Writing is a lot of hard work, but sometimes luck plays a part in our success too. What are some lucky breaks you’ve caught as an author? Maybe it was in the writing, or inspiration, or on your path to publication. Perhaps it affected your sales after the fact. Tell us about one of your unexpected wins. Readers, please share your lucky breaks with us too.
Lisa Q. Mathews

This may not seem related to my writing career, but as a baby editor living in New York, I was…well, pretty broke. I really wasn’t sure whether I’d be able to afford my studio apartment much longer without changing jobs. But on a crowded subway one night, I ended up straphanging next to an acquaintance from an old freelance job. She was moving to Boston to be with her new boyfriend, but she needed to sublet her apartment because she wasn’t sure things would work out. $325/month, half my current rent. Her landlord wanted “a nice girl” to live in his carriage house. I somehow fit the bill–the only catch was, I had to care for my friend’s 2 nasty cats because they couldn’t move with her. The boyfriend was allergic. So I got to keep my publishing job, along with Satan 1 and Satan 2 (I’m not sure what their real names were) and started writing kids books for hire to bring in the big bucks (ha). I’m not sure what my alternative career would have been. To live in New York and/or work with books, you gotta have faith in Lady Luck–but she always comes through!
Ellen Byron

Luck put me in a room with Denise Hamilton, who used to write terrific LA Noir mysteries. We’d met a couple of decades before, when I made a terrible first impression. We wound up at her house because she and my husband shared a mutual friend. New Yorker that I was, I asked what she’d paid for the house. This was not considered impolite back home, where we regularly bitched about high rent and housing costs, but I learned that night it was not the way of L.A.
Anyhoo, cut to 2010 or so and our kids happened to be in the same art class. I apologized profusely for my faux pas from long ago and she was lovely. I’d written my first mystery, and she mentioned she was going to a convention called Thrillerfest. I knew my WIP didn’t fit that genre, so I asked her if there was a con for more traditional mysteries. She said, “Yes. Malice Domestic.” I went home, found the website, and saw Malice had a grant for unpublished writers. I applied and was one of the winners.
That’s how I wound up at my very first Malice Domestic in 2013, which kicked off my mystery career.
Marla Cooper

So many of the good things that have happened in my life can be traced back to meeting the right person at the right time. I had an advertising client who got a book deal with Chronicle Books, and she asked me to be her ghostwriter. After it was done, our editor reached out to me to ask if I’d be interested in writing a whole other nonfiction book — this one for a destination wedding planner. (I think you can see where I’m going with this.) Right around the same time, a friend of mine sold a cozy mystery series. So when I went in to meet with the wedding planner, it didn’t take long for me to put two and two together, and thus the Destination Wedding Mysteries were born!
Cynthia Kuhn
So many moments at writer conferences have felt lucky! I’m always very shy (yes, if you have met me, I know it doesn’t seem like it but it’s true…I am just overcompensating, which looks like super-outgoing…it’s confusing). Anyway, it takes some effort to push myself out into the hallway or bar group or restaurant gatherings but then I often meet someone who is exactly the right person I didn’t know I needed to meet at that moment. Maybe if you put yourself out there, it makes it possible for the luck to find you or something? Also carrying a four-leaf clover helps, I’m told. If you have one.
Leslie Karst

I always tell aspiring writers that first, you need to be a good writer and hone your submission until it’s as polished as it can be. Second, you need to be perseverant and not give up, even if you’ve sent out over a hundred queries (which is what happened to me). Because agents get queries every day, sometimes hundreds a week. But they generally only take a few new clients a year.
And that’s where luck came into play for me. My query happened to land on my future agent’s desk just a day or two after she’d gotten a request from my future publisher for books just like mine. Bingo! I got the full manuscript request and eventually the offer of representation. Timing and luck.
Jennifer Chow

My first lucky break happened when an editor read my self-published book and loved it. After sending her some sample chapters, I got a contract for my Sassy Cat series. Another break came during a SinC webinar, where I happened to talk about the importance of community; thankfully, the Chicks were listening and soon invited me to join the coop.
Patricia Sargeant

