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Before you send out your work, have it edited by an established pro! |
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A literary agent shares secrets. |
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Agent Lori Perkins blogs and tells all |
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Writer's Digest magazine
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Writing-World
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| Wylie Merrick Agency's Blog |
Zack Company Blog
Agent Andrew Zack blogs. |
|
 Friday, December 18, 2009
Agents at a Conference Talk Queries, Short Stories, the State of the Industry & More
Posted by Chuck
This is a "Blast From the
Past" post. To celebrate the
GLA Blog's 2nd birthday, I am
re-posting some of the best
"older" content that writers
likely missed.
------
In 2009, I presented at Muse & the Marketplace,
which is a writers' conference held in downtown Boston. The event
seemed to be a big success and I gave two presentations—one on query
letters to agents, and another on nonfiction book proposals.
Also—I sat in on an agent panel and listened to four agents share all kinds of good tips and secrets. The four reps were:
1. Mollie Glick of Foundry Literary + Media 2. Rob McQuilkin of Lippencott Massie McQuilkin 3. Elisabeth Weed of Weed Literary 4. Lane Zachary of Zachary Shuster Harmsworth

Here is what they shared. Everything below is paraphrased.
ON SUBMISSIONS & QUERIES:
MG: When you contact an agent with a query, if
you can mention other books that the agent has repped (for example,
because you repped X, I think you will like my Y).
LZ: Mentioning that you have an MFA is
impressive and can help, but doesn’t make too much of a difference in
the long run, because it’s all a matter of whether the writer can
write.
MG: When looking at a query, agents are
looking for something that helps them pull your letter out of the pile
and say “This person has some legitimacy.” LZ:
The query letter is “a couple of sparkling paragraphs about what you’re
writing.” She often sees query letters with superfluous detail in
them—namely about the author’s life (“I ski … I hunt.”) If she sees
superfluous detail in the letter, she assumes that the manuscript will
have too much fat on it, as well.
RM: Simultaneous submissions are normal and
assumed. In other words, it is safe and healthy to submit your work to
several agents at once.
MG: Submitting to agents and editors at the
same time is counter productive because if you were to get an agent,
she won’t know who you’ve submitted to and received rejections from. This makes her job harder.
LZ: If she passes on an idea but thinks another agent at the agency will find it interesting, she will always pass it on.
ON SHORT STORIES:
RM: One of the best and most common ways to
sell a collection of short stories is to repurpose them into a novel,
or sell the collection as one part of a two-part deal, with the second
book being an actual novel.
LZ: Short story collections do sell, but they do so very rarely.
ON CHOOSING AN AGENT:
RM: There are distinct benefits to working
with a young & hungry agent. Namely, they will be able to spend
more time helping you polish your work before it gets sent out. A
younger agent may have more time to help you.
EW: It makes no difference whether you go with
a big or small agency. She’s worked at both, and finds very little
difference. It's all about the agent's ability, not the size of the
agency.
ON OTHER TOPICS:
MG:
The state of the publishing industry has meant that the market is
surprising. By that, she means that she will have an expectation
regarding what a publisher will pay for a book, but the publisher is
usually not offering the expected number. They’re either offering
higher or lowering than first expected. In other words, the down
economy is throwing things into a shift, but it's not always bad.
LZ: Agents are always on the hunt for new
great writers and they read lots of publications. They read literary
journals to find amazing talent. But they also ready magazines. She
recently took on an author after reading a piece by the writer in Backpacker Magazine. The lesson here is that building credits is a good idea.
MG: She handles more clients than people may
think. It’s because fiction takes so long to write and polish that
it’s often 2-3 years between projects. It’s her job to keep track of
what’s in progress, what needs a little more work before making the
editor rounds, and what is good to go out right now.
MG: Finding an agent is like looking for a
job. Writers should be professional. Both sides should ask questions
of one another before contracts are signed.
Editor's Note: The agents were
asked if they read Scribd, a site where people can post their writing.
(Questions about these sites can up now and again at conferences.) All
four agents said no, and then seemed to have somewhat negative opinions
of posting stuff online. Rob said he doesn’t want to find secondhand
material. Mollie said she is wary of anyone who has posted too much of the work online.

