll only frustrate
yourself and those to whom you are sending work. Make the time, read the
journals, target the ones appropriate for your writing, make a list, then be
brave and send your work. Other resources for researching literary
magazines and journals is Duotrope, CRWROPPS, (Creative Writers Opportunities List), New Pages, and The Writer's Chronicle.
These are your research tools. And don’t forget online journals and
magazines. Publishing through online-lit journals and magazines is the
quickest way to get your name in the literary circle. Try them.
Cover letters and bios: Once you’ve earned a few
publications, its fine to say, “Here’s my stuff. Thanks for considering
it.” If you’re anxiously seeking a first publication, however, be
creative. Humor the editors, offer something anecdotal, and tell
something interesting about yourself – can you tie carhopping in the eighties
to writing? Of course you can, you’re a writer. Think of your cover
letter as a dangling carrot. Most editors see hundreds, even thousands of
submissions. Say something in your letter that will make an editor want
to open your submission first. Be just as creative with your bio. A
bio is a synopsis of your life as a writer – where you’ve been published,
awards you’ve won, where you’ve studied. Blah-blah-blah. Bios are
more intriguing when they trace other segments of your life. Do you have
a pet chicken named Princess Fluffy Butt (that’s a real
chicken name, Google it, you know you’re going to). Do you collect
airline barf bags, unused hopefully (also real…Google).
Back to rejection: If you’ve chosen writing as your path (or
it chose you), rejection is the stone on the path that bruises your heel.
Toughen up. Usually rejection doesn’t mean your writing isn’t good, it
may mean your work is not a good fit for where you’re sending it (See above:
Research!), it may mean your writing needs more revision, it may mean the pages
are full already. As Sylivia Plath noted – “I love my
rejection slips. They show me I try.”
Helping others: Writing is gratifying. Getting
writing published is marvelous. Writers are not in competition with one
another, we are in it with one another. Help fellow
writers – especially emerging writers – find their way to success. That
was my motivation for this blog post.
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Cheryl Wilson Smart is a final year MFA candidate
studying Creative Nonfiction at the University of Memphis, where she is
recipient of the 2015 Creative Writing Award in Nonfiction. She is current
Managing Editor, past Assistant Managing, and past Nonfiction Editor of The
Pinch. She has publications in The Collagist, Appalachian Heritage,
Cleaver Magazine, Word Riot, The Citron Review, Little Patuxent Review, Pine
Hills Review, Apeiron Review, and others. Her essay,
"Horses in the Wrinkle" has been nominated for The Best American
Essays 2016. See cherylsmartwriter.com to read other works.