MamaWriters are completely thrilled to have Sally MacKenzie with us today. With a series of fabulously popular, fun Regencies, starting with The Naked Duke, Sally MacKenzie knows what it’s like to be a mom and a bestselling author. But not at the same time.
With some surprising lessons and wonderful insights, Sally talks with us about something we writers and mos don’t usually discuss: Maybe we can’t do it all, not at the same time. And maybe that’s okay.
Please help us welcome Sally MacKenzie!
Hello to all the mama writers out there! I have to like the blog’s motto: “Raising kids. Writing romance.” When Kris asked me to stop by, though, I wasn’t sure if she really wanted me. I told her I felt a bit of an imposter, but she said that was ok.
How am I an imposter? I am a wife and mother and I write romance, but I quit writing fiction for a number of years while I was raising my four sons.
Yep, I quit. Not right away. At first I wrote while the baby of the year was napping or played nearby. I bought a thick pad to muffle the sound of the typewriter. (I shudder to admit that was pre-personal computer days.)
I finally did get a PC–an IBM XT for what now would be an outrageous price–when son #2 arrived, and then I switched to writing picture book texts. The shorter length seemed more manageable and, truthfully, picture books were my main reading material at the time. I sent many of those out to publishers and got some positive rejections. I even went through revisions with one house, but ultimately they decided my story was too much like another book already published and passed on it.
And then the youngest reached his final year of pre-school. I decided to put writing aside to enjoy my last baby until he went off to full day kindergarten
Eight years and many carpool miles later….
I got back to writing when my oldest son was heading off to college. I decided it was time to either follow my dream or give it up. I’d always loved Georgette Heyer’s books, and I’d read many–probably hundreds–of regencies while I was doing the baby thing, so I thought I’d try my hand at writing one. The stars aligned, and The Naked Duke debuted in February 2005. I’ve been writing Naked every since.
Do I regret my decision to stop for a while? Yes…and no.
If I’d kept writing, maybe my career would now rival Norah Roberts’.
Wait. Let me take a moment to savor that thought.
Or maybe not. Maybe I’d have burned out. Maybe I’d never have published. Maybe I’d be divorced. Maybe my kids would be in jail.
Or maybe not.
I don’t know what would have happened if I’d made a different decision. When I look back, I have to remind myself how busy I was with kid duties. My husband worked virtually 24-7. His salary allowed me to stay home, but his hours meant I was mostly a single mom. I wanted my sons to be in scouts and sports, to take piano lessons, to have lots of opportunities and experiences–and some of those activities needed me to step in to keep them going.
Would I recommend quitting? No, unless you can walk away with no regrets. If you can truly give writing up–or at least writing for publication–I’d say do it. Publishing is a crazy business with no guarantees and absolutely no job security. But if you’re cursed to be a writer (and I have to say some days it does feel like a curse), you probably don’t have a choice. The need to write will nag at you and eat at you until you finally give in.
If for some reason you can’t put aside a little time regularly to write fiction, you can do other things to hone your skills and prepare for the time when you can carve out fiction-writing time. I always looked for volunteer jobs that involved writing. I edited school and community newsletters: I wrote swim league guidance and high school fundraising programs and even a couple kid plays. And my other volunteer positions–Cubmaster, swim team organizer, PTA president–helped me develop skills I find useful in the non-writing side of my writing business.
There’s definitely a risk in stopping. On more than one occasion I found myself thinking about Langston Hughes’ poem, “A Dream Deferred.” And the longer I went without writing, the more impossible the dream seemed. (Though I have to confess I feel overwhelmed every single time I face a blank computer screen whether at the start of a new novel or even the start of a new day’s writing session.)
I’m in awe of all my friends who are meeting deadlines and raising kids. But we are each different with different demands on our time and energy and mental space. Balancing everything is an ongoing challenge that I still haven’t mastered. But then life is a journey, not a race, right?
Okay, here’s the promo part–you didn’t think I just stopped by for the heck of it, did you? If you’re looking for an escape from all the balancing, my next Naked book, The Naked Viscount, is out June 1–and earlier in some places.
