What should you do?
Conventional wisdom says put it away and start on the next one. Many published authors write three or four novels before they get one published.
And I agree that you don't want to get stuck in some kind of rut (think Bill Murray and Groundhog Day). But I think a lot of people quit revising too soon. It's just a guesstimate, but I probably spend three to four times as long revising as I do writing a first draft.
On each revision, I look for different things...
passive voice
character arcs
plot twists
chapter endings
settings
dialog
character development
humor
inconsistencies
relationships
paragraph structure
flow
pacing
word choices
similes and metaphors
(warning: this list is far from complete)
So is your manuscript as good as it can be? If even one thing is off, your otherwise excellent story might be rejected.
I started writing My Invented Life (my second novel) in 2003. I finished it a year later (revising some as I went). It went through ten more revisions before attracting an agent in 2007. In those three years, and between revisions, I revised my first novel several times, and wrote most of a third.
So I always keep moving forward, but keep showering love on my first children.
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