I’ve been agented before, and I’m going to be honest here— I
loved having an agent.
What I didn’t love was the process of knocking on agents’
doors.
Reminder to self before embarking on this road:
A. Queries
need to be succinct
B. Invest
in every query, but not too much because…
C. …Most
will either be ignored or rejected with a form email
D. Treasure
the replies that ask for more materials, revision, or invite future queries,
for…
E. …Those
are the only ones worth investing in and the only ones that count.
The query landscape
has never been more crowded, and thus most voices are drowned by the multitude’s
noise.
Got to have
faith in my equanimity, my manuscripts, and my ability to weather this trek.
All experienced
advice welcome 👍
Here we go---
4 comments:
No advice here, Mirka. Good luck to you. I'll take your tips as I cautiously dip my toes into queryland.
This is not a fun quest, but it's a very worthwhile one. You know the basics, so it's a matter of sending them out relentlessly until you strike gold. It only takes one yes. Keep going!
Yes, it's tricky. Good luck getting another agent. I hope the trek is not arduous.
It must be quite a job for agents to go through the large amounts of query letters and manuscripts they receive!
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