Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

       Memorylane

I remember a time when I actually thought it was possible to be considered an author, to be accepted into the "fold" of published authors, to be a member of that esteemed grouping of writers who'd "made it". Those thoughts took place several years ago.

I've met a lot of authors who I deem to be successful – some of them might disagree because of their paychecks. Others would accept the mantle with humility. Although many successful authors have been traditionally published, some of them have gone "indie" because of the financial rewards. Of course it always helps to have the "been published" or "bestselling author" behind you when you go the independent route. 

I've done the posts on "success" and what it means at any level, but this isn't really about that. It's about my personal reflection of writing dreams, self-publishing when the stigma attached to it remained and sometimes still does, being unready for the demands of publishing, deciding the demands forced compromises I wasn't willing to make, and eventually slipping off into an undisciplined time of writing only blog posts before once again being receptive to three possible endeavors which still continue in their various states of unfinished works in progress. 

Yes, there was a time when it mattered to walk upon that hallowed ground of recognition for my work as an author. Now? I guess I can say it only matters when someone, anyone, reads one of my books and truly enjoys it. That really does matter to me.

 

Father, I thank you for every one of those readers. Every single one. Only you bring the good and perfect gifts, the increase. Only you. Thank you for all you've done for and given to me. In the Name of Jesus, Amen. 

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4 responses to “There was a time when . . .”

  1. BK Jackson Avatar
    BK Jackson

    Everybody has to decide what matters most to them in writing books. For me, I’ve come to the conclusion that it isn’t publication, though some income would be nice. But I write the stories I write because I like the challenge. It’s more like solving puzzles. That’s what creativity is in general–solving puzzles. In drawing it’s a challenge to draw a horse or a dog’s eye and keep working at it and trying different approaches till it looks so realistic it could be a photograph. That sort of thing.
    That’s also part of the reason I’m not a finisher by most people’s definition. Once I feel I’ve solved the puzzle to my satisfaction, I’m ready to move on.

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  2. Nicole Petrino-Salter Avatar

    Interesting concept, Brenda. It’s good to know yourself. I think your writing would be a welcome change to those who love western fiction. The important thing, however, is as you described: knowing what writing is to you.

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  3. Brenda S. Anderson Avatar

    I’m glad you’ve come to that place with your writing, Nicole, as really, that’s where we should all strive to be. Not quite there yet. I know that God’s definition of success differs from the world’s definition, and my goal is to rest in God and to be satisfied with where He brings me. Still working on it!

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  4. Nicole Petrino-Salter Avatar

    We’re all working on it, Bren, at least those of us who know we are writers. I haven’t perfected it by any means, but I can say I have a different perspective than those years ago. I prefer it this way.
    You keep keepin’ on. The Lord has blessed your hard work and you can rest in that.

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