Yes, I’ve got my synopsis, three chapters with a (fabulous!) letter out to an agent. It’s quite emotional, letting the A4 envelope disappear into into the postbox slot and hearing the ‘thunk’ as it hits the bottom of the cage inside. At that stage, my first thought was ‘Oh, God, the postbox is empty – I’ve missed the post’ but I hadn’t. My brain, through my eyes, reminded me it was only 11.45 am. Even in English villages, the last collection isn’t until the afternoon…
What did I do next? Went home and had a glass of red.
That evening, I banished all thoughts of manuscripts, synopses, slaving over a hot keyboard. My OH and I loaded up the car and fled to France for a few days, which is where I am typing this post.
I understand I won’t hear for several weeks, especially as the London Book Fair is approaching. I might start getting a little nervy around mid-May and hope I’ll be grown up enough not to phone up until the end of May.
Well, I have Part Deux of my trilogy to edit/polish up, so in between the wine, cheese and milder weather, I’ll content myself with working on that.
(But I still think it’s exciting…)
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It’s a cliché, but it’s damn right! The business of getting an agent, getting your book published and sold is definitely as hard, if not harder, as writing the novel in the first place. Similar to when you’re pregnant. You think being pregnant is bad (sickness, lassitude, ruined feet, stretch marks, galloping appetite, pan-galactic weight gain), but once the dear delight is born, you will be slogging away at a level you thought had been left in Victorian sweatshops.
One thing I’ve learnt that is crucial. You must do your research before you put one finger on the keyboard.
1. Know what sort of a book you’ve written (sounds obvious, but it isn’t always);
2. Find out which agents deal with your genre/type (Writers’ & Artists’ Yearbook, Association of Authors’ Agents, etc.);
3. Try and find the agent within a big company that deals specifically with your sort of book;
4. Read up about them on their website, the internet in general;
5. If you have any writing friends, ask their opinion.
As for the letter, there are gazillions of websites and books giving advice about being focused, businesslike and informative, but something that’s struck me as essential is some marketing advice I heard a few years ago at a business seminar from a very respected marketing guru: BE NICE!
I’m not being sycophantic ;-), just practical. Agents want books, too. No books, no business. So basically, they’re a team member in your enterprise of getting your book to the reader and it’s bad work practice to be rude to your fellow team members.
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I went to an RNA London South East meeting yesterday with fellow newbie Rachel to hear Alison Joseph, author of the ‘Sister Agnes’ series, compare story structure in the two genres.
She observed that while crime and romance in the same story may be rare, there were similarities in the framework and essential elements. Both needed conflict and tension, for instance. Alison pointed to a high point in tension in her crime books at around seven-eights of the way through. The last eighth was a wrap-up along the lines of ‘So, Inspector, what about the fate of xxx?’
Alison said she enjoyed writing about extraordinary things happening to ordinary people (often the setting for romantic novels) and the relationships that developed between her characters (an obvious one in romance!). She got a lot of empathic smiles around the table about the necessity of avoiding the mid-book sag.
After a Q&A session from the twenty-odd members, there was a book raffle. For my 50p, I won Elizabeth Chadwick’s The Greatest Knight, the story of William Marshal, which I shall look forward to reading with great pleasure.
An afterthought: I was a little puzzled about the crime/romance mix comment, as were one or two others in my twitter group. David Hewson’s The Lizard’s Bite is an example of a successful mix, I think as are Lindsey Davis’s Falco series. Have just started JD Robb’s (Nora Roberts) Naked in Death which adds a futuristic element to the mix. I’ll report back…
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