The heroine is Jane Parker-Roth whom I met when I wrote The Naked Gentleman. She pretty much grabbed me by the ears and demanded her own story. The hero, Lord Motton, is beset by aunties. The story was inspired by one of Thomas Rowlandson’s pornographic prints that I saw in Vic Gatrell’s City of Laughter and features Pan statues with prodigious penises.
Did I happen to mention my youngest son’s college application essay was all about how embarrassing it is to have a mother who writes these books? I did feel for him. The Naked Duke came out when he was a sophomore at an all male Jesuit high school and I’d just finished a term as Parents Club co-chair. But hey, don’t we parents exist to embarrass our children?





Hi Sally,
Congratulations on the release of your latest book ‘The Naked Viscount’. Can’t wait to add it to my TBR shelves along with a few of your other books I haven’t read…yet….but I will soon! LOL But you’re in good company, sitting there between Julie Anne Long and Julianne MacLean. I’ll get to them, I promise!
Enjoyed reading your blog today too. My children are grown now and I’m retired so I don’t have the working mom blues anymore! But, as a single mom holding down a demanding job, there were two things I always lived by at the time: priorities and time management. Now that I have nothing else to do (except read books & play on the computer) and as I struggle to get my daily chores done, I wonder how I actually managed to do it all!
Twitter: Sally_MacKenzie
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Hi, Karen! I haven’t met Julie Anne, but I’ve sat next to Julianne (and I’ve just realized those first names are the same, aren’t they?) at book signings. She’s great.
I have to agree–I look back on the days when all four boys were young and I wonder how I did it–and that’s with a husband in the picture and without having a job outside the home! (People used to ask me how many loads of laundry I did a week, and I’d reply, a week? Ask me how many I do a day!) Maybe part of the answer is that I was younger then, too. And I think you point out something else as well–you know how they say, if you want something done, give it to someone who’s busy? Sometimes having a lot of free time leads to more time wasting. It’s a balance. How much is too much and how much is too little?
Welcome to Mama Writers Sally!
Great post! I have three small girls (9yr, 4yr and 8 mos old). There are definitely some days (who am I kidding, most days!) that are a challenge for me. But I can’t NOT write fiction. Its a driving force, when a day goes by without me writing at least a little bit, I actually dream about it that night and wake up with a craving to write worse than my craving for coffee.
I do the writing during naptime in the mornings, and then again in the afternoon. I am lucky that I get some time without my kiddies at least once a week with babysitters/Pre-K/School, so I can work. Recently the hubster agreed to a maid, so that’s some more time to write, and I also work a few nights a week too.
Good for you, for taking the time to be a mom with your boys! I’m sure it was a tough decision, but the best thing for you and your family. I’m glad you got back into it
can’t wait to read your latest!
~Eliza
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by KrisKennedy and KrisKennedy, mamawriters. mamawriters said: Latest Blog: Special Guest- USA Today Bestseller Sally MacKenzie, 'Naked' series author http://bit.ly/9HWtDp [...]
Twitter: KrisKennedy
says:
Sally,
I love your post so much, b/c it talks about things we usually don’t in our culture: the idea that maybe we can’t have it all, all the time. Sometimes we have to choose.
Far too often, we tell ourselves (or others imply) that doing so is a failure, and leave it at that. As if failing is a bad thing!
I just read somewhere that failure strips things down the the essentials. (why oh why can’t I remember–it was only last night!–witness the wail of a mother with young kids…)
Oh, oh, I remember! It was J.K. Rowling, a reference to a commencement address she gave, where she talked about the value of publishing rejections, and the way it forced her to not only get more determined, but more focused. She had to decide what really mattered to her, and aim herself like a laser beam at those things (my phrasing, the ‘laser beam’)
So, I love your conversation. We don’t do that enough, talk about choices, and the reality that it means saying “I can’t” or “I won’t” to some things.
We have to make choices. I can split the 100% of me into 3-4 things and do them extremely well, or I spread 100% of myself between 25 things.
