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'Divine Rivals' author Rebecca Ross shares how she went from working a 9-to-5 to publishing one of BookTok's favorite series

'Divine Rivals' author Rebecca Ross shares how she went from working a 9-to-5 to publishing one of BookTok's favorite series

Rebecca Ross' new book "Wild Reverence" hits bookshelves September 2.
Ross had written six books before publishing her breakout hit "Divine Rivals" in 2023.
She said working in the mornings helped her make writing a priority.
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'Divine Rivals' author Rebecca Ross shares how she went from working a 9-to-5 to publishing one of BookTok's favorite series
'Divine Rivals' author Rebecca Ross shares how she went from working a 9-to-5 to publishing one of BookTok's favorite series

Business Insider

time3 days ago

  • Business Insider

'Divine Rivals' author Rebecca Ross shares how she went from working a 9-to-5 to publishing one of BookTok's favorite series

Rebecca Ross has been on a career hot streak many authors can only dream of. In April 2023, Ross published her breakout hit, " Divine Rivals." The young-adult fantasy about Iris Winnow, a journalist who gets entrenched in a war of the gods, became a New York Times bestseller. Its sequel, " Ruthless Vows," also hit the list when it came out just eight months later. Then, in June 2025, Paramount acquired the film rights to "Divine Rivals." Ross, 37, is continuing the momentum with a stand-alone adult romantasy, "Wild Reverence," set to be published on September 2. Taking place in the same universe as "Divine Rivals," "Wild Reverence" follows Matilda, the herald of the gods, who becomes entangled with the fate of a human lord she first encountered as a child. Despite her recent success, Ross told Business Insider that writing a novel felt like a far-off dream when she started her career. Making time to write Ross had aspirations of writing a novel while attending the University of Georgia, but she didn't immediately dedicate her career to it after she graduated in 2012. "I studied English because I love reading and writing," Ross told BI. "But then when I was working my 9-to-5 job, I really enjoyed it, but I realized I was just doing the same 9-to-5, 9-to-5, 9-to-5, and I wasn't writing at all." "A few years passed, and I was like, 'If I don't take this seriously and set aside time and try to write a novel, it's never going to happen, and this will be a dream that I never go after,'" she said. For Ross, dedicating her weekends to writing and waking up early to write on weekdays before her day job at a college's student accessibility services office was key to turning that dream into a reality. "I love writing almost before the sun rises," she said. "The world just feels really quiet. I don't have many distractions. I also just like writing then because I feel like my dreams are still very close to me in the morning." Eventually, after many early mornings, Ross finished a draft. She told BI that forcing herself to complete a book, regardless of the quality of the manuscript, helped boost her confidence and motivation. "I actually finished a draft, and it was like 140,000 words of a fantasy novel," she said. "It was not that good, but I finished it. And I was like, 'Oh my gosh. Here I am working 40 hours a week at a job, but I still made time to write a fantasy novel.' It took me about four months, but I was able to really get it done." Waiting for the breakout Shortly after she finished that first draft, Ross got the idea for "The Queen's Rising," a YA fantasy novel. She told BI she knew she could write it because she had already finished one book. "I just had this drive," Ross said. She finished "The Queen's Rising" in 2015 and landed a three-book deal with HarperTeen with the manuscript. Ross quit her day job at the end of 2015, and "The Queen's Rising" was published in February 2018. It didn't make the NYT bestseller list, but it helped Ross build a fan base. "It was a very quiet release," Ross said. "I had my readers, and they were just so lovely and loyal to me. They just followed me from book to book. I tried to invest in them as much as I could." Ross kept writing until she struck gold with "Divine Rivals." "I remember telling myself, 'I will just keep writing books as long as I can. As long as an editor wants to acquire it, I'll just keep going,'" she told BI. "It took seven books, but eventually one broke out." Indeed, "Divine Rivals" went viral after its release in April 2023, partly thanks to BookTok. The novel changed her career trajectory, but Ross thinks it's important for people to know she didn't find that wide audience with her first book. "I think some authors feel discouraged if their debut doesn't hit right away, and that can feel like so much pressure," Ross told BI. "A lot of times, you could even see publisher support go down. That can be really difficult." "Sometimes, it does take so many books before you do write one that really resonates for a lot of readers," she said. Confidence is key Ross said any aspiring author should "be dedicated to your writing time," whenever and however often you can do it, even though it's easy to "shove your writing time to the side" if you have a day job, are in school, or are taking care of children. "A book is made little by little," Ross said. "If you can't write every day, that's OK. You find a way to make it work." Ross also said it's important to "finish what you start." "Once you finish something, you learn so much even about how to structure a novel, and then your confidence is up, like, 'OK, I can do this, so let's do it better again,'" Ross said. She added that hopeful authors shouldn't let naysayers discourage them either. "You might have some people that support you, and there's definitely going to be people that think it's never going to go anywhere, unfortunately," she said. "You can't let those types of comments get you down or make you think you can't do it because you can."