Me teaching at the conference. I gave two presentations - one on queries to agents, and another on nonfiction book proposals.
Want more on this subject?
Guest Columns | Short Stories | Writers' Conferences
Friday, December 18, 2009 2:07:49 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Sunday, November 22, 2009
New Agent Alert: Justine Wenger of Emma Sweeney Agency, LLC
Posted by Chuck
Reminder: Newer agents are golden opportunities for new writers because they're likely building their client list; however, always make sure your work is as perfect as it can be before submitting, and only query agencies that are a great fit for your work. Otherwise, you're just wasting time and postage.
 About Justine: She graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a BA in English Literature and Creative Writing. In addition to working for Emma, Justine is poetry reader for BOMB Magazine, and routinely writes short stories or long poems on the subway.
She is seeking: literary fiction, short story collections, and food-related non-fiction. I'm looking for stories that are well-written with surprising, yet simple craft and driving characters. "I am also a fiction and poetry reader for BOMB Magazine and OPEN CITY, which is a good example for the style of fiction I would like to acquire."
How to submit: "We require queries to be delivered by e-mail to queries (at) emmasweeneyagency (dot) com. Please paste your cover letter and the first ten pages of your manuscript or proposal in the body of your message. For security reasons we cannot open attachments. Please note that queries sent to any e-mail address will not be considered. Because of the volume of email we receive, we cannot respond to every query. We regret that we do not accept submissions by post unless specifically requested." If this query is specifically for Justine, put "Query for Justine" in the subject line.

Want more on this subject?
Literary Fiction | New Agency Alerts | Short Stories
Sunday, November 22, 2009 4:28:14 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Sunday, September 06, 2009
How I Got My Agent: Greg Gutierrez
Posted by Chuck
"How I Got My Agent" is a new recurring feature on the GLA blog. I find it fascinating to see the exact road people took that landed them with a rep. Seeing the things people did right vs. what they did wrong (highs and the lows) can help other scribes who are on the same journey. Some tales are of long roads and many setbacks, while others are of good luck and quick signings.
This installment of "How I Got My Agent" is by Greg Gutierrez, who writes short pieces about surfing as well as novels.

ZEN AND THE ART OF SURFING
The night of my high school graduation, I had the last fistfight I would ever share with my father. This relationship would be the underlying gist of my first novel. I hopped on a flight to Oahu in search of waves, and to find myself. The drinking age then was 18 and in bars I told girls I wrote for Surfer magazine. In reality, I worked at a shady visitor’s information booth where I gave tourists a case of pineapples if they attended a seminar on timeshare condos. It took a few years, but my writing did appear in magazines. An early break came in 1998, when The Surfer’s Journal ran 5 stories from my collection, Zen and the Art of Surfing, in one issue. Later, through a grant from the Julian Paz Foundation, Zen and the Art of Surfing was published in paperback and is now in its eighth printing.
I have taught high school English for the last decade. Four and a half years ago, I started writing a novel. Two long years later, I was finished. I called the book Mammoth Lakes.
THE SDSU WRITERS CONFERENCE
In 2007, I went to the San Diego State University’s Writer’s Conference where I hoped to be discovered. It was a turning point for my writing. I received vital feedback from editor Toni Plummer (loved my character’s names and suggested I shorten my chapters so that each one read like a short story) and the following agents: Betsy Amster (told me my work was too violent for her, but that I’d find an agent), Loretta Barrett ("show me, don’t tell me"), Jennifer De la Fuente ("keep it under 100,000 words"), Elizabeth Evans ("the first sentence is the most important, have tension on every page"), Jud Laghi ("stick with it, it’s a number’s game"), Judith Riven ("lean and clean, no extra words, no clichés"), and my favorite, Sally van Haitsma (I still hit her up with industry questions and she always answers me with insight and kindness). My book wasn’t nearly ready and I spent two years cutting out 30,000 words and rewriting it top to bottom including the title, which became Mammoth Mountain.
