This week, a whole big bunch of us are turning the spotlight on those who are almost there, writers who are agented but haven't quite got the deal yet, or writers who have sold but their books aren't quite out. Join us this week for 70 (yes 70!) success stories!
Each day this week I'm going to post an interview with one of these writers, to hopefully inspire you, provide hope along your way, and prove that you CAN succeed in this crazy business. You guys--you're going to LOVE these interviews. They were so inspirational to me!! They're doing it. You can too.
Click here for more inspiration: Lisa and Laura Roecker, Beth Revis, Leah Clifford, Victoria Schwab, Kirsten Hubbard, Elana Johnson, Dawn Metcalf, Kim Harrington, Carrie Harris, Amy Holder, Kathy McCullough, Suzette Saxton and Bethany Wiggins, and Tiffany Schmidt.
*****
Sean Ferrell is awesome.
Not enough for you? Okay: he's my client-brother, and in many ways feels like a real big brother. He's wicked funny, a dad, and a dedicated and fabulous writer. I say this even though I haven't had the chance to read his book yet. I KNOW IT anyway. And this interview? Inspired my socks off. Read on, my friends.
1.   Tell us  about NUMB!!
What's Numb? Oh, right. My  book. Numb is the story of a man who wanders into a circus without  memories or the ability to feel pain. He follows what few clues he has  from the circus to New York City, makes money exploiting his talent for  nailing himself to bars, and ends up meeting more than a few people  interested in taking advantage of him. In short, I am not very nice to  the poor fellow.
2. Can     you tell us a little bit about your road to publication (finding an  agent and editor)?
It was easy. I clicked my  heels together and there they were. And you were there, and you, and...  Hold on, that's not right.
My pursuit of publication was  just like so many other writers' paths. I call it the shampoo theory of  publishing: lather, rinse, repeat. You work on something, you submit,  you get rejected, you rework, submit elsewhere, etcetera etcetera. I was  lucky enough to have Janet Reid want to read my book. Then she offered  to rep it. Then the shampoo theory reactivated only this time she was  the one in a lather. I tried to let her do her job without troubling her  for too many updates. What good would it be to have me calling and  asking "well, well, well?" Instead, I worked on another book. And  another, and then another. Not only did she find an editor who liked  Numb, she found an editor who saw the same book I do, and I am lucky on  every conceivable front: I have a great agent, an amazing editor whom I  like and respect and trust, and I look good in a suit.
3.     Was there ever a time you felt like giving up? Why didn't you?
I think it depends on how you  define "giving up." I know most people want to hear "ME? QUIT? NEVER!  CAP LOCK!" The reality was that in some ways I did feel like giving up. I  found excuses to not work. I found things to distract me from the work.  I planned great writing sessions, if only the dishes were cleaned first  I better do them and oh the rugs need to be vacuumed and I could really  iron the napkins even though they are used and paper. For a time I  thought about going back to school to pursue a degree in animation. It  wasn't until my wife was pregnant with our son that I had a "What the  #&@% are you doing?" moment. I was sitting in my living room in the  dark, staring at a blank computer screen, and I heard a voice ask me,  "When your son asks you what you do, what do you want to tell him?" The  next morning I started getting up at 5AM to write. I did that for  several months, even after he was born. Then we moved to a place in  Brooklyn where my commute to midtown Manhattan was ninety minutes both  ways. I wrote on the train, by hand, in leather-bound journals.  Eventually I got a small netbook. I still get a majority of my writing  done on the train, even though my commute is shorter now and my son  older. Pregnant women and the elderly hate me. "No, you can't have this  seat. Because I'm an artist, that's why." Through it all the reason I  kept at it was "What will you tell your son what you are?" Did I follow  my passion? Did I do what I HAD to do. At first, no. But eventually,  yes. And I know now that it has stuck. I won't be stopping anytime soon. 
4. How have your writing goals/dreams changed since you started the process?
At first it was very goal  oriented. "I want to have a book published." Then you think you've  become a "serious" writer when you no longer want the publication but  instead just want an agent. That's bullshit. It's as much of a  distracting goal as publication. The moment--and I am serious when I say  "moment"--that I knew in my heart that I only cared about getting the  words in the right order good things started to happen. Do I want my  books to sell? Of course. But when I sit down at the keyboard I am  completely absorbed by the issues my characters are facing and how to  make the sentences clear, the plot work, the descriptions true. I have  brilliant moments of self-doubt, beautiful certainty that I suck at  this. I think of these moments as brilliant and beautiful because they  remind me of what's important: the writing writing writing. Thank God I  have those moments of doubt. The second I stop having them is when I'll  be going through the motions and writing work that will most certainly  be crap. Doubt is a sign of passion. Embrace it.
5. These interviews will hopefully inspire those who are just beginning the writing process. What's the one piece of advice you wished you knew when you started?
I'm a bit of contrarian.  Sometimes for humorous effect, sometimes just because, and sometimes  because by law I'm forced to utilize my Philosophy degree in SOME way.  However, when it comes to writing, I really go the opposite direction  from a lot of "how to"s. Some of the things I do wouldn't work for  everyone. Some people are outliners; I'm not. Some people say "write in  the morning" or "never listen to music, eavesdrop to learn dialog" or  "Revise the day after/week later/month after you finish." I would never  be so arrogant to recommend that others should write the way I write.  What makes my way so special?
But  there is one piece of advice I would question: "Know your audience."  Why? Am I going to drive them to the bookstore to pick up the book? I  always assume that my audience are people who like the things I like. If  I fill a book with things I think are cool, people who might be like me  will probably find some (I hope most) of it cool too. However, I enjoy  lots of different things, and my tastes can change based on mood,  weather, time of year. If MY interests and tastes can develop and shift  how am I going to meet the interests and tastes of some anonymous  "audience?" I spent a lot of time trying to write for a specific  audience in grad school. The effect: I wrote very little, and what I did  write was like someone else's work. 
Thanks, Sean!! Go see Sean's blog for more general amusement AND advice, or follow him on Twitter @byseanferrell!
 
10 comments:
Great interview - it is inspiring!
But Sean, who says you look good in a suit?
What a great analogy to shampoo. I've rinsed and repeated a million times, I think. I love "Doubt is a sign of passion. Embrace it." That's what I'm going to do from now on!
Fabulous interview!
And I positively can't wait for Sean's book!
Great interview. Awesome all around.
Thanks for your thought-provoking answers, Sean. I laughed at the shampoo analogy, but it is so true. And your attitude toward doubt...perfect. I believe I'll steal it and use it myself.
Really can't wait to get my hands on NUMB.
Great interview, Susan.
Numb sounds awesome!
Love this interview! My favorite so far (er, no offense, Linda G, who interviewed me!)
Seriously, it's fun to get these insights into Sean's mind. Now I need a shower.
But I can't wait to get my hands on NUMB!
Tawna
This is a cool interview, great idea. Go Susan and Sean.
The shampoo method! That is GREAT! Wonderful interview Suze & Sean.
I loved reading this--can we be friends? Your book sounds incredible--what a story! Thanks for the interview Susan and Sean!
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