By Suzanne Woods Fisher
A few weeks before my first novel was due to release, I
received an advance review from Publisher’s Weekly. That moment is
seared in my mind: I remember the time of day it was when I received the email,
where I stood in my house, how it felt as I read it.
Because it was…terrible. The reviewer skewered my
book. Usually, there’s something positive to spin from reviews, even if it’s
just a few words to pluck. Not this one. The reviewer hated the book from start
to finish, effectively giving me a very public black eye.
It was a crushing blow. I was convinced that
my publisher would halt production of my book and rip up all my contracts.
Finished…before I even got started.
That was thirty books ago. I’ve gained a thick
skin since that first review, something all writers need but no one tells you
how to get. Turns out, you get it through awful reviews. Every single author
will get a few battle scars along the way, especially in this reign of
customer-driven-social-media. A career in writing can be compared to standing
in front of the world in your underwear. You’re oh-so-exposed.
But one mark of a professional writer is to
persevere, to welcome scrutiny and learn from it, with the goal of continually
improving skills.
Here’s my best advice for writers: Don’t count
your critics. Weigh them.
You want to please the right people, because
you can’t please everyone. If you try to please everyone, you’ll only get
stuck. So, then, who are the right people? Who are the critics you need to
weigh? For me, they’re my editors, my agent, and my first draft readers.
Here’s my next best advice: Critics can be
wrong.
That first book, the one that received such a
horrible, scarring review from Publisher’s Weekly, is still in
print, ten years later. Either readers
weren’t reading the reviews or people just didn’t care what the critics said.
That book did really well. To date,
it’s sold over 200,000 copies.
I can’t promise the same outcome for you, but
I also hope you don’t receive a scathing review for your first novel.
Regardless, here’s my last piece of advice for you as an aspiring writer: Do
not quit. No matter what. If you’re meant to write, you are
meant to write.
Carol award winner Suzanne Woods Fisher writes stories
that take you to places you’ve never visited—one with characters that seem like
old friends. But most of all, her books give you something to think about long
after you’ve finished reading it. With over one million copies of her books
sold worldwide, Suzanne is the best-selling author of more than thirty books,
ranging from non-fiction books, to children’s books, to novels. She lives with
her very big family in northern California. Social Media: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Bookbub, Goodreads,
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