Tag Archive: agent


Around the Interwebs

A couple of agent blogs have come to my attention in the last few days, and since I had commentary on both, I thought I’d mention them here.

The first is by outstanding agent Nathan Bransford. This post was brought to my attention by our own Jeff Kirvin. It’s entitled ‘The One Question Authors Should Never Ask Themselves When Reading’. Go and read it. No, go ahead. I’ll wait.

Don’t forget to bookmark his blog. I highly recommend it for writers at any stage.

I really like the points he made in that article, and agree. But I don’t think ‘do I like this’ is a useless question to ask yourself – as long as you don’t stop there. Consider WHY you like what you’re reading, or don’t like it. Once you’ve read it, pick it apart and see what bits you most enjoyed. Where did you skip past paragraphs, or get bumped out of the story’s grip on you, and how could the author have prevented that?

Reading with an eye to how you would do the same thing is an occupational hazard of being an author. You should still get lost in fiction – we’re readers first, after all – but there’s nothing wrong with admiring cool things as they go by, tucking them away in your head for later. And nothing wrong with reading bad fiction and seeing how you could do better.

The second article was brought to you by the magic of Twitter. This is from top agent Rachelle Gardener, entitled Managing Expectations. Go forth… read, bookmark, return.

The next to last paragraph resonated most strongly with me. As authors in a rapidly changing publishing environment, it’s really required of us to keep our expectations under control.

It’s always a wrench for a new author to realize what ‘getting published’ really means to them – usually a far cry from what they thought. Certainly the beginning of a journey, not the end.

But nowadays, with things changing so fast the word ‘book’ doesn’t even mean what it did when you were a child, it’s even more strange. We would be shooting ourselves in the foot to hold any unrealistic expectation. Ambition and optimism are good – expectation must be fluid. Discover the difference between what you desire and what you expect. The world may give you the former, if you work for it… the latter can cripple you.

Submission

It’s not easy for me. I was looking over what I have finished and realized that I have more than 10 completed works that I still think are good enough to submit. They range from short stories to novellas to full length novels, and cross all kinds of genres. Why am I not submitting these works?

Partly it’s because I’m not the world’s most organized person. Once I have motivation (someone liking my work, or asking to see more, etc) I am really going to keep on top of everything. I’ve never failed to turn in revisions on time, or not meet my professional obligations, or screwed up on a deadline. It’s the initial submission process that is hard for me to get started on… actually putting things in the mail.

Partly it’s because query letters and synopses are hard to write. I have a head start on the synopsis thing, thanks to my work on the blurb team for another publisher. I have some experience thinking in terms of condensation and snappy word hooks. But it’s still not the easiest part of writing!

But these can’t be the whole story. Perhaps some self-image issues. In any case, I hereby swear to do better and submit some things!

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