51 Rejections

History is filled with stories about authors who were rejected but kept trying until they found success.

Here’s just one example. A number of years ago, an aspiring author decided he wanted to write a book about the key decisions that determine personal success. However, he didn’t want to write it in a traditional nonfiction format. Instead, he wanted to teach the concepts as a story.

He spent a year writing the book, then submitted it to a publisher. It was rejected, so he moved on to the next one. Rejected again.

The author tried a third and fourth time. Still more rejection. Pretty soon, he worked his way up to a dozen rejections. Still no dice.

He kept pushing forward, submitting the book to more publishers. This went on for another dozen rejections. Then another dozen, and another dozen still.

After spending three-and-a-half years getting rejected by 51 publishers, he struck gold when Thomas Nelson publishers gave him the green light. That book was The Traveler’s Gift. The author was Andy Andrews, whose books have now sold over three million copies worldwide.

Andy Andrews tried 52 times before he got what he wanted. Let that sink in for a moment.

This may sound like an extreme example, but stories of perseverance are common in the publishing world. Even if you are self-publishing, you will face challenges, setbacks, and problems that require you to dig down deep and keep moving when things aren’t going your way.

The historical novelist James Michener once said, “Character consists of what you do on the third and fourth tries.” There are a lot of writers with talent, but not all of them have the character and discipline to keep going in the face of rejection.

How about you? What are you up against in your writing? Are you willing to be persistent? How many times are you willing to try?

Because you may not have success on the third or fourth tries. It might just take 52.

Today’s Challenge: Don’t let rejection or discouragement stop you. Keep going with your writing. You’ll get there eventually.