Tag Archives: writer problems

On Shameless Self-Promotion

This may or not not be an artist’s depiction of one of my book signings. šŸ˜›

Iā€™ve made it no secret no secret that Iā€™m a shameless self-promoter. In fact, it could be argued that I sometimes flaunt it. However, this week I had two interesting thoughts related to that this week. Well, more like one thought and one realization.

First, my self-promotion got me in a bit of trouble. I shared my latest blog in a Facebook group Iā€™m in, and not one but two admins messaged me after deleting my post telling me not to do that since the group had a rule against self-promotion posts (because otherwise the members would be bombarding the group with them). It wasnā€™t the first time this had happened. Admittedly, it was kinda my fault since Iā€™d forgotten about that rule.

One admin asked me why I promoted myself. ā€œIā€™m a writer,ā€ I replied. ā€œItā€™s what I do.ā€ She said she wrote haikus but didnā€™t go around saying, ā€œLook at me! Look at me!ā€ I had to fight the urge to start an argument.

ā€œWhy?ā€ you ask. Because the difference between me and this admin isā€”at the risk of sounding rudeā€”Iā€™m a professional and sheā€™s a hobbyist (as far as I know). I donā€™t know if she has a blog where she posts her haikus, but if sheā€™s okay with only a few people reading her stuff, thatā€™s fine. I, on the other hand, want to grow an audience because writing is my trade and vocation. If I am to be (more) successful, I must get people to read my stuff. I figured that since Iā€™d built a community in this Facebook group, thatā€™d be a great place to generate interest. Apparently not. I understand why they have the rule, but I didnā€™t like the attitude I was getting from the admin. However, I can forgive it because she may not understand where Iā€™m coming from. I know promotion can come across as arrogantā€”just look at Donald Trump (yes, I went there)ā€”but itā€™s necessary in my line of work. If you have the right attitude, though, it can work. It may seem paradoxical that self-promotion and humility can go together, but I do believe itā€™s possible.

Ironically, I learned that even I have limits on my self-promotion, which brings me to my second thought. I realized that when Iā€™m trying to get people interested in books (or anything I make/do), Iā€™m filled with passionate adamancy. Iā€™m a one-man hype machine. But when people come back to me and say they loved my stuff, I almost want to refuse their praise. Butā€¦I have friends who are more talented and/or successful than me! I think.

Yeah, Iā€™m weird.

Iā€™m not 100-percent sure why I think like this. It might be because I feel like Iā€™m the lesser of my peers. Iā€™m in awe of their talent and think theyā€™re more deserving of peopleā€™s attention and adoration. Or I think that if I was as talented and/or savvy as my more successful peers, then Iā€™d deserve the praise. In other words, I see a disconnection. Does that make sense?

What do you think, True Believers? Do you have similar struggles? How do you deal with these thoughts?

I Should Be Writing, Not Blogging!

Itā€™s been one of those days. Or weeks. Or months.

Not only have I let my writing projects pile up higher than the stack of comics I needed to buy at my local shop (itā€™s what happens when you neglect to pick them up for two months), but somehow everyone and his dogā€™s cousin is vying for my attention. I have friends who want to hang out just because, for their birthdays, etc. I sometimes run errands for my family or spend time with them. I have my increasingly demanding ā€œday job.ā€ I have hobbies I try to enjoy now and then.

All of this is eating into my precious writing time. I havenā€™t penned a word in the next Children of the Wells novella in a month, nor have I touched Hopeā€™s War for a long time. My last Examiner article was in December. Yet here I am firing off a quick little blog because I resolved to be more consistent with posting content on my website. Blogging should be secondary to all my other writings.

Iā€™ve heard that a writer should never blog about how he hasnā€™t been writing much. I broke that ā€œruleā€ a long time ago, unfortunately. Besides, I hope I can use it as a lesson for aspiring writers.

Learn to say, ā€œNo.ā€

Itā€™s totally okay to do that.