About a year ago, while still fine tuning my book, I began to send out queries in groups of ten. Eventually, I sent out fifty with no success. Then, after over four years of working on the book, I figured out how to put its essence into one sentence. "What happens when a lost man finds Christ, only to lose his soul?" I opened my query with this sentence and contacted ten more agents. Boom! I had two requests for full manuscripts and two requests for partials. I got a call from Benee Knauer, Victoria Sanders’ editorial director. She enthusiastically requested a two-week exclusive read. “I wouldn’t have it any other way!” I told her (not filling her in that my book was being read). Two weeks later, Victoria herself called to tell me even though she was only halfway through the book, she wanted to sign me.
I was excited, but nervous. What if she finished it and decided she didn’t like it? Would she change her mind? I was cursed with my writer’s imagination and self-doubts. It all became real a few days later when the contract arrived in the mail.
REWRITING AND SUBMITTING
We spent about four months polishing the manuscript. It’s three weeks since Victoria submitted it to editors. For me, waiting to hear whether a major house wants it has been more agonizing than looking for an agent. I’m trying to lose myself working on my second novel.
My advice to writers is to read your entire novel in one or two sittings before you send it out. This is how an agent will read it and some mistakes may be easier to see. Then, send out lots of queries, making sure each one is better than the previous one. Don’t give up; someone is going to fall in love with your book.

Zen and the Art of Surfing
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How I Got My Agent Columns | Short Stories
Sunday, September 06, 2009 10:10:57 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, April 27, 2009
Literary Agents Tell All at Boston Conference
Posted by Chuck
I just returned from Muse & the Marketplace, which is a writers' conference held in downtown Boston. The event seemed to be a big success and I gave two presentations - one on query letters to agents, and another on nonfiction book proposals.
ALSO - I sat in on an agent panel and listened to four agents share all kinds of good tips and secrets. The four reps were:
1. Mollie Glick of Foundry Literary + Media 2. Rob McQuilkin of Lippencott Massie McQuilkin 3. Elisabeth Weed of Weed Literary 4. Lane Zachary of Zachary Shuster Harmsworth 
Here is what they shared. Everything below is paraphrased.
ON SUBMISSIONS & QUERIES:
MG: When you contact an agent with a query, if you can mention other books that the agent has repped (for example, because you repped X, I think you will like my Y), that still really works.
LZ: Mentioning that you have an MFA is impressive and can help, but doesn’t make too much of a difference in the long run, because it’s all a matter of whether the writer can write.
MG: When looking at a query, agents are looking for something that helps them pull your letter out of the pile and say “This person has some legitimacy.” LZ: The query letter is “a couple of sparkling paragraphs about what you’re writing.” She often sees query letters with superfluous detail in them—namely about the author’s life (“I ski … I hunt.”) If she sees superfluous detail in the letter, she assumes that the manuscript will have too much fat on it, as well.
RM: Simultaneous submissions are normal and assumed. In other words, it is safe and healthy to submit your work to several agents at once.
MG: Submitting to agents and editors at the same time is counter productive because if you were to get an agent, she won’t know who you’ve submitted to and received rejections from. This makes her job harder.
LZ: If she passes on an idea but thinks another agent at the agency will find it interesting, she will always pass it on.
ON SHORT STORIES:
RM: One of the best and most common ways to sell a collection of short stories is to repurpose them into a novel, or sell the collection as one part of a two-part deal, with the second book being an actual novel.
LZ: Short story collections do sell, but they do so very rarely.
Editor's Note: The thing that I noticed about short story collection success tales were that they all came around in strange ways. For example, the first success story an agent related was how a woman traveled all the way from India to attend an American writers’ conference and met an agent personally. The other success story told of an intern that worked at an agency where the intern said “Hey, I’ve got some short stories.” What to notice here is that neither one of these two examples came about through a cold query submission. I found it odd to hear two success stories like that when almost no agents accept queries for short story collections. So it was not surprising to hear that neither were through queries. They were both somewhat special circumstances.
ON CHOOSING AN AGENT:
RM: There are distinct benefits to working with a young & hungry agent. Namely, they will be able to spend more time helping you polish your work before it gets sent out. A younger agent may have more time to help you.
EW: It makes no difference whether you go with a big or small agency. She’s worked at both, and finds very little difference. It's all about the agent's ability, not the size of the agency.