Tracee Ellis Ross says her mother, Diana Ross, taught her the joy of being alone
Tracee Ellis Ross says her mother, Diana Ross, taught her the joy of being alone

Business Insider

time5 days ago

  • Business Insider

Tracee Ellis Ross says her mother, Diana Ross, taught her the joy of being alone

Tracee Ellis Ross, 52, said she isn't waiting for a partner to feel loved and credits her mother, Diana Ross, for teaching her how to build a meaningful life alone. In an interview with Self Magazine published on Tuesday, the actor spoke about practicing self-care and how she learned to be comfortable on her own. "I come from a lot of abundance, but all of the abundance that I enjoy is mine, that I've built," Ross told Self Magazine. "And building my own life has made me very aware of what my mother built on her own and what it took for her to do that." Ross is the elder of two children from Diana Ross's marriage to music executive Robert Ellis Silberstein. She also has an older half-sister from her mother's relationship with Motown founder Berry Gordy and two younger half-brothers from her mother's second marriage. Ross said her mother's success inspired her to do the same. "[My mom] didn't build the wealth she has, she didn't build the career she made because of a man. The example that was set for me [was] that I didn't need a man to build the life I wanted. It wasn't, 'Look at me,' it was, 'This is me.' And that informed something very important for me foundationally," Ross said. Being comfortable alone starts with a deep understanding of how to care for herself. "Knowing how to care for yourself is also how you teach someone how you want to be cared for. I've spent a lot of my life getting to know who I am," Ross said. "My favorite place to be is inside my body, to be present in my skin," the "Black-ish" actor added. Although Ross is content on her own, she says she is still open to love and is looking for a partner. "What I don't mind is being a poster child for living your life on your own terms, for not waiting for partnership to find joy and happiness, for curating and cultivating one's own sense of self," Ross said. Ross says she seeks a partnership built on meeting as equals. "I want a whole life and I want a real life, and I want a true life, and I want a partner that's not going to sweep me off my feet, but is going to link arms with me. And that might not happen, and that's OK," she said. A representative for Ross told Business Insider that the actor had no additional comment. During an appearance on Michelle Obama's "IMO" podcast in April, Ross said she prefers dating younger men because men her age are often "steeped in toxic masculinity." "I have long been past the age where I feel like it's my job to teach somebody or grow them up," Ross said. "That, I'm not interested in." Ross joins a growing list of women who have spoken openly about finding meaning in singlehood. During a "Call Her Daddy" appearance in early July, Charlize Theron said that being a single mother was "one of the healthiest decisions" she ever made. "With women, it's always like, 'Something must be wrong with her. She can't keep a man.' And it's never part of the discussion of like, 'Wow, she's really living her truth. She's living in her happiness. This is actually a choice that she made,'" Theron said. Social scientist and author Bella DePaulo, now in her seventies, told Business Insider last year that she feels "happiest and most fulfilled living life as a single person." "There are so many different kinds of love other than romantic love. There's love for friends, mentors, and teammates, as well as love for your work and your passions. And when we think about it that way, which is how many people who are single think about it, there's a lot of love in our lives," DePaulo said.

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