Youā€™re only one person. You canā€™t do everything. If you want to be successful at anythingā€”especially writingā€”it will take sacrifice. Youā€™ll have to turn down many things, even good things, so that you can squeeze in that daily goal of 1,000 words or whatnot. Youā€™ll probably upset some people, but the ones who love you most will understand. In fact, they may eventually adjust their expectations and schedules to better accommodate your goals.

Iā€™m not sure how I became as ā€œpopularā€ as I am. I do, however, know that what I do with my time is my choice. I have no one to blame but myself if I miss a deadline or donā€™t get something done. I have an active mind that seeks as many creative outlets as possible. Iā€™m also a bit of a weird writer in that Iā€™m extroverted and have to come out of my writer-ly solitude to be with others. All of those things together can create a lot of tension. What am I saying? I know it does because Iā€™m experiencing it right now!

Thatā€™s why saying, ā€œNo,ā€ is an important skill to have. You canā€™t please everyone, no matter how hard you try. You have to learn to make priorities and stick to them. Otherwise, youā€™ll lose your mind. Iā€™m sure most loony bins have wards set aside for writers and other creatives who went crazy. Youā€™ll have plenty of collaborators and time to write, but I doubt anyone will publish you. šŸ˜›

Anyway, I have places to go, stuff to do, people to kill. (Waitā€¦did I say that out loud?)

Iā€™m a Writer, not an Imposter!

While at Gen-Con last month, a woman said something that struck me during one of the Writers Symposium panels I attended. She said that when she first started attending conventions after getting published and meeting some of her writer heroes, she suffered from Imposter Syndrome and felt like she didnā€™t deserve to be there. While she only mentioned it briefly, I knew exactly how she felt.

Wikipedia defines Imposter Syndrome as ā€œa psychological phenomenon in which people are unable to internalize their accomplishments. Despite external evidence of their competence, those with the syndrome remain convinced that they are frauds and do not deserve the success they have achieved. Proof of success is dismissed as luck, timing, or as a result of deceiving others into thinking they are more intelligent and competent than they believe themselves to be.ā€

Iā€™ve sometimes mused that the only reason Iā€™m considered intelligent (I took an online IQ test as a college freshman that said mine was 135) is because the standards for intelligence had been lowered. Ever seen the film Idiocracy? Thatā€™s what Iā€™m talking about. Couple that with being around friends like Nick Hayden (who wonā€™t admit heā€™s a literary genius) and family like my brother Jarod who is super-talented and imaginative, and I feel like a midget among giants.

For example, a fellow Children of the Wells collaborator once said Nick creates complex characters and I wrote thrilling action scenes. Externally I appreciated what she said, but internally I was reeling. I liked that my stories were exciting, but creating great characters was a skill I thought every good writer needed to master. Action scenes were just window-dressing. (It didnā€™t help that she also said the hero I created for the serial was boring unless playing off of other characters while Nickā€™s were strong enough to work on their own). It was like she was saying Nick was Francis Ford Coppola and I was Michael Bay. I suddenly felt like the least talented person in the room.

When I hear back from readers, I sometimes find myself thinking, I have fans?! like I donā€™t deserve them. They tell me they love my books, and I almost blush from embarrassment. Sure, Iā€™m a better writer than, say, that hack E.L. James, but I still feel like my stories and talent donā€™t hold a candle to my peers or the ā€œtruly successfulā€ professionals out there (Neal Gaiman and Orson Scott Card, to name a few). Heck, when Iā€™ve pitched The Day After to readers, I tell them I think the best story in the collection is Nickā€™s and not mine. (Jarod disagrees and says mine is the best, but I write that off as familial bias).

The reality of my situation is a mixed bag. I hold a degree in professional writing from a respected university and was taught by some of the best in the writing business, but if I was to look at my booksā€™ actual sales numbers (or even just the number of reviews they have online), some would say thatā€™s evidence that Iā€™m not that good. I even had an agentā€”a woman I went to college withā€”tell me the book I sent her was well-written but wasnā€™t ā€œtrendy.ā€ Yet, as I mentioned earlier, Iā€™ve had readers tell me they loved my stuff when they read it. Heck, I had a new reader buy a copy of Ninjas and Talking Trees the last day of Gen-Con, and no sooner do I get home does she message me on my professional Facebook page to say sheā€™d read a few chapters and now wanted links to the rest of my books. I didnā€™t know what to do with myself (other than send her the links, of course).

