Green

More_of_Me

Tonight I attend ‘More of Me’ Book Launch II for my dear friend Kathryn Evans – a special for the inhabitants of Chichester and its hinterland. If I have time after I return from the dentists in the afternoon, I shall wear an outrageous green dress. I have heard that green dresses are unlucky – green being the colour of the fair folk – but I have no wish to bring ill-fortune to my colleague. Rather  a dusting of lucky fairy dust…

Cover design by Hannah Cobley at Usborne

There will be better accounts with jolly pictures of the event than mine. This is not about the celebration – however wonderful it is.

frock

Here’s the frock!

It’s about the pangs I have learned to set on one side. I’m not going to pretend I don’t have a painful moment of self-examination when I see another writer publicly succeeding where I have not. The shoulds form a poisonous chorus – I should have worked harder, I should have written something more popular, I should have started when I was younger…

Moss-covered-lava_field_iceland-by_Mal_B. Non-comm_licence

But they can be sent into the barren wastes. That’s quite easy when I’m reviewing or reading something so much itself as ‘More of Me’. It has such a distinct voice – at once so very Kathy and at the same time with its own unique tone. I have little difficulty praising a work not written for my readership.

The mental distance is less protection when it’s closer to home. Regular readers will know I am friends with Lu Hersey – whose novel won the Mslexia Children’s Novel prize whilst mine was short-listed. We both wrote about selkies. With such a mutual enthusiasm, you can see why the self-recriminations swam around my ankles.

They’ve come back now the Branford Boase longlist has been announced: Deep Water by Lu Hersey, edited by Sarah Stewart is on there. That delusory ‘it could’ve been me’ daydream lets them slip in and accuse me.

daydream_by_zombie__fairy-d5rykdl

Happily I can call on my experience with Nicki Marshall of Golden Egg Academy, and now my first session of their Editors Course, to grasp how unsung yet special that writer-editor relationship is. A much better imagining. That helps – and the knowledge that though there were similar themes, the likely readers would be different. Not so much rivals as wild-swimmers crossing the same bay, perhaps.

As for Frances Hardinge winning the Costa – her work is so far ahead of mine, it’s like a candle envying a star.

star_goddess_

So what have I learnt?

  • I’m not as nice as I’d like to be, but I can tell my green-eyed ego to stand in a corner.
  • Keep going – as Kathy, Lu and Frances have.
  • Go with your wildest, most exciting ideas – that’s where ‘More of Me’ came from.
  • Seek for an agent who understands what you are offering.
  • Work with an editor who grasps what you intend – or be that editor.
  • Try competitions, challenges, anything – but write.
  • Quality will out – read and ponder.

singing-bird_CC

“If I keep a green bough in my heart, the singing bird will come.”

Chinese proverb

7 thoughts on “Green

  1. I think we can all relate to this, Philippa. It’s not easy being the “bridesmaid” and never the bride. I like that you recognize and acknowledge your feelings while still cheering on your fellow writers. At times like these, it helps to remember to “Take Joy” in the craft of writing, as Jane Yolen says in her book. Along with that is to treat yourself kindly. It’s easy to get out the hair shirt and beat yourself up. Acknowledge those feelings but let them go. You are an awesome writer. Getting published is hard and requires equal parts talent, connections, luck, and not giving up. Thanks for sharing!

  2. I remember a really helpful, very fine writer I met once who was really important to my decision to continue writing after the first 100 rejections laid me low. She liked my work, made suggestions and went on with her own to get a contract and have her first book published. There were so many congratulations ringing in the air, it felt like we had all shared somehow in her success, however… only a little over a year later, the same publisher rejected her second novel because of the sluggish sales (despite very good reviews) of her first. Moral: creating a product for public consumption is always a crapshoot. It bears little upon the quality of the product and more on the timing and the luck that accompanies it into the market. I know your writing, Philippa, and it’s exceptional. As writers, we can only create alone and not all that glitters is gold. Someone literary said that, I’m sure of it.

  3. You’ve got your green-eyed beastie well-tamed in public. I’m sure all ours growl under the table far more than we’re usual prepared to admit. A pleasure to work alongside you on the editing trail. x

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