Ten years ago today, my first cover story appeared. It was my first “pro credit” — a long profile in my hometown’s alternative weekly of romance author Julie Leto, who has become, in the last decade, a mentor, a colleague, and one of my closest friends.

Here is the story. It’s called “My Randy Valentine.” Then, as now, authors don’t get a lot of say in their titles.

I had written a few several-line movie reviews for the newspaper the summer I graduated from college, and one food review, for which I was paid the cost of the dinner. But this was the first time I got a check.

For this article, I was paid $500. It was, to a girl answering phones at an insurance company and working nights at Pottery Barn in Manhattan in order to afford the rent on the crappy Queen’s apartment I shared with two roommates, an outrageous windfall. I remember the day the story came out. I waltzed into a salon in Astoria with hair that went all the way down my back and told the owner that I was a writer, and I wanted a more “rock star” haircut. An hour later I had this awesome, razory short style that I wore for many years.

My parents had the issue of the newspaper framed for me. I went out and drank wine with friends. I was a writer! I was paid for writing!

And since the place I was being paid to write was in Tampa, not New York, I decided to get out of that town. In New York, I met a lot of people who had come to be writers/artists/actors but had been beat down by the system. I lost count of the number of times I’d said to a new acquaintance, “I work at [insurance company] but I’m working on a novel,” and they’d give me a sad, knowing smile and go, “Yeah, I used to do that, but I got tired of being poor.” I dreaded coming to the same conclusion. (Ironically, now most of the people I know in NY are full time writers, but I never met any of them then.)

A month later, I lost my job. I made an attempt to find a new one. I thought it would be good if I tried to find a job in publishing. But jobs were really scarce in NYC post-9/11, and it got even tougher when they stopped accepting “unknown mail” due to an Anthrax scare. Once, I tried to drop off a resume in person at the Harlequin offices, and they kicked me out. After about a month of that, I decided to leave. It was very telling that most of my boxes in my bedroom had remained packed.

I went to Florida, where I promptly picked up a regular freelance gig at the newspaper that first published me. I started waitressing to make extra cash. I lived with my parents. I finished my first manuscript and, as a reward (and thanks to Julie’s urging), I joined RWA. I finished another manuscript. I started submitting and collecting rejections. By 2003, I was working full time for the paper and living in an off-season vacation cottage on a beach in Sarasota.

The questions I got from acquaintances in Florida were, “If you want to be a writer, why don’t you go to new York?” The answer of, “because the newspaper that’s paying me is here” didn’t seem to sway them, nor did, “You mean like Hemingway?”

I spent most of 2003 like this, and then I went to Australia and New Zealand with Sailor Boy on an epic antipodean adventure (and yes, it took me until 2012 to publish anything set there. Sometimes things take time to marinate). While overseas, I finished my third manuscript. When we came back, in spring of 2004, I started freelancing for the paper again, but things there had changed significantly and bizarrely, and I knew I had to get out. I just didn’t know where to go. I wasn’t making enough to live on, and newspapers were cutting staff, not adding them. As a good half-dozen hurricanes rocked my state, I took another job doing clean up and concentrated on my fiction (still doing my weekly freelancing gig). I got my first revision requests, contest wins, and agent interaction. Also, a lot more rejections.

In January of 2005, Sailor Boy and I moved to Washington, DC. As I was packing, I got the idea for Secret Society Girl. When I got there, I started looking for a job, and writing my books on the side. I almost took a job as a night desk editor at the Post. Boy, that would have been hell. I am NOT a night person. Instead, I took a job as a copyeditor at a science journal. It was a scary time. I was still in publishing, but for the first time since February of 2002, I wasn’t writing for pay. And no matter how hard I was trying with my new manuscript, no matter that I had others still circulating publishing houses, there was no guarantee that I’d ever make money writing again. That was March of 2005.

One week later, I had an agent. A few weeks after that, I had a book deal for more money than I’d ever made at any job.

Since 2005, I’ve been making my living as a writer. Since April of 2006, I’ve been doing it full time. This summer will see the release of my eighth novel. It’s funny to think about how in my adult life, I’ve been doing this longer than anything else. Since April of 2006, I’ve had a date in mind where if I didn’t sell something new, I’d have to go out and get a job, just as I got odd jobs every other time my writing income fell short in the past decade. With every contract, I’ve been able to push that date forward. I haven’t needed it in almost six years.

But it all started in February of 2002, with one little newspaper, and one cover story, and one check that was so much more than $500 — it was actual, spendable money that someone gave me for putting a bunch of words on paper, and it was the first time that ever happened. Happy anniversary, little article. Happy anniversary to both of us.

10 Responses to “Happy Writing Anniversary to Me”
  1. Celine says:

    Happy writing anniversary! I don’t think you will need to consider a side-job ever again if you don’t want to (:

    [Reply]

    Diana replies:

    We’ll see Celine. What’s really interesting to me is how many people I started with, and how many people had blossoming careers when I started who aren’t publishing at all anymore. That I’ve managed to stay in the game this long is something I’m grateful for every day.

    [Reply]

  2. Anna says:

    Congratulations on ten years! This post was so interesting – I’d been hoping you’d tell us more about those early days, after previous posts piqued my curiosity. Somehow it’s very encouraging to hear how people have persevered through tough circumstances and discouragement to make it as writers. Here’s to many more years in the profession with no need for a day (or night) job!

    [Reply]

    Diana replies:

    Thanks, Anna. I sometimes forget that not everyone who reads this blog has been reading it for eight years. Let me know if there’s anything else you were curious about.

    [Reply]

    Anna replies:

    Oh thank you, Diana. I confess, I’ve done a little digging (stalking?) through the archives to learn more about your writing process and road to publication. I’ve been struck by your commitment – it seems like you’ve kept writing no matter what, seen projects through to the end and been very pragmatic about the business side.

    Anyway, love the blog, old entries and new, and always look forward to the next installment. And can June come any sooner?! Also, I’m intrigued by this mysterious new project code-named PIMP…

    [Reply]

  3. alaska says:

    love this post, love that you persevered, and love that i get to read even more novels written by you. ;)

    [Reply]

  4. Tiff says:

    This is an amazing post that gives me a lot of hope. While I don’t think I want to be a full-time writer (I like my stable government job too much), it’s really inspiring to see how much you went through, and how you got to where you are. I was already impressed by your writing and ambition, but your perseverance is unbelievable. Especially with the manuscripts.

    Now I feel really inspired to go and tackle my own manuscript again. Thank you!

    [Reply]

  5. Elizabeth Norris says:

    Happy Anniversary Diana!

    I love your story. Everyone has their own struggle and its not the part where they tell you their success that inspires me, its the part where they question everything and despite doubt, fear and struggle, they decide to keep going. You decided to keep going. Thank you.

    Its our never-ending-stories and as a writer I couldn’t glean more inspiration from anywhere else.

    Cheers!! Here’s to 10 years more!

    [Reply]

  6. Susan Adrian says:

    Congratulations, Diana!! That really is a wonderful feat.

    I have yet to make a penny from my writing, but I did make a nice living copyediting scientific journals… ;) And still working on the other part.

    [Reply]

  7. Julie Leto says:

    Happy anniversary, sister! I avoided the internet all Valentine’s Day so I didn’t see this until now…but your article is still the only one I’ve ever done with a reporter that contained NO errors, except the ones imposed by your editor. Randy, indeed. ;-)

    [Reply]

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