
The Rules I Broke
I’m a rule follower. Maybe a better characterization is that I believe experts when they tell me there’s “a way” to do a thing. When I was beginning my writing career, the “way” was to get short stories published in fine literary journals. At the same time, you worked on a novel. The theory was an agent would read your story in one of those journals and came clamoring at your door to rep your novel. Sounds quaint, doesn’t it? Yet, I followed that strategy long beyond its efficacy. Then came When We Were Murderous Time-Traveling Women. It’s hard to count the number of rules I broke with this novel.
First, I didn’t write toward publication. I wrote the novel for my own puredee entertainment. Oh, I’d think, then how about this? If I was having fun, I was succeeding.
Second, I had no audience in mind, unless you count me as an audience, which I’m not sure I can be writer and audience unless I move really fast from one side of the desk to the other.
Third, I didn’t follow the rules of my genre. I didn’t even have a genre. WWWMTTW is a literary fantasy that draws from family lore and mixes it with historical mishmash. Kind of like me.
Fourth, I wrote short chapters. Really short. As in three or four pages. When I read a book, even if I like the work, I tend to flip ahead to see how long until the chapter ends. I short-circuited that. (I ended none of the chapters on the characters going to bed for the night, though; I’m not totally unprincipled.)
Fifth, I addressed the reader directly. As in, “I am so sorry, but before I disclose who wanted the Dauphine dead, I need you to bear with one more interruption (I’ll be quick, I promise.)”
Sixth, I did not pass the manuscript around to Beta readers and get unlimited feedback. I had a trusted Beta reader. I submitted to one contest and placed. That was that was that.
Seventh, I sent it to a handful of agents and quit. I decided I wasn’t going to get into that again. Three times, I placed three different manuscripts in the hands of professionals who promised to sell them and could not. You know the definition of insanity? I wasn’t doing that again.
Eighth, I went with the first small press that showed interest. Of course, I researched the press. I even interviewed the publisher. I assured myself I would have an editor who related to my work. But I didn’t think, ooooh—if they like it, maybe a bigger press will too. I said yes to my first offer.
By saying how I broke the rules, I’m not saying I’m so smart and all those folks following the rules are dumb bunnies. I’m saying the rules weren’t working for me, and I quit following them.
I recently read a blog post by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar quoting Churchill as saying, “However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results.” Abdul-Jabbar proved the truth of the quote by sharing his own experience during key basketball games. Typically, I will go down with the ship, believing in another Churchill quote: “Never, never, never, never give up.” (Which isn’t even accurate; the quote is, “Never give in, never give in, never, never, never, never-in nothing, great or small, large or petty — never give in except to convictions of honour and good sense.” An entirely different concept.)
I examined my strategy. I pivoted. My novel won.

breaking the writing rules, How to get your novel published, the rules for writing a novel, When We Were Murderous Time-Traveling Women
Marcee Silver
Sounds like you being you is a good idea. Keep at it.
Ellen Morris Prewitt
Thank you, Marcee. I like that.
Emma
I am so very proud of your writing persistence, your dedication to your own path, and your pending success with this project – you certainly are an inspiration to all of us who give up too quickly. Like me!
Ellen Morris Prewitt
Thank you, Emma. I still consider us “in this together.” ❤️
Jerrie
Congratulations! Thanks for relying on your “good sense”.
Ellen Morris Prewitt
Thank you! It took me a LONG time to get there, but I finally did!
Donna
LOL Ellen! I can relate to a few of your broken rules as well…looking ahead to see how long a chapter is? Bingo! Now I’m looking ahead to April 1st when your book lands on my doorstep 🙂
Ellen Morris Prewitt
We are not the only two people who have related to this behavior 🙂 Kinda fitting the book is coming on April Fool’s Day…
Marie A Bailey
Your story is an inspiration, Ellen. I haven’t looked at my novel-in-progress in probably a year. One problem is the feedback I’ve gotten over time from several people. I’ve always received encouragement and for that I’m grateful. Yet, trying to reconcile feedback with my own preferences is a challenge … one that makes me loathe to pick it up again.
Your post here is telling me that I should reconsider. Perhaps there’s a few (or many) rules that I need to break too.
Congratulations on your upcoming publication! Can I preorder? You probably already shared info but I must have missed it. I’ll Google you 🙂
Ellen Morris Prewitt
With my personality, it’s hard to NOT follow feedback, particularly when everything says it’s the way to go. When In the Name of Mississippi was doing so well in contests, but not winning, I ran after more feedback–what is the one missing thing? At some point, I may go back and write what I want to write, but a lot of time must pass before I’m up to it. It may be that time has passed for your novel-in-progess and its ready for your new eyes.
On WWWMTTW, yes–you can preorder at Bookshop.org.https://bookshop.org/p/books/when-we-were-murderous-time-traveling-women-ellen-morris-prewitt/794b9d9d050e518b?ean=9781956615623&next=t
Thank you so much for asking!
Marie A Bailey
Beat you to it … I found it on Bookshop and preordered right now I left that comment 😄
Ellen Morris Prewitt
Thank you so much! I appreciate it.
Joanne Corey
So happy you were able to chart your own path with your book due out soon!
I think the “rules” aren’t working for a lot of writers, if they ever really did except for a small percentage.
Ellen Morris Prewitt
And the rules sound so good, and they make such good sense. Except that they didn’t work for me. But I know if I’d thought I was writing a novel for publication, I might not have deliberately broken all these rules. But I was writing for myself, so I didn’t care. Not sure what that says about me psychologically, but there it is.