ON OTHER TOPICS:
MG: The state of the publishing industry has meant that the market is surprising. By that, she means that she will have an expectation regarding what a publisher will pay for a book, but the publisher is usually not offering the expected number. They’re either offering higher or lowering than first expected. In other words, the down economy is throwing things into a shift, but it's not always bad.
LZ: Agents are always on the hunt for new great writers and they read lots of publications. They read literary journals to find amazing talent. But they also ready magazines. She recently took on an author after reading a piece by the writer in Backpacker Magazine. The lesson here is that building credits is a good idea.
MG: She handles more clients than people may think. It’s because fiction takes so long to write and polish that it’s often 2-3 years between projects. It’s her job to keep track of what’s in progress, what needs a little more work before making the editor rounds, and what is good to go out right now.
MG: Finding an agent is like looking for a job. Writers should be professional. Both sides should ask questions of one another before contracts are signed.
Editor's Note: The agents were asked if they read Scribd, a site where people can post their writing. (Questions about these sites can up now and again at conferences.) All four agents said no, and then seemed to have somewhat negative opinions of posting stuff online. Rob said he doesn’t want to find secondhand material. Mollie said she is wary of anyone who has posted too much of the work online.

Me (Chuck Sambuchino) teaching at the conference. I gave two presentations - one on queries to agents, and another on nonfiction book proposals.
Want more on this subject?
Agent Advice (Agent Interviews) | Guest Columns | Queries and Synopses and Proposals | Short Stories | Writers' Conferences
Monday, April 27, 2009 8:28:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, November 18, 2008
How Long is a Novella? And How Do You Query Agents For Them?
Posted by Chuck
Q. What is the average length of a novella? And is it'pitched' to literary agents the same way novels are 'pitched'? - Gene
A. Novellas generally run 20,000-50,000 words. About 30,000 words is average. While this number of words would be very common when pitching a nonfiction text, such a length reminds me of tennis lessons in my youth. My coach would tell me to stand at the back line to volley or approach the net, but never to float in between the areas, because that was "no man's land." That's what a novella feels like to me: "no man's land." Very much too long to be a short story, and very much too short to be a novel. Concerning how to pitch it, Gene, my first advice is to expand it into a novel-length work (at least 80,000 words). If that's not a possibility, then you can simply look for the few agents out there who do represent things such as novellas and short story collections, then try them. You would query the same way and the work needs to be finished and polished before you do. The odds of success here are very, very small. My best candid advice is to finish this novella and stick it in a drawer. Then write a few novels, get them published, and gather a moderately loyal readership. When you do, a publisher will release your novella in a small print run and your loyal readers will gobble it up. Everyone wins. Q&A from Blog Readers | Short Stories | Word Count
Tuesday, November 18, 2008 3:24:01 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Saturday, April 19, 2008
Anatomy of a Bad Query Letter: When a Good Idea Gets Buried and Good Intentions Go Wrong
Posted by Chuck
Agent Nathan Bransford has his "Anatomy of a Great Query Letter" posts. So, on my blog, for educational purposes only, I present "Anatomy of a Bad Query Letter" (Part 1).
Obviously, I've changed names and places to protect this writer.
Check out the original letter and then I'll dissect it below...
-----------------
Awesome Writer 123 Main St. Address
Date, Year
Dear Agent,
I am seeking representation to market a collection of my original short stories, entitled XXXX. My goal is publication to a mass audience, not only to English-speaking readers, but globally, to have translations of my work available in several languages.
I hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in Environmental Studies from the University of XXXX. I wrote my first story in January 2006, and I have since begun to also write a body of poetry. My short stories are science-fiction adventures with an ecological angle. Teenagers and young adults comprise my target audience. In a perfect world, I feel I could best get my message across in a television series adapted from the stories. That would be my long-range goal. However, unlike current popular TV programs and films of intergalactic warfare, my work stresses the interconnectedness of all life and the sacredness of Earth’s wilderness.
