Harlequin Special Edition wants me to do edits on Coming Attractions, then resubmit. This is
not a guarantee they’ll buy it.
But it’s
also not a rejection, and gets me a step closer. The editorial assistant used
such words as “loved”, “skill”, and “write very well”, which ain’t too shabby
when accompanied by “I would welcome a revised manuscript”.
Then there
are those two long paragraphs detailing what she didn’t like. Some of the problems were niggling at the back of my own
mind, which tells me I should have listened to my internal editor from the
first. But a few suggestions include major, moving the whole book around stuff,
of the “months of revisions” variety.
So, am I
going to do all that work, or move on to a different publisher and try again
with the story as it stands?
Well, it’s
Harlequin, man!
Yes, I’m
aware some writers hate Harlequin. No, I’m not afraid to take a pass.
However, the editor is absolutely right about almost all the concerns she
mentioned. I’d be a fool not to take advantage of that critique, make the
changes, and try it again … so that’s what I’m going to do. However, I’ll
probably start by making the obviously needed changes, save that version, and
then go on with a new Harlequin version.
I guess free time will be out of the question between
now and the holidays.
Sounds promising! Good luck!
ReplyDeleteThanks -- luck, and time!
DeleteFree time is definitely out!
ReplyDeleteNo free time, that's for sure. But serious writers know that's the price they pay ...
ReplyDelete