
Aaron Elkins writes:
If you can call a guy who gets his first novel published at 47 an overnight success, then I'm an overnight success.
I tend to be unloved at writers' conferences when the question of "how many rejections did you get" comes up, because the answer they want, of course, is "Seventeen," or "Forty-two," or some such.
As for me, when I finished my first novel, I sent out about fifteen query letters. The first eleven resulted in no-thank-you's (I don't think you can call them rejections, because they hadn't seen the manuscript), but the twelfth -- to Ruth Cavin at Walker and Company -- received a response indicating interest. I sent the MS in, and it was accepted.
Since then, I've "rejected" two of my own novels when I was about three-quarters through, but I've never had a submitted piece of work rejected.
Aaron Elkins is a former anthropologist and the author of the Gideon Oliver series. His book Old Bones won the Edgar Award for Best Novel.
In June of 1996, chez Domaine du Val des Rois, in Valreas, I tasted a 1969 rose that my host, Romain Bouchard, had made, from Grenache, Syrah, and Gamay, and it was breath-taking! Only very slightly past its prime, but still vivid and precise, and riveting. After which we tasted a Tavel, from...1968--a terrible year--and it was more tired than the Bouchard wine, but amazingly still quite interesting.
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I also drank those wines in June of '96, chez Romain et Nancy; we must have been there together! I am so sad to know of Romain's passing.
Posted by: Steve Edmunds | July 27, 2011 at 07:33 PM