Publication in New Age and ecological magazines would be a logical first step for me. With the collection of I am submitting here, I welcome your input. What follows here is what I could see as possible back cover endorsements/promotions of the collection:
- "Awesome Writer’s collection of stories has a more than sufficient number of surprises and compelling plot twists to engage the 12-25 set, with a skillful juxtaposition of science- fiction and spirituality."
- "XXXX demonstrates the discerning and thoughtful intelligence of an author who personally survived a traumatic childhood event, and then spent nearly ten years as a teen and young adult on a spiritual healing quest. Write rshares this learning and experience in an authentic way, through his delightful characters, both human and alien."
- "XXXX crosses a frontier familiar to many teen and young adults in the science- fiction/magic adventure genre, but differentiates itself in a message of hope for humanity and the planet, without preaching. The stories evoke the Arthurian legends in their mysticism and magic, but instead of knights, wizards and kings, benevolent aliens team up with humans. These stories could possibly become as loved by the new generation of youth as the film E.T. was thirty years ago."
Thanks in advance for your time and consideration.
Sincerely yours,
Awesome Writer E-mail: awesomewriter@yahoo.net
----------------
OK, here we go...
I am seeking representation to market a collection of my original short stories, entitled XXXX. I like the straightforward approach to begin, but note how your collection is "titled," not "entitled." My goal is publication to a mass audience, not only to English-speaking readers, but globally, to have translations of my work available in several languages. This is what another blogged called "Thinking Too Far Ahead Syndrome" (TTFAS). Stick to pitching your work.
I hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in Environmental Studies from the University of XXXX. I wrote my first story in January 2006, and I have since begun to also write a body of poetry. Awesome!! Wait - why does this matter? My short stories are science-fiction adventures with an ecological angle. Teenagers and young adults comprise my target audience. Kind of cool. Will voracious YA readers gobble up a short story collection? They just might, but this cool note is not expounded and buried in mistakes. Pity. In a perfect world, I feel I could best get my message across in a television series adapted from the stories. That would be my long-range goal. Way too much TTFAS! However, unlike current popular TV programs and films of intergalactic warfare, my work stresses the interconnectedness of all life and the sacredness of Earth’s wilderness.
Publication in New Age and ecological magazines would be a logical first step for me. Probably - so go do it! With the collection of I am submitting here, I welcome your input. Input as to what? How to begin? An agent wants to sell your work and make money, not give you career advice for free. What follows here is what I could see as possible back cover endorsements/promotions of the collection: This doesn't bode well...
- "Awesome Writer’s collection of stories has a more than sufficient number of surprises and compelling plot twists to engage the 12-25 set, with a skillful juxtaposition of science- fiction and spirituality."
- "XXXX demonstrates the discerning and thoughtful intelligence of an author who personally survived a traumatic childhood event, and then spent nearly ten years as a teen and young adult on a spiritual healing quest. Writer shares this learning and experience in an authentic way, through his delightful characters, both human and alien."
- "XXXX crosses a frontier familiar to many teen and young adults in the science- fiction/magic adventure genre, but differentiates itself in a message of hope for humanity and the planet, without preaching. The stories evoke the Arthurian legends in their mysticism and magic, but instead of knights, wizards and kings, benevolent aliens team up with humans. These stories could possibly become as loved by the new generation of youth as the film E.T. was thirty years ago."
Ohhh-kay. I get the gist. Maybe this is a unique take on the pitch, as you want to "pitch through blurbs," but it doesn't work. Conjuring up fake praise comes off as not only amateurish, but a bit egotistical. Meanwhile, the cool idea of sci-fi short stories for teenagers is never explained well, even to the point where the interconnecting themes are not identified.
Furthermore, agents will usually not pick up a short story collection from a new writer. The best way to get such a collection published is to write novels, gather a readership, and then publish it. If you are an amateur and want to get them sold, I highly suggest getting some awards and honors for a few of them.
Thanks in advance for your time and consideration.
Sincerely yours,
What about just "sincerely"? Isn't that good enough anymore? I've seen "sincerely yours" a lot recently. This sounds kinda flirty ... maybe it's just me.
