By Dame Toni
As an admitted, not-even-close-to-recovery list junkie, I don’t expect you to believe me when I say I don’t make New Year’s resolutions.
And you’d be right not to.
Most of my resolutions are typical – eat better, exercise more, blah, blah, blah. But I do have one that is a writerly thing. And I’m not the only one. The other Dames and I have a private communications loop we use to chat with each other. Most of what we say is protected under to the cone of silence, but I don’t think I’m in violation if I reveal that, in our recent back-and-forth discussion about our various New Year’s Resolution, there was one that made pretty much every list. And, it’s this: In 2010, I will Sell More Books.
The economic downturn has affected writers, too. While publishers are still buying books, they aren’t buying as many and they aren’t paying large advantages. But I still believe that selling more books is a reasonable resolution, and it’s because, like most writers, I have an unshakable conviction that I’ll beat the odds. That my novels will sell, where most are rejected. That I’ll get big advances, even though there are less of them available.
Unrealistic? A little crazy, even? Maybe. But it’s a good kind of crazy, at least in my not-always-so-humble opinion. And, possibly, even a necessary kind of crazy for those of us who have made it our goal to earn our livings writing popular fiction.
Around twenty years ago, I listened to a tape of a self help book by Earl Nightingale. I don’t’ remember the title, or even the topic. But I do remember one thing that he said. Paraphrasing, it is that if you are in the top 5% of your field, you can survive 95% unemployment. This statement stuck with me, and it’s a good thing to remember when I wake up at that irrational three-in-the-morning hour, convinced I’ll never break out of the midlist.
I think it’s a good thing to remember when youmake ANY New Year’s Resolution. For example, I heard a statistic that 88% of dieters either fail to reach their weight goal, or gain all the weight back afterward. Scary, right? Not if you’re in the 12% who stay slim. I read that 70% percent smokers who attempt to quit return to cigarettes. So what, if you’re one of the 30% who never put another one in your mouth?
Although the percentage of writers who never quite achieve long-term success might be seen as some by daunting, New Year’s Eve is a good time for me to remind myself that I don’t need to worry about the number of people who will fail.
I don’t plan to be one of them.
Happy New Year, everyone! If you make only one resolution, resolve to be in that top five percent, at whatever you do. Be your own kind of recession proof.





















