Beverley Oakley writes sensual historical romance
laced with
intrigue, mystery and adventure set in Georgian and
Regency England.
She also writes Colonial Africa-set romantic suspense
featuring fearless aviators, and psychological romantic suspense as Beverley
Eikli. Learn more about Beverley and her books at her website.
Success and Failure: When They’re the Same Thing and When
They’re Not
Like so many little girls
growing up in British Commonwealth countries in the early 1970s, I longed to be
one of the intrepid children in Enid Blyton’s Secret Seven series. By the time I was seven, I wanted to be writing those adventure stories.
At seventeen, I realized my
childhood ambition to complete a novel and in a fever of anticipation, posted
off my 600-page sweeping historical saga to Zebra Books, who published many of
my favourite romance authors at the time. The crushing rejection came two
months later. Apparently, “Drowning [my] heroine on the last page [was] not in
line with the expectation of romance readers”.
So I followed the School
Careers Counselor’s advice and became a journalist.
For the next few years I
wrote for magazines and newspapers. I was fulfilled in my work. My first novel
wasn’t a failure for not achieving publication, but a success because I’d
completed it.
When I met my true love—a
Norwegian pilot—in Botswana, we explored the world doing back-to-back airborne
survey contracts as the only husband/wife team in the business at that time,
and I put my fiction-writing desires on the backburner. Childhood dreams
weren’t so important when life was rich and full of other excitements.
After seven years of this
itinerant, thrilling life, we started a family. And the definition of who I was
changed—certainly in my eyes.
I adored our daughter but I
found it hard to farewell my husband for two-month overseas stints and any
prospect of excitement beyond changing nappies when I was the one staying
behind in a new city.
For so much of our married
lives we’d shared our adventures, but as a new mother, I felt lonely and
lacking connections and direction. Maybe,
I thought, it was time to get serious
about that dream of becoming a published romance author. That would be how
I’d define success, for me.
We were now based in Perth,
Western Australia, and, just before the birth of our first child, I’d joined
Romance Writers of Australia and entered the first three chapters of a romance in
their Single Title competition.
The excitement I felt to see
the self-addressed envelope that I knew contained my competition feedback
sheets sticking out of the letter-box on the bustling inner-city pavement in
front of our townhouse after a walk with my husband one day was a déjà vu moment. Suddenly I was seventeen again, experiencing
the same churning excitement as when I was ripping open Zebra’s response. I’m a
little ashamed to admit that I acted with no more maturity than I had when I was seventeen.
After a quick scan of the
contents I started sobbing on my husband’s shoulder in the middle of the
street. My ranking was second-to-last.
Despite the results, the
feedback was immensely helpful. I rewrote my entry, submitted it to the same
competition the following year, won, and received a request for the full from
Avon acquiring editor, Erika Tsang. Although my rushed attempts to complete the
book resulted in another rejection, I regarded the experience, overall, as a
success. A year had passed since the woeful results had come in from my first
competition attempt, I was enjoying motherhood, my husband was back home for a
long stint, and my resubmitted entry had not only come first but had attracted
a request for the full manuscript.
Three weeks before I was due
to give birth to our second child my husband broke his back. He’d spent the
previous five months flying in Antarctica while I looked after our toddler in a
large house by the sea in Adelaide, South Australia’s capital. Once a week we
would make phone contact on a crackling line so we both felt huge anticipation
at the prospect of being reunited.
Our reunion was short-lived.
A couple of weeks after his return, while renovating the house, he fell off a
ladder and sheared off all his vertebrae on a pallet of slates.
With a newborn, a
four-year-old and a husband in excruciating pain, I took the first job I could
find while my husband recovered. Although he hadn’t severed his spinal cord, he
was plagued with recurrences of the Golden Staff infection and a level of pain
that barbiturates could not keep in check.
They were dark days with a
great deal of upheaval. I was proud of my husband who never complained. Pain
was his constant companion and the effort it cost him to push on was always
apparent. He got work in Japan where we lived for a year before we moved to a
country town north of Melbourne, and seven years later we’re still here.
A few weeks ago, I picked up
my diary and read an entry from 2008. Our daughters at that time were aged two
and six and I was frustrated by my inability to find work that fitted around my
caring duties while living so far from the city. I’d been overseas for so long
I’d lost contact with former friends and work colleagues. I was also deeply
worried that what I perceived to be my husband’s unhappiness was my fault. I’d
finished the entry, despairingly: “I just want him to be proud of me!”