Want more on this subject? Guest Columns | Queries and Synopses and Proposals | Short Stories
Saturday, April 19, 2008 9:45:56 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Agent Advice: Debbie Carter of Muse Literary Management
Posted by Chuck
"Agent Advice" is a series of quick interviews with literary and script agents who talk with Guide to Literary Agents about their thoughts on writing, publishing, and just about anything else.
This installment features literary agent Debbie Carter of Muse Literary Management. Prior to starting her
own agency in 1998, she worked for a literary agent, a talent manager,
and in the record business as a talent scout. She has a BA in English
and music from Washington Square University College at NYU.
She is seeking: literary novels and short story collections with popular appeal, mysteries, thrillers, suspense, espionage fiction/nonfiction, children's fiction/nonfiction and literary narrative nonfiction. Other nonfiction areas of interest include music, writing, birds and gardening.

GLA: What's the most recent thing you've sold?
DC: Recent sales include a short story to The Kenyon Review by 2005 Pushcart nominee Aurelia Wills, to be published in their 2008 summer issue; and a children's folktale collection, The Adventures of Molly Whuppie, by Anne Shelby, to Univ. of North Carolina Press.
GLA: You accept short story collections and novellas. Do you feel that the stories have to be connected or can they all be individual? Are these still a tough sell to publishers either way?
DC: I am looking for writers of short fiction who have enough stories for a collection or are writing toward completing one. Most collections are by prize-winning authors and feature stories previously published in name journals and magazines. If stories are interconnected, like a novel, and the work is strong enough to compete with debut novels, the writer does not need these credentials. Aurelia Wills, a writer who sold a couple stories on her own to journals, is completing stories toward a collection, and I submitted stories to journals as she worked toward that goal. We sold one to The Kenyon Review, but major journals passed on the other stories; unfortunately, we couldn't agree on a strategy for further submissions and we parted company: I thought the stories needed to be longer and that she should revise, and she wanted to keep sending the stories out because making submissions was "a numbers game." If a writer and I don't agree editorially on content, I will usually suggest that they seek feedback in a workshop. Some follow my advice, but some don't and decide to submit to publishers on their own. It is a matter of a reader's taste whether or not an editor publishes a story, but if I see something wrong with a story (usually an aspect of the structure), I will ask the writer to "fix" it. It's rare for an agent or anyone for that matter to like everything by a writer, and many writers will want to sell everything they write. I try to allow room for disagreement in my relationship with writers: I offer an agency agreement that is limited to specific works. I offer an agency agreement that is limited to specific works. As for novellas, the content of the story should determine its length, but I didn't see any novellas by new writers on BN.com. Children's publishers are open to young adult novels of novella length, but I don't know firsthand if publishers of adult fiction are receptive to them; I haven't found one. Stewart O'Nan just published Last Night at the Lobster, a Christmas novella. If readers buy it, then publishers will know there is an audience for the short novel, and will probably consider short novels by new writers. When I receive a query for a novella, my first hunch is that the book isn't finished. I usually recommend that the writer read Building Better Plots by Robert Kernen, for its checklists in chapter 2, to see if there's something missing in their story or plot.
GLA: When you're reading a partial, what are the most common problems you see in the writing samples? What are the most common reasons you turn down a submission?
DC: I usually request the first hundred pages of a novel, and for story collections, four or five stories. I want to see if the opening chapters or stories capture me in any way, with a compelling narrator or a strong premise or situation as in The Firm or The Day of the Jackal. Many times, I turn down first submissions because they're trashy or trite, or they're about obscure or specialized topics, like Roman history. That's not to say these manuscripts won't appeal to other readers; on my Web site, I list genres that don't appeal to me. But I'll always tell writers why I'm passing and offer suggestions on where they might look for agents. Or, in the case where I like the voice or specific passages, but there isn't enough there for me to work with, I'll suggest books for further reading.
GLA: You seek narrative nonfiction. What are the key elements you look for in a narrative nonfiction submission? What elements must be there to capture you attention and distinguish it from regular nonfiction?
DC: I read narrative nonfiction as I do novels, for story and character, except they seem to mean more to me because they're true. I've placed my favorite titles on the "bookshelf" page on my site www.museliterary.com with links to excerpts.
