I have just submitted a new manuscript to my editor. If all goes well it will be my seventy-seventh published work. Those of you struggling—and it is a struggle—to publish your first book, that number may seem outlandish, and you must think my mood sanguine. The number may be absurd, but my mood is anything but sanguine, sanguine meaning : “Of persons and expectations, etc.: Hopeful or confident with reference to some particular issue.” In fact, I am anxious, which, to stick to the dictionary, means, “Troubled or uneasy in mind about some uncertain event; being in painful or disturbing suspense; concerned, solicitous. unsure of the outcome.”
The truth is my deep involvement with writing a book can, and usually, does, create a kind of selective blindness to what I have created over these past months. Thus, after reading the MS to my wife, she might say (and has), “Wait a minute! How does X know that Y …?” Or, “Whatever happened when Z …? Or even, “There is no logic that A does B, when C …” Most dreaded (yet welcome) of all, “That Chapter 2 really is dull. Can’t you cut it …?”
It is my experience that when I share my work with someone—a reader—I immediately see my work in a different way. Call it defensive. Call it self-criticism. Anyway, I suddenly am aware of the shortcomings of the work.
I suspect that this shift from a selfie approach to creation as contrasted to external objectivity is obligatory in the creative process. I am willing to trust myself only up to a certain point. And that point is when someone else reads my work. Such as—my editor.
3 thoughts on “Am I sanguine?”
It is encouraging to hear that even experienced and tremendously successful writers are hunble enough to seek and act on input from others.
This is a sign of a great writer. You’re willing to take the risk of sharing with readers and do the work to up your game.
Sorry . I meant to say that you wrote a good passage. Its funny too!!!