Friday, September 11, 2020

Your Kidlit Questions Answered! Part Ii

Blog & website of children's book author Tara Lazar Your Kidlit Questions Answered! Part  II Graphic by Edna Cabcabin Moran Continued from yesterday… Jennifer Kirkeby asks: What do you do to keep yourself motivated? Especially after rejections? You know how “location, location, location” is  real estate’s most important criteria? Well, “new work, new work, new work” is how I keep myself motivated. A new story is always so exciting, isn’t it? I’ve seen writers try to sell the same manuscript year after year. On one hand, it’s good to be persistent, but on the other hand, you should know when it’s time to move on. Once you’ve finished a manuscript and started submitting, work on something new. Always have your list of ideas ready. Review them. Grab onto whatever resonates and start writing. An editor might not like what you’ve just submitted, but they might like your NEXT project. The more projects you have, the better your odds of becoming published. Don’t let rejections get you down. Everyone gets them. It’s the nature of our business. I’ve gotten so many now that they’ve lost their sting. I read the rejection, absorb the comments, decide if I agree or disagree, and move on. Not every manuscript is for every editorâ€"and a rejection doesn’t mean your story’s terrible and it will never find a home. Editors can reject a manuscript because it competes too closely with one of their existing or upcoming books, or because it doesn’t fit with their imprint’s personality and goals. An  editor  with  a bug phobia may stay away from beetle books.  An editor  might even love your story, but their team isn’t as enthused. Remember a rejection is not a personal attack. They are rejecting the work you submitted, NOT YOU. YOU are marvelous. YOU are creative. YOU just need to write another story. . Yangmommy asks: Hi! I thoroughly enjoyed your presentation at the MD/DE SCBWI in Maryland last month. It was the highlight of my day (and I still find myself saying, “whhyyy?”)!  But I left wondering more about how and when to insert the art notes. In the margins? Within the text (but doesn’t that break up the flow?)? Do you have an example you can showcase on your blog? An art note can be written in the body of your text, right after the words the art will accompany. I typically put the art note in brackets and italicize the text, like this: [Art: bear tickles alien.] I’ve also written manuscripts with so many necessary art notes that my agent has submitted them in graph format. This is because the art notes broke up the flow of the story too much, making it difficult to read. The graph format allows an editor to scan through the story easily while still being able to comprehend the illustrations. I explained this in a post here. . Tim asks: I attended a picture book writing conference recently, and the presenter asked for a show of hands of all those who at least occasionally wrote manuscript in rhyme. Nearly every hand in the room went up. And many new rhyming picture books are published each year. Yet aspiring PB writers are told frequently that rhyme is a very tough sell. So I’d love to see a post or two on how to sell rhyming PBs. Not tips on how to write in rhymeâ€"there are lots of resources for thatâ€"but on how to SELL it, including the no-nos either in queries or in manuscripts that will stop an editor or agent cold. Tim, there are no tricks to selling a rhyming manuscript other than making that rhyming manuscript GREAT. (There’s nothing you can say or do to sell a sub-par  manuscript.) Editors see a lot of bad rhyme, which is why they often tell new writers to avoid it. Rhyming manuscripts that don’t sell: What’s a GREAT rhyming story? A manuscript whose rhyme scheme is original and whose meter is consistent. A manuscript that features an appealing, marketable hook. For a picture book, some  agents and editors zip right past the cover letter to get to the meat of the manuscript, so I don’t think anything is going stop them cold, unless you’re wildly unprofessional and stuff your envelope full of glitter. Your query/cover should: It should be one page only. The manuscript should be double-spaced in a 12 pt serif font, like Times New Roman. Again, don’t use gimmicks. Good writing and a professional presentation are  all you need to attract an agent/editor’s attention. . Ginger asks: What does a picture book look like in written form and do you add picture ideas? I mentioned the standard format above. Here’s a pic of what the first page of a PB manuscript might look like: The second and each subsequent page header will  include “Name/TITLE” on the left and numerical page number on the right. Regarding art notes, that really requires its own post! See these previous posts: The bottom line is that you only include art notes if it’s not clear what’s happening from the text alone. For instance, if your text says “Felix was happy” but he’s really upset, you need an art note so the illustrator doesn’t make him smile. Write something like: “Felix was happy. [Art: Felix isn’t happy.]” You should not write “Felix was happy. [Art: Felix is stomping his feet, wearing red, waving his arms and sticking his tongue out.]” That’s far too specific and doesn’t leave the illustrator room to interpret Felix and his feelings. .Part III to come tomorrow! .  

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.