Check out how many queries it took for Jack King to publish his first book:
http://www.spywriter.com/getpublished.html
http://www.spywriter.com/getpublished.html
I don't know how productive it would be to send out hundreds of query letters where the first few are resulting in rejections.
Does not work, however, if you write stuff nobody wants to read. Trust me, I know.
caw
I have to confess I never get really inspired by other people's success stories. Because they're other people, and what worked for them won't necessarily work for everyone. (The reason why I never buy inspirational books. Reading successful people saying, "Don't give up!" just rankles me. They're successful. Of course they're in a good position to say, "Don't give up!") Success, as well as how it's achieved, are very subjective things which rely on so many factors, some within our control, some beyond it. There really are some people who do everything right and go on trying till the end but never really make it. To tell the people who never gave up, but failed anyway, to "never give up" just seems insulting.
Just being honest. If it helps to inspire others though, I guess that counts for something. And now that I've thoroughly rained on the parade...
*creeps off*
It'd be nice if there were some impartial third party that could evaluate writing samples and objectively determine whether a writer should give up. Unfortunately, no such service exists and likely never will. In the absence of said service, there doesn't seem to be any solution other than to continue submitting work until either 1) success, or 2) death.
Reminds me of a quote.
I don't want to achieve immortality though my work; I want to achieve it through not dying.
Somebody can find the attribution for me.
I don't know. This is a subjective business, after all. How many times was Stephen King Rejected?
J.K. Rowling?
Margaret Mitchell?
None. The myth that Gone With the Wind was rejected by many publishers is false. Mitchell, a newspaper columnist, was approached by an editor for Macmillan who asked if she had written any novels; she gave him GWTW and the rest is history.