Not many authors
publish their rejections letters. Not so for Dan Gutman. He shares several on
his website, and says he’s received hundreds of them. Gutman has also published
over a hundred books for kids, including the very popular MY WEIRD SCHOOL
series. Not too shabby, eh?
So, Dan, you've received hundreds of
rejections, but you've also published over a hundred books. At this point, for
each rejection letter, do you now have a book?
No, because a
lot of books have been rejected repeatedly. "Honus" was rejected
ten times. "Johnny Hangtime" was rejected twelve times.
"Casey Back At Bat" was rejected TWENTY times. It took
ten years to get that one published. Man, now you're getting me
depressed!
Ha! Sorry ‘bout that, Dan. But it seems you’ve
made peace with rejection being part of a writer’s life. Was there any one
thing that helped you let go of the upset that comes with rejection?
It must have
simply been blind arrogance, on my part. I just convinced myself that my
writing and my ideas were good ones that kids would really like. I never
assumed that just because somebody was an editor working for a major publishing
company, they were a better judge than I was. I trusted my
instincts. Also, I was motivated to succeed because I wanted to show
those editors how wrong they were. Success is the best revenge!
Love that! And thanks for the reminder.
Your journey is an interesting one. Your
original desire was to write humor, but it took you a while to figure out that
your writing sweet spot was writing for kids. Do you have any advice that might
help people find their own writing sweet spot?
Everybody is
different, of course. But I'll tell you what worked for me--TRY
EVERYTHING. This was not my plan, but first I tried writing short essays
for newspapers. I tried writing longer magazine articles. I tried
writing screenplays. I tried writing non-fiction books for adults.
I failed at ALL those things. But by failing, I figured out what I was
NOT good at. And then, when I tried writing for kids, instantly I felt,
"This is what I'm good at! This is what I was meant to
do!" My only regret is that it took me ten years to get to that
point.
You are amazingly prolific, having
published over 100 books. Many writers, especially those just getting started,
find finishing a project one of their biggest obstacles. Any advice for getting
to “The End”?
Hmmm, for me,
it's always the MIDDLE that is the hard part. When I start a book, I
usually know how it will begin and how it will end. Then I struggle with what
comes between.
I play little
mental tricks on myself. I will make a false deadline, a date by which a
project must be finished (even if it's not due yet). I will set the day
before I'm going away on trip as the day I have to finish a project. I'll
limit the number of hours in a day I work on a project, because I find I get a
lot done when I have to do it in a short period of time. That kind of
stuff.
Find Dan on Facebook
Follow Dan on Twitter @DanGutmanBooks
As alway, SCBWI Team Blog will be live blogging from the conference floor. Mark your calendar for the August 3rd kick-off.
Find Dan on Facebook
Follow Dan on Twitter @DanGutmanBooks
As alway, SCBWI Team Blog will be live blogging from the conference floor. Mark your calendar for the August 3rd kick-off.