Erotica author, aka Elspeth Potter, on Writing from the Inside

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Writing Goals


What are your goals for writing?

I was thinking about this recently, and realized I needed to make some new goals. My first goal was sell a short story. I did quite a bit of that, all the while with the goal sell a novel. After I sold a novel, it was get a second novel contract, which I accomplished in April.

So what now?

I have a lot of ideas I'd love to turn into novels, but using those ideas doesn't really feel like a goal; they're just part of writing for me.

There's the money aspect, but I'm not sure that counts as a goal, either. Though I love being paid for my work, other factors are more important to me, and it doesn't seem useful to me to set a goal like earn X amount of money.

I don't actually have the goal of becoming a full-time writer. If some fortuitous event made me unspeakably wealthy, perhaps, but I don't see that happening. I don't want to worry about my contracts in the way I would need to, if they were my sole source of income. I prefer the stability of having a day job.

My only real goal at present, besides the immediate, finish the pirate novel, is to work on becoming a better writer, but that's more of a constant undercurrent than a goal. There's write what I want to write, which I am pretty much doing already, to my astonishment. It's not every publisher that will accept things like eunuchs and vengeful werewolf spies. And, of course, have fun. I wouldn't be doing this if I didn't enjoy it.

6 comments:

  1. Congrats on the continual upward climb!

    You make a good point that there's career goals and then there's writing goals. Of course, my goal is to sell a book. :) But they say set goals that are achievable, so I suppose a better goal would be to send a second book to my agent. My writing goal is to write a novel outside of my current world so I can learn to branch out a bit.

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  2. a better goal would be to send a second book to my agent.That's an idea. Maybe I should see if I can teach myself to write a new proposal while writing the current book. That is an important skill I don't have.

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  3. Since I've finished my book and am presently querying, I'm taking a break to read everybody I promised to read while I was writing. I would love to be a full time writer and it is a goal of mine, but not to sound negative, I've found if I don't think about it that seriously and put too much energy on it, it just may happen for me. I'm writing more for a sense of accomplishment. I write all the time, so it isn't like my current book will be a one trick pony. But after being in the music business all those years and being disappointed with that, I want to see my book in print in the bookstore so I can feel like I accomplished something that's very hard to do. If that makes sense.

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  4. It makes TOTAL sense. My "get novel published" goal took me at least a decade to accomplish, more if you count when I was just learning to write. And it was awesome when it finally happened. I'm still happy with that.

    Being relaxed about the goal is wise, though. Publishing is such a crapshoot sometimes.

    But...now I don't know what to strive for.

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  5. I know lots of authors move immediately into the Become a Bestseller goal stream, but that seems fraught with peril to me. As in, it becomes soooo easy to focus on print runs and publicity rather than on writing.

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  6. Also, how can you MAKE yourself into a bestseller? That has often puzzled me. I mean, I know there are books and such that tell you how, but those things aren't GUARANTEED. And...I don't think they MEAN anything, really.

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