Monday, September 3, 2018

How’d You Get Published?

By Jessica Kate @JessicaKate05 



In the time since I announced my multi-book contract with HarperCollins' Christian fiction imprint, Thomas Nelson, so many people have asked me about the journey leading up to this point.

So here’s the story, in five dot points--the good, the bad, and the oh-so-ugly rewrites:

2013

At 21, I'd started novels as a teen but never finished them. I went from full-time work to part-time, so I decided to try and finish a whole book in the extra hours. Did it. (Did much of it wrong, but still did it. ) Whole process was super hard. I set that book aside. (Where it shall remain.)

2014

Decided to do it again. Wrote the first draft of what became ‘Love and Other Mistakes’. Still had no idea what I was doing. Joined American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) and began to learn a lot.

2015

Burned out working full-time and writing. Took 6 months off. Got notification that I was a finalist in My Book Therapy's Frasier Competition. Decided it was a nudge from God to go to ACFW conference in Dallas for the award ceremony. In order to have a completed second draft to pitch to agents, I had to write 60,000 words in 10 weeks.

Chained myself to the laptop. God worked a miracle. Book got done. Met my agent at that conference, Chip MacGregor.

2016

Worked with Chip and a freelance editor to improve ‘Love and Other Mistakes’. I read once that a 20-page editorial letter (where the editor tells you everything you need to fix) is a bad one. Mine was 40. Took me 6 months to fix the book, but it was WAY better afterwards.

2017

Wrote first draft of a new book. Was ecstatic to finally be a finalist in the ACFW Genesis competition. Went to the conference and pitched ‘Love and Other Mistakes’ to publishers.

At the 2017 ACFW Gala: me (centre) with fellow Genesis Award finalists
Rebekah Millet (left) and Jenny Whitehurst Smith (right).

2018

In May (that's right folks, May—seven months after submitting and two months after accepting it wasn't gonna happen), I received an email from Chip saying that he’d spoken to Thomas Nelson again and they were interested. In June, received the formal offer. Made the announcement in July and revealed the title in August. :) :) :)

I'm so excited to be sharing Love and Other Mistakes with you all in 2019! I can't say enough for the people along the way who've taught me about writing, encouraged me and given me perspective on the challenging days.

To anyone thinking about writing a book, here's my top five pieces of advice:


  1. Do it with God. Without His strength, joy and the right perspective I'd have given up long ago.
  2. Join a writing community for encouragement and teaching. ACFW and My Book Therapy were instrumental in my early writing years, and they still are today. Since then I've also added the 5 Year Plan to Becoming a Bestselling Author to that list.
  3. Attend conferences and network like crazy. Both ACFW conferences I attended were instrumental, if not essential, in finding my agent and publisher.
  4. Expect to rewrite. A professional writer spends their life rewriting.
  5. Know when to press on and when to take a break. Ninety-nine percent of the time when I feel like giving up, I put on my big-girl pants and keep going. But in 2015, I definitely needed that six-month break. Pray for the discernment to know your priorities.

So writers, what were the key points in your writing journeys? Share in the comments!


About Jessica Kate

Australian author Jessica Kate writes inspirational romances that are fun, sassy and real. Jess is a screenwriting groupie, co-host of the StoryNerds podcast, and her favorite place to be--apart from Mum and Dad's back deck--is a theme park.

She's travelled North America and Australia, and samples her favorite pasta wherever she goes--but the best (so far) is still the place around the corner from her corporate day job as a training developer. She loves watching sit-coms with her housemates and being a leader in a new church plant.

Find Jessica online at:


8 comments:

  1. Always interesting to hear other people's stories. Such a hard process. Interesting too that 'who you know' is still so important (very Asian).

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  2. Making personal connections sure has been a big part of my journey!

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  3. Congratulations on your writing journey, Jessica Kate! I'm looking forward to meeting you later this month at what will be my first ACFW conference - where I'm also looking forward to FINALLY meeting my agent and editors - and all the author friends I've made on Facebook :)

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  4. Thanks Carolyn! Yay, you're going to LOVE ACFW! :) I can totally relate. I've worked with my agent 3 years now and we haven't seen each other in person since that first conference where we met. It's one of the toughest parts of being an international writer, the distance from everyone. Thank goodness for skype! I can't wait to meet my editor in person and visit the publishing house. So pumped!

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  5. Love reading this, Jess. And I reckon you're way ahead of the curve. 2014 -2018! Incredible. Excited to give you a hug in Nashville. particularly love that it's clear you're doing this hand in hand with the Lord. Such a wonderful example for all of us.

    :)

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  6. Thanks Ian! Feel very lucky. Looking forward to finally meeting everyone in person!

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  7. Hi Jess, Congratulations on your book contract! It was lovely to meet you in person at ACFW in 2015, and I look forward to seeing your debut book in print in 2019! :)

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  8. Great story Jess ... and thanks for sharing it. So good to see this kind of persistence. Many people think writing is about words and creativity; it's more likely to be persistence and drive. And leaning on God when the rejections come.

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