It was the desperation of my
words from this long-forgotten time that prompted me to write this blog about
how we regard success and failure. At various stages of our lives, the same
goals can seem more or less important. Often it’s everything else happening in
our lives that can cause us to regard a particular event in either a positive
or negative light. I regarded my unsuccessful publishing efforts when I was
seventeen and when I was thirty-seven in a positive light because I was
fulfilled in other ways. But a few years later, my vision was narrower without
meaningful work, and I’d honed in on that elusive publishing contract as the
only way to define success.
We can’t help what we feel,
only what we do about it. Perhaps articulating my lack of self-worth, and
questioning on paper how I might set it right, made me forge a more productive
path.
I don’t know. I just
remember that it was around this time I adopted a
laser focus toward my quest
for publication – very unlike me – and made up a spreadsheet with the names of
three editors and two agents I would query. Thereafter, each time I got a
rejection on my first three chapters, synopsis and pitch letter, I’d refine and
improve each, then send it to another agent or editor. The idea was that as
long as I had five submissions on the go, I’d always have hope.
It paid off.
My first publishing contract
arrived in the post a year later.
Since then, I’ve published
fifteen historical romances under two names and, as of the past two months, am
earning an income that’s enabled me to give up my day job. We’re in our
twenty-second year of marriage and as happy as we were when we were adventuring
around the world together, young and carefree. My husband adores his job flying
long-haul, mostly from Melbourne to Los Angeles – though a bad motorbike
accident has kept him out of the skies for fifteen months – and we have two
happy, thriving children.
Would I have focused so hard
on my goal of publication during those dark days ten years ago if I had felt
the same overall carefree happiness I’d felt most of my life? Probably not.
I’m just glad my publishing
dreams weren’t handed to me on a platter when I was a seventeen-year-old.
Trying to surpass such a high benchmark for success achieved at such a young
age might have set me up for a lifetime of disappointment and altered the way I
differentiate between success and failure.
Instead, those twenty-six
years between submitting my first novel and getting my first publishing
contract were full of ample compensations when I didn’t quite reach the bar.
They made me appreciate life more and define success through effort as much as
results.
The Mysterious Governess
Two beautiful sisters – one
illegitimate, the other nobly born – compete for love amidst the scandal and
intrigue of a Regency London Season.
Lissa Hazlett lives life in the shadows. The beautiful, illegitimate
daughter of Viscount Partington earns her living as an overworked governess
while her vain and spoiled half sister, Araminta, enjoys London’s social whirl
as its most feted debutante.
When Lissa’s rare talent as a portraitist brings her unexpectedly into
the bosom of society – and into the midst of a scandal involving Araminta and
suspected English traitor Lord Debenham – she finds an unlikely ally: charming
and besotted Ralph Tunley, Lord Debenham’s underpaid, enterprising secretary.
Ralph can’t afford to leave the employ of the villainous viscount much less
keep a wife but he can help Lissa cleverly navigate a perilous web of lies that
will ensure everyone gets what they deserve.
Thanks so much for having me, Anastasia. It's been a pleasure. :)
ReplyDeleteOh Beverley, what an amazing and inspiring blog! I can't imagine going through all those trials and tribulations and staying so resolutely positive. I love your books so much, and I can see where your heroines get their indominatable spirit! Thanks fire sharing with such honesty. It really is inspiring!
ReplyDeleteOh Beverley, what an amazing and inspiring blog! I can't imagine going through all those trials and tribulations and staying so resolutely positive. I love your books so much, and I can see where your heroines get their indominatable spirit! Thanks fire sharing with such honesty. It really is inspiring!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Nina! What a lovely comment!
ReplyDeleteBev, your blog was as inspiring as you. Always, since I've known you, you've been positive, tenacious and passionate about your writing. Your stories, which I adored well before you were published, are sensuous, emotional and thrilling reads and you so deserve every success. I'm proud to call you a friend and grateful for all the wisdom you've shared over the years. I look forward to RWA and to setting our writing goals for the coming year. Congratulations on the achievement of a lifelong dream and most important of all, you have much to feel proud of. Not the least a happy marriage. Eivind is very lucky to have the love of someone as true and guieless as you. Looking forward to seeing you soon. xxx
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Lexi. Your comment is really lovely. You've been a great friend and I appreciate all your hard work in helping me get to where I am. I can't wait to read your books. Your tenacity is something that has always inspired me, and they will be up there, soon, too!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThat's a pleasure, Angela. :)
ReplyDelete