My friend and outstanding writer Dietrich Kalteis asked me
to contribute my “favorite” rejection story for an article he’s putting
together. He only wanted a paragraph and I had a good story for that level of
detail. I have another story that’s more along the lines of writers’ nightmares
I can share here.
Nick Forte was originally a tongue-in-cheek protagonist of a
not quite cozy about a former musician turned PI who worked cases that involved
the music business. His sidekick fancied himself as Hawk but was universally
known as Wren. I had an agent—the late and sorely missed Pam Strickler—who
enthusiastically pushed the book to the major New York houses, where it
received encouraging rejections.
Pam turned to a leading second-tier publisher of crime
fiction. They asked for an exclusive, then sent it for a round of readers’
comments. I made some edits, and they sent it around again. More comments. More
edits. Then it went through what sounded like a painfully detailed evaluation
process with the house editors. No news. Pam sent a gentle prod. They put us
off. Pam send another note. The runaround again. I forget how many of these we
went through, never rejecting us, but not sending a contract, either.
Pam and I finally agreed it was time for the “piss or get
off the pot” letter. That received a blow-off: a two-line e-mail with
grammatical errors even I recognized, back when I chose to write in the first
person because I lacked confidence in my grammatical skills. Total time waiting:
almost two years.
The story has a happy ending. I used the time to take Forte
in a different direction, which led to two Shamus nominations. Still, I have a
fantasy I think most writers can relate to.
I sell a book that generates enough buzz I get to make a
national tour. When the publicist tells me I can have a spot in [city name
redacted] speaking at [prominent bookstore associated with the publisher
mentioned above redacted] I tell her I wouldn’t appear there if the owners
kissed my bare ass on the 50-yard line of the Super Bowl during the coin toss.
The publicist would be encouraged to relay my comment to [publisher name
redacted] in those exact words. I’d then ask her to spare no effort to book me
into that bookstore’s closest competitor, where I’d be happy to bring food and
beverages, stay as long as anyone wanted, and sweep up after.
(*--Irish Alzheimer’s: A condition where the afflicted party remembers only the grudges. My mother’s maiden name was Dougherty.)
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