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The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » You searched for rejection » Page 2

Search Results for: rejection

When Not to Respond to a Rejection Letter

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon March 12, 2015
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If you ask an agent the least favorite part of her job, she’ll usually say it’s sending out rejection letters. As an aspiring writer years ago, I saw more rejection letters than I care to recall. Still, I can’t remember one that wasn’t nice. Some were even helpful.

Back then, you had to kill trees and use at least one postage stamp, or run up a long distance phone bill (charged by the minute and spelled out on your phone bill) to respond to a rejection letter, so I don’t believe I responded to any rejection letters.

Email is super but it also makes it easy to fire back. At our office, we never know what will trigger an outraged response. We’ll send out what we believe is a perfectly nice letter, and receive something along the lines of:

1.) You’ll be sorry when I’m famous.

2.) God gave me this book, so now I’m on His side and you’re not.

3.) You’re obviously a hillbilly since you have no taste.

4.) You’re a lousy agent.

5.) My friend loves my book, so you don’t know what you’re talking about.

As an author living in a free country, you have every right to feel all of these emotions. They may or may not be based in truth. But for the moment, they are your truth. But don’t hit the SEND button on any email stating any of these temporary truths to anyone who could have an impact on your future career. That includes the Godless, hillbilly agent who doesn’t know what she’s talking about. So if you:

1.) Feel your face flushing red and hot;

2.) Feel your heart thumping rapidly; or

3.) Want to scream and throw things…

please don’t press SEND on any email. Email is forever and not the friend of the angry and disappointed.

So instead, you can pray and then:

1.) Call your friend, who loves your book.

2.) Drink tea.

3.) Watch a half hour of mindless television.

4.) Catch up on laundry.

5.) Walk around the block a few times.

In other words, do something else to calm down. And be glad you didn’t show your insecurities, pride, and anger to anyone in professional publishing.

Your turn:

Have you ever sent an email you regretted? How did you recover?

What advice would you offer a person angry about being rejected?

Category: Get Published, RejectionTag: Get Published, Rejection, rejection letters

3 Reasons Why Rejection is Good

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon August 28, 2014
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I’ll be the first to admit that rejection doesn’t feel good, so how can it be good? Well, a rejection: …allows you to close the door and move on to the next opportunity. …shows that the other person doesn’t share your enthusiasm enough to be your partner. Learning this allows you the freedom to find the right partner. …may be a sign of God’s will. His …

Read more3 Reasons Why Rejection is Good
Category: Career, Get Published, RejectionTag: Rejection

Five Myths About an Agent’s Rejection

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon October 31, 2013
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1.) The agent hates me. Unless you approached her and said something along the lines of, "You and your kids are ugly and you have lousy taste in manuscripts," a rejection shouldn't be personal.

But if you are worried that you unintentionally offended an agent or other publishing professional, take action. Email to let him know you have been worried about why you may have been the cause of …

Read moreFive Myths About an Agent’s Rejection
Category: Book Proposals, Conferences, Craft, Get Published, Rejection, Tamela, Writing CraftTag: Agents, Get Published, Rejection

The Unhelpful Rejection Letter

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon March 8, 2012
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Have you ever received an unhelpful rejection letter that says, "Sorry, but this just isn't a fit for us."? I have. And I've also written more of these rejections than I'd like to admit. In fact, after I write this post, I may just have to send out twenty more.

Some authors write back to say, "Can't you tell me what I can do better? What suggestions do you have?" I'm sure I frustrate writers …

Read moreThe Unhelpful Rejection Letter
Category: Book Business, Book Proposals, Get Published, Rejection, TamelaTag: Get Published, Query Letters, Rejection, Tamela

The Fear of Rejection

By Steve Laubeon June 20, 2011
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Randy Ingermanson recently interviewed author Mary DeMuth in his "Advanced Fiction Writing E-Zine" and the topic of rejection surfaced. I thought it was very insightful and, with permission, am posting their conversation.

_______________

My friend Mary DeMuth recently published an e-book with the title The 11 Secrets of Getting Published.

Given that the price is only $2.99, I assumed the …

Read moreThe Fear of Rejection
Category: Book Business, Get Published, Rejection, Writing CraftTag: Book Business, Get Published, Rejection, Writing Craft

Tips for Mentoring Writer Friends

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon January 29, 2025
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You’ve undoubtedly done everything listed below since you’re one of our readers. However, based on the many unsolicited submissions we receive, many new authors still need to follow good advice. If you’re mentoring new authors, we suggest recommending the following: Please Read and Follow Our Guidelines As Steve Laube says, “We are not hiding.” We feature our …

Read moreTips for Mentoring Writer Friends
Category: Get Published

How to Write Your First Novel – an Interview

By Steve Laubeon January 20, 2025
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write your first novel book cover image

Thomas Umstattd Jr. interviews Steve Laube   Thomas: So, you’re thinking about writing a novel. You’ve tried your hand at writing a few times, but the story just hasn’t come together. Or maybe you wrote and wrote, but you didn’t quite like what you wrote. The method of starting to write and hoping for the best is the hardest way to write a novel. It’s like trying to …

Read moreHow to Write Your First Novel – an Interview
Category: Steve, The Writing Life, Writing CraftTag: Craft, The Writing Life, Writing Craft

Book Proposals I’d Love to See (What Tamela Hancock Murray Is Looking For)

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon January 7, 2025
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(Updated 1/7/2025) I’m thankful to the Lord that I’m a literary agent working for Him in Christian publishing. I’m grateful to the readers of this blog for being part of our writing community. As for approaching me with your work, let’s see if our passions match: Christian Romantic Suspense and Suspense Readers of Christian romantic suspense and suspense are a large and devoted …

Read moreBook Proposals I’d Love to See (What Tamela Hancock Murray Is Looking For)
Category: Agency, Book Business, Book Proposals, Career, Craft, Creativity, Romance, Trends, Writing CraftTag: Agency, book proposals

How to Become a Better Novelist With Brad Pauquette

By Thomas Umstattd, Jr.on December 10, 2024
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Imposter syndrome sometimes tells you the truth. Sometimes, you really do need to get better at the task in front of you to succeed. Many gurus will tell you that you already have everything you need. You just need to pay them money so you can be successful. But in the real world, success requires the hard work of improving your craft. Now, it’s true, sometimes imposter syndrome lies; but …

Read moreHow to Become a Better Novelist With Brad Pauquette
Category: Craft, Writing CraftTag: Writing Craft

The Anatomy of the Publishing Cycle

By Steve Laubeon November 25, 2024
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If you ask an editor or an agent, “What’s hot right now?” you are too late with the question. The nature of the publishing business is that what you see selling today are books that were conceived, written, published, and marketed over the past couple of years or more. That is why we, on this side of the table, avoid making pronouncements on current trends. In some ways, the agent and the …

Read moreThe Anatomy of the Publishing Cycle
Category: Book Business, Branding, Career, Creativity, Indie, Marketing, TrendsTag: publishing, The Publishing Life, Trends
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