GLA: Plenty of people want to write a memoir (and many do), but few are good. For you, what separates the best memoir from the others?
DC: The way you phrased the question is subjective. What's good depends on whether you're looking for a well-constructed story or a firsthand, often amateur, account of an experience that may provide answers to questions in your own life, as a kind of self-help read. I'm looking for well-constructed stories, and the memoirs I like, posted on my bookshelf page, are by authors or journalists who have studied writing. I evaluate them as I would a first-person narrator in a novel. Do I like this person? Some bestselling memoirs don't appeal to me because their lives are just too awful to read about, as in The Glass Castle. The narrator recalls one miserable episode in her childhood after another with no letup; she wore me out. In a play or novel, the dramatist or author would alter the plot, selecting only significant scenes instead of telling everything about the life, and arranging them for dramatic effect; and giving readers a break from the main story with scenes with other characters. Some memoirs are on topics that don't appeal to me, such as Eat Pray Love, a spirituality title, or I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell (why would I want to read about a womanizer? Again, a personal reaction) or the didactic Bill O'Reilly books; But in the memoirs I do like, the narrators appeal to me as people, and have strong plots that satisfy expectations for traditional story structure: I like coming-of-age stories like Mermaids by Patty Dann, stories that capture an aspect of American culture that has past, like The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio, or stories of historical significance that are relevant today, like The Zookeeper's Wife.
GLA: Will you be at any conferences in the future where writers can meet you?
DC: Right now I'm booked for the Sand Hills Writers' Conference at Augusta State University in March. I'll also be at ThrillerFest in NYC in July.
GLA: What's your best piece of advice regarding something we haven't discussed?
DC: I would suggest they read Publishers Weekly and the New York Times Book Review. I know writers need time to write and research their projects, but I think writers would be less frustrated if they knew more about the business. Many writers approach novels or memoirs strictly from aesthetics: Is this a good book? Many of them are thoughtful and well-written, but do they know who would want to read it? Can they define their book's category as a publisher or bookseller would? Does the book speak to the concerns of their readers? Some of the stories and topics are old-fashioned, too derivative of other books, or aren't relevant to our lives today. Readers are looking to connect with a character, and see the world in a way that is familiar and new at the same time. We constantly hear that people have less time to read, but we all have time for a compelling story that speaks to our concerns, like Harry Potter, Sophie's Choice or Carrie. Reading PW and the NYTBR will tell them what's being published by large and small companies, what's selling, and why. They don't have to force themselves to write books they don't like just to fit a trend, but they should see who is publishing books they like, and shape their own manuscripts to fit publishers' lists. Want more on this subject?
Agent Advice (Agent Interviews) | Children's Writing | Memoir | Narrative Nonfiction | Short Stories
Wednesday, December 19, 2007 1:10:11 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, June 18, 2007
Writing a Novel? Stress Your Short Story Awards.
Posted by Chuck
If you want a literary agent to represent you and sell your novel to a large publishing house, you need to write a great query letter to that agent, first and foremost. That's old news. But there's something else you can do, too: Prove yourself as a capable fiction writer by getting short stories published or honored through contests.
When an agent reads a query, she'll look at your pitch - the one paragraph that explains what your book is about. If she hasn't thrown your query in the garbage by the time she's done reading the pitch, she will then read the next (and hopefully, final) paragraph, where you explain who you are and any writing credentials you may have. This is your golden opportunity to stress your accolades.
Think about it: If she reads your pitch and is somewhat interested, it would help if the next paragraph says,
"Three of my short stories were published in literary journals this past year, including Journal X; and one short story was awarded first prize overall in the Cool Short Story Contest in 2006."
Now she's thinking: "OK, the pitch didn't totally knock my socks off, but this is a capable writer. Maybe I should peruse the first 10 pages."
Where can you find contests? Writer's Market has a sizeable database of them. And because competitions pop up so quickly then die off just as fast, simply using Google will work. If it's a regional competition (e.g., Baltimore Area Fiction Writers present the 2007 Writing Contest), think about getting involved with the sponsoring group. Perhaps a writer in the group already has an agent and could refer you down the line. Platform | Short Stories
Monday, June 18, 2007 3:48:04 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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