All of that to say that even at this yearā€™s Gen-Con, I felt like I didnā€™t deserve to be there. Last year I had terrible book sales. I saw myself as the least successful writer in Authorsā€™ Avenue. Indeed, I even thought I was a rank amateur compared to most, if not all, of my peers there. Theyā€™re obviously more talented, marketed, and connected than I am, I thought. It took about a day-and-a-half of good sales at this yearā€™s con for me to start putting that behind me, but even by Saturday, I was still a bit depressed. The kicker was getting a pep talk from a guy (sadly, his name escapes me at the moment) who saw me at the Christianity and Media Panel the day before to bring me out of it. He bought a copy of 42: Disovering Faith Through Fandom and after hearing a bit of my story, said he saw how I could strike up a conversation with any random passerby and use that to draw them to my booth. He was sure God would use me to glorify Him by building relationships, and that I had just as much of a right to be there as my peers did. I needed to hear that.

All of this to say that I have to remind myself that Iā€™m not an imposter. Iā€™m not the writer-ly equivalent of a Cylon masquerading as a human. I am a writer. I have been published. I have readers and fans. They may be a small number now, but they will grow. I have the respect and friendship of my fellow artists. I have all of these things for a reason, and not because Iā€™ve deceived anyone or deluded myself.

To paraphrase Dr. Leonard McCoy, ā€œIā€™m a writer, not an imposter!ā€

I Can Do Everything! (or, ā€œMan, I Need to Hire a Secretary!ā€)

Being an indie author sometimes makes me wish I was Shiva. šŸ˜›

As Iā€™ve stated before, Iā€™ve been negligent on blogging for the last month. It wasnā€™t just this blog that suffered, though. Most, if not all, of my other projects were put on hiatus so I could finish editing my two latest books, 42: Discovering Faith Through Fandom and Ninjas and Talking Trees, in time for Gen-Con 2015 next week. But it was only one of the many things I had to do.

One of the perils of being a self-published author (as I think I mentioned in an early episode of ā€œBut I Digressā€¦ā€) is you have to do everything, or at least almost everything, yourself. Your work doesnā€™t stop with writing the book and making recommended changes. You have to become an entire publishing house. You write, you edit, you hire cover artists (assuming you donā€™t create the cover yourself), you do layout, you promote the book, etc., etc. Unless youā€™re an excellent project manager, this can be tiring, especially when you also work a day job and have a social life. In the last month, Iā€™ve found myself thinking many times, I just want to write! I understand now why some authors forego self-publishing, despite its advantages, in favor of traditional publishing: they have much less to worry about. Their attention isnā€™t nearly as divided, so they can focus more on their craft.

Strange (or selfish) as it may sound, one of the reasons I want to get married is because Iā€™d like to have a wife who could help me with some of this. Yes, I admit it: Iā€™d like her to be my secretary. Hereā€™s the thing: she wouldnā€™t be my subservient, but my partner. Weā€™d work on things together as equals.

Regardless, I already practice this to some extent. I hired friends/professional editors to look over these books so it wasnā€™t just me. Fresh eyes can see things I donā€™t. The artist who created the cover for 42, Ruth Pike, also did the back cover and some promotional materials. My friend Nick Hayden then did the layout. Anthony Gangemi drew the artwork for Ninjas and Talking Trees, which required a bit of faith on my part because it was the most expensive cover Iā€™ve commissioned. I was thinking back on a self-publishing seminar where the instructor insisted authors should invest money in our careers. But I had to add the text and do the layout myself because Nick was unavailable. Then I had to wait for CreateSpace to process everything. (Thankfully, their shipping department is awesome, and my orders arrived four or five days early).

Let this be a warning to you: if you want to be an indie author, expect to put in extra work.

Itā€™s worth it, though. šŸ˜‰

P.S. Please leave reviews for my books on Amazon and Goodreads!