Why does book rejection feel so personal—so final? Why does a book rejection letter have the power to stall a project for years, even when the idea still matters? And how do some authors seem to land book deals—sometimes before the book is even written—while others stay stuck in endless rejection cycles?
In this episode of My Rejection Story, Alice is joined by Allison Lane, founder of Allison Lane Literary, a former PR executive turned book strategist who has helped every one of her clients land an agent and secure a book publishing deal. Together, they unpack what rejection in the publishing world actually means—and why it’s rarely about your worth, talent, or intelligence.
Allison reframes rejection as a strategic signal, not a dead end. Drawing from decades in PR, brand strategy, and publishing, she explains why most aspiring authors misunderstand how the industry works, why writing the full book too early can actually hurt your chances, and how to become “book rejection proof” by thinking like a business—not a hopeful artist waiting for approval.
Throughout the conversation, Alice and Allison explore how childhood rejection, shame, and trauma shape creative ambition, why nonfiction books are sold on proposal (not passion), and how authors can learn how to get a book deal with no money, without an agent, or before writing the book—if they understand the real rules of the game.
In this episode, they explore:
Why book publishing rejection is usually a signal—not a verdict
What a book rejection letter is actually telling you (and what it’s not)
How to deal with rejection when writing books without losing momentum
How to get a book deal without an agent—and when an agent actually matters
How to get a book deal with a publisher by pitching the idea, not the manuscript
Why nonfiction authors should learn how to get a book deal before writing the book
How to get a book publishing deal by widening—not narrowing—your audience
Why “being good” isn’t what sells books, and what does
How authors with small platforms still land major deals (including lessons from Allison Lane books and clients)
Rather than romanticizing rejection or offering empty encouragement, this episode gives listeners a clear-eyed look at the publishing ecosystem—where books are products, authors are brands, and rejection is part of the filtering process, not a personal failure.
If you’ve ever asked yourself how do you get a book deal? or how can I get a book deal without burning years on the wrong strategy? this conversation will fundamentally change how you approach publishing—and rejection itself.
Connect with Allison Lane:
Website: https://lanelit.com
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/allisonlanelit/
Chapters
00:00 Rejection as Redirection—and Why Publishing “No’s” Aren’t Dead Ends
03:30 Saying Yes Early: Why Idealism Can Quietly Stall Creative Careers
08:45 What PR Teaches You About Pitching—and Why Most Book Pitches Fail
13:30 ADHD, Trauma, and Why Rejection Cuts Deeper for Some Creators
18:00 Shame, Silence, and the Stories We’re Afraid to Write
23:00 Why Some People Grow After Trauma—and Others Get Stuck
27:30 Imposter Syndrome, Ambition, and the Fear of Being Left Behind
32:00 Standing Out Without Credentials: How Alison Learned to Be Unignorable
37:00 Why Writing the Full Book First Is a Mistake in Nonfiction
41:00 How Publishers Actually Decide Which Books to Buy
46:00 The Myth of “Too Niche” vs. the Reality of Audience Expansion
51:00 Why Books Don’t Sell Because They’re Good—and What Actually Makes Them Sell
56:00 Becoming the Marketer of Your Own Book (Without Doing Everything)
01:00:30 Building a Platform Before the Book—and Why Timing Matters
01:02:00 Final Thoughts: Becoming Book-Rejection-Proof and Taking Action