In Photo: Mark Albertson (See the bottom of the page)
What I learned
Writing editorials for a free weekly did not reap financial benefits, but it did prepare me for bylines and deadlines. Then, with The Hour, I began to get a check for my work. It wasn’t much money, mind you. But unlike the column inches I had been used to, The Hour gave me the latitude to do full-page spreads, complete with maps, charts and photos of history’s greatest battles.
Nonfiction books are, in many cases, an elaboration of articles, but they allow the writer to bask in the freedom of greater amplification and detail. Yet newspaper writing provided the foundation— a training camp, if you will—for meeting deadlines and polishing my research skills. Whether the word count is 1,000 or 100,000, dedicate yourself to a level of quality that assures only your best work.
Advice
Do not give up. Be relentless. And have the skin of a crocodile, which will enable you to deflect rejection. Brushoffs are part of the business, but I did not let them get in my way. Why? Because I refused to accept no!
Be open to opportunities your writing provides—speaking engagements, for example. Libraries and veterans groups are among the stops I’ve made in Connecticut, and these speaking opportunities have allowed me to enlighten people about the only battleship ever named for their state. Besides, folks like hobnobbing with a local “celebrity.”
Do newspaper interviews whenever possible. And don’t forget radio and television. I recently appeared on a Fox affiliate, Channel 61 in Hartford, and they came after me! So take advantage of any opportunity to get noticed. You just might find that newspaper, radio and TV interviews can carry just as much weight as published clips when you market yourself for additional writing jobs.
In Photo:
Mark Albertson, a long-time member of the U.S. Naval Institute, has contributed historical articles to several Connecticut newspapers for many years. His next book, On History: A Treatise, is due out early this year.