My First Time is a regular feature in which writers talk about virgin experiences in their writing and publishing careers, ranging from their first rejection to the moment of holding their first published book in their hands. Today’s guest is Lauren Baratz-Logsted, the author of 27 books for adults, teens and children, including the recent comedic romance for adults, The Bro-Magnet. Lauren was an independent bookseller and buyer for 11 years before deciding to take a chance on herself as a novelist. While trying to sell her books, she worked variously as a Publishers Weekly reviewer, a freelance editor, a sort-of librarian, and a window washer. Her first novel, The Thin Pink Line, about a woman who fakes an entire pregnancy, was published by Red Dress Ink in 2003 as their first-ever hardcover and was published in 11 countries. She's since had more than 20 books published for adults (Vertigo), teens (The Twin's Daughter) and children (The Sisters 8 series, created with her husband and daughter). Visit her website: www.laurenbaratzlogsted.com.
My First Novel
I started writing my first
novel just a little over 20 years ago on November 15, 1992. The day before, I’d
quit my job of 11 years to do just that—write—so I figured I’d better get
cracking. Two months later, I’d completed my first draft of Waiting for Dead Men's Shoes. Like many before me, my first book was a wish-fulfillment
story. Having worked in an independent bookstore all those years, I wrote a
comedic mystery about an underachieving independent bookstore clerk whose
dreams come true when her beloved boss is murdered, leaving her to solve the
crime and run the store.
One of my bookstore contacts
was an editor who ping-ponged back and forth between Random House and Farrar, Straus and Giroux so I
sent it to her. It wasn’t right for whichever house she was with at the time
but she offered to show it to her sister, the publisher at a house that did
publish comedic mysteries.
Not long afterward, the
publisher called me up to say that it was the most hysterical book she’d
ever read. She was laughing on every page and would be showing it to her team
at a sales conference that weekend. I’d hear from her soon. I couldn’t believe
it. But what did it mean? I called up Ms. RH/FSG, who said, “It means she wants
to buy your book, you idiot!” I still couldn’t believe it. How lucky could you
get?
Apparently, not as lucky as I
thought.
Two weeks later, my phone
rang and it was the publisher again. This time, she was no longer laughing as
she told me in a very serious tone of voice that she couldn’t possibly buy my
book. Then she hung up.
From the heights of the
mountain to the depths of wherever I was, and in such a short time.
But such is the writing life.
What else could I do? Brush myself off and keep going. So I did. I sent that
book to countless agents and editors, many of whom had positive things to say
about the humor. But still no takers.
Finally, one kind person
explained to me that because my book championed independent bookstores while
skewering chains as being no better than the devil’s spawn, no publisher would
touch it with a ten-foot pool. Keep in mind that this was the early ’90s, when
two major chains ruled the publishing land like King Kong and Godzilla.
Apparently, no publisher wanted to bite the hand that was feeding it.
So what could I do? I wrote a
second book. This book skewered the royal family. I might have gotten away with
it, but then Princess Diana died and the book died with her. So I wrote a third
book, about a disgruntled would-be novelist. This time, I skewered everyone in
publishing: agents, editors, reviewers. If no one was going to publish my books
anyway, I might as well insult everyone in the business! In a humorous way, of
course.
Eventually, in time, I
learned how to skewer more judiciously. At least, I stopped biting at once all
the hands that might potentially feed me.
In the last nine years, I’ve
had 26 books published. And today, there’s one more, making it 27. Over 20
years after I first started writing it, through the wonders of e-publishing,
the revised and updated version of Waiting for Dead Men’s Shoes
featuring my bookstore alter ego Mini Monroe has finally been published.
Am I still sorry it didn’t
sell 20 years ago? Funny you should ask that. The truth is, I’m not. If I’d
sold it back then, I might have spent my entire career writing comedic
mysteries – not that there’s anything wrong with a career like that, but the
way things played out, I got the chance to do a little bit of everything instead.
And now this.
Congratulations, Lauren! How wonderful to read about your successes!
ReplyDeleteI believe that books are published when they are meant to be published. Of course I would have liked my memoir to have come out five or six years ago, but it would have been a much different (and much worse) book than the version that is being published in April. It's hard to be patient, but worth it.