START DESIGN NAIL ARTS - nail polished

Actually,  I  decided that I wanted to be a writer before I decided that I wanted  to  write children's books. The first thing I did after realising that I   wanted to be a writer was join our local writers' centre. Then I  joined a  romance writers' group. Writing romance seemed like a good  idea at the  time. At a meeting of the romance writers' group I met  several writers  who were also writing children's books.



I  call all of this reading and studying  my apprenticeship. A writer has  to learn how to write a book just as a  pilot has to learn how to fly a  plane.

It's  through the writers' groups I belong to that I  learnt about the  publishing opportunities which lead to most of my  books. Therefore I'm a  big fan of networking.

So, to reiterate, my advice is:
a)  Join  writers' groups. Local and/or online writers' groups. By joining   writers' groups you hope to network, learn about the publishing world,   obtain feedback on your work and make friends with similar interests.
b)   Read a lot of recent children's books. Take notice of what you like  and  what seems to work. Study the writing. You're reading for research   first, pleasure second.

c)  Read a lot of books about writing for children. It can  help to read  books about writing in general. But children's books are a  specialised  field. For example, you need to know the different types of  children's  books for the various age groups - the word lengths,  language, style  etc.

e)   Take courses on writing for children. The writing for children course I   did, many years ago, involved weekly writing assignments. I wrote a   picture book, easy reader, early chapter book and sections of longer   novels, which were all marked by my tutor. Two of my first six published   titles were written during this course.
f)  Have your manuscripts  assessed by a reputable manuscript assessment  service. Due to the volume  of submissions publishers receive and the  quality of some of these  submissions, many publishers are now  requesting a manuscript assessment  accompany every submission.

h) Enter competitions. Write articles and short stories. Seek ways of filling your writer's cv with publishing credits.
Now   you're on your way. From this point on, the secret to becoming a   children's author is persistence. I've read and heard quotes from many   authors who claim that the secret to their success is persistence. 