Which things will be higher quality? And what do we want for our lives? Lots of cheap ‘dollar store’ moments, or high-quality, deeply experienced, fully-present lives?
For me, it’s the latter.
And that is why I don’t clean anymore. Ha!
Thanks so much for coming by!!!
Twitter: KrisKennedy
says:
btw–I meant to say I loved your foreign edition covers! I put on for ‘Duke’ up there in the post, b/c it was so cool.
Twitter: Sally_MacKenzie
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I was just off clearing stuff out of my dad’s storage unit. As I told Kris when she kindly reminded me about writing this post, my dad died in February. He was 95 and living independently, but he had started to fail in the months before he died. I felt a little guilty–I’m Catholic and female so guilt is my middle name–that I hadn’t gotten him over to see the assisted living place. But I had a series of killer deadlines in December and January; I told my brothers they had to fill in. And they did–in their own way.
I mention this for a couple of reasons. First, it’s probably a rare person who doesn’t have demands on her time, even once her kids are grown. So there’s no perfect time to write. And second, I–and I don’t think I’m the only one–need to realize that I can’t do it all by myself nor should I. I don’t control the world–thank God, I’m sure my sons, at least, would say.
Eliza, good for you at keeping the writing going. Many of my writing friends have kids and a couple have kids with very serious, chronic diseases. I’m in awe of them.
As Kris said, I do think we need to figure out what few things we will do and then adopt a laser-like focus on those. But each person has a unique set of needs and desires and has to decide for herself what things to focus on and how to juggle it all.
And darn if it didn’t seem like every day I’d decide to get down to writing, one of the kids would wake up with an ear infection and off we’d have to go to the pediatrician.
I’m sorry to hear about your dad…. The fact that he was living on his own for so long and independently is phenomenal! My great-grandmother lived by herself until she was 100, and she started to have some spills then too. They moved her into an assisted living and she hated it. She was very depressed, and actually passed a few months later, just before her 101st birthday. I felt terrible, because I used to visit her every few months, and I hadn’t been up to see her since she moved in there, and then I never got the chance.
And you’re right, being female gives us all the middle name guilt! I feel like that all the time…
Thanks for sharing your wealth of advice
Twitter: Sally_MacKenzie
says:
That’s wonderful that your great-grandmother lived by herself till she was 100, Eliza. And I’m sorry she hated assisted living, but it makes me feel better to hear these stories, too. I sometimes think if only I could have gotten dad to move, he wouldn’t have died–but he might very well have hated the new situation. It’s a delicate thing, dealing with the elderly. They aren’t our children, yet they aren’t always in a position to make good decisions. Very frustrating in some ways.
Hi Sally! Can’t wait to read the next Naked installment! (And really, with the word Naked in the title, there’s no way your son could talk about your books and pretend you wrote science fiction or something… Lol)
Just yesterday, I was in the bookstore and saw a book titled the “Do it All Mom’s Day Planner.” The image of the woman on front looked like I often feel. (And I only have ONE child… I bow in humble awe at Eliza’s feet.)
I think that somewhere along the line the concept of “you can do it all” began to mean “You MUST do it all, and ALL AT ONCE!” So we tend to feel guilty if we look at setting something aside for a while to focus elsewhere, as if we’re failing. Often times, for me, sleep is the one that loses out…and eventually, enough nights of that, and everyone in the house loses to a grumpy Mama. So it’s always a balancing act, and one that requires setting priorities when needed.
Twitter: Sally_MacKenzie
says:
I had to smile when I read your post, Jeannie. Can you imagine a book titled “Do It All Dad’s Day Planner”? I think the dad job has evolved over the years, but probably not that much. Or maybe publishers just know that very, very few men–if any–would look twice at a book like that.
Now that would be a great show to watch!! Dad’s trying to do it all!!! I love it!
And Jeannie… no need to bow! We work like an assembly line… teeth brushed, good. Teeth brushed, good. Teeth brushed, good. lol Its the only way to stay sane!