In 2015, I had an idea for a cozy mystery series featuring a Catholic Sister. I pitched it to my then-agent as Father Brown meets Murder, She Wrote. I loved this premise, which is the reason I started doing research for my amateur sleuth before I completed the proposal. Ha! Imagine my surprise when my then-agent said publishers wouldn’t be interested in the series. Crushing.
During this time, a colleague and I hosted a reader session at a book conference. The room was crowded, which is probably why I didn’t see my then-editor enter and take a seat toward the back midway through our presentation. At the end of our session, a reader wanted to know what my colleague and I were reading. I admitted I’d been reading a book on theology for a cozy mystery series featuring a Catholic Sister but that I wasn’t pursuing the idea because my agent didn’t think it would get picked up. After the session, my editor told me she was very interested in the idea and asked for the proposal. That proposal turned into my Sister Lou Mysteries. Those stories would never have happened if that attendee had not asked what I was reading while my editor was in the room.
Readers, do you have any lucky breaks you could share with us? We’d love to read them.

My first lucky break was meeting my ninth grade teacher, Mr Iorfida (sp). Growing up in a poor minority neighborhood you are always told by someone that you will not aspire to anything. Mr. I. told me I can be or do anything I want to. So he made sure when I got to high school to be placed in the college bound program so my classes were to gear me there. Then he introduced me to my guidance counselor who also guided me towards that goal. To my surprise, he put my name up (without my knowledge) for a scholarship at a small Catholic women’s college and I got the scholarship and I was the first person in my family to graduate from college. From that moment, I met incredible people who guided me through my life journey to the present. My favorite moment was attending my first Malice with Heather Webber and I was in my element with fellow book readers which lead me to meeting my author friends who I call friends.
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Dru!! This is moving. I love learning more about you that I didn’t know. I think another lucky moment for all of us is when you came into our lives. xo
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Indeed!
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What a wonderful story. My stepfather was my Mr. I , and my life would look dramatically different without his encouragement. 💛
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Here’s to all the marvelous teachers out there who encourage their students!
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Hear, hear!
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Absolutely!
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What an amazing story, Dru! So thankful for your teacher, who believed in you and looked out for you.
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Dru Ann, thank you for sharing those memories with us. They lifted my heart.
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Dru Ann, I agree with Ellen. I’m so grateful to have met you.
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Oh my gosh, Dru Ann, I literally have 2 tears rolling down my cheeks right now. I had never heard your your beautiful college journey story. Maybe I’m also teary thinking of how many authors and readers YOU have inspired. (Off to grab a Kleenex.)
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I love all these origin stories! For me, I’ve lived my writing life by my mother’s mantra: the harder you work, the luckier you get.
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Oh, that’s awesome. And you know what, Judy? Your mom was right! I think hard work brought us all to our lucky moments.
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I love that!
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“Create serendipity,” is my mantra.
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Ooh, that’s a good one!
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Ha! That’s so true, Judy!
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Judy, I love that! Thank you for sharing.
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So true, Judy! Moms are always so wise (even if we don’t appreciate their words at the time). My mom’s was “don’t borrow trouble.” I try to remember that, but…
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Lisa! My mom always said that same thing. Now I say it. Ha!
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After working for a Fortune 500 company for 18 years, I found myself restructured out of a job. With nothing in my field available, I landed a part-time job at a new Barnes and Noble store opening near my home where I met a new friend. She introduced me to one of her long-time dear friends who was looking to hire someone with my skill set. This led to a series of experiences that enabled me to keep my house and complete my working career in a way that allowed me to retire and once again enjoy a bookish life!
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Wow!! This story is total serendipity. Who knew a part-time job at B&N would bring you full circle?!
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Lovely story, and huzzah to a bookish life!
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That’s so wonderful! Thank you for sharing that memory with us.
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Love this story!
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A PS to our dear Cynthia: You are always the life of every party! (It’s the kindness, which you cannot hide.)
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Cynthia, I agree with Lisa. You’re so kind and patient. Thank you.
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Right now, I’m feeling very lucky to be working from home again full time!
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Wow, Mark! That’s something. I’m surprised your company is bucking the trend of return to the office.
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Woohoo! That’s great, Mark!
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Patricia, Pat Sellers wrote me that “I am listening to her book right now because I was introduced to her by starting to read Chicks on the Case!”
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