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		<title>Querypalooza, part XIII:  showing off your qualifications (over and above the obvious)</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=12033</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=12033#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Sep 2010 01:00:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.annemini.com/?p=12033</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
&#8220;A little brains, a little talent &#8212; with an emphasis on the latter.&#8221;

Last time, we embarked upon an in-depth discussion of that most-dreaded part of a good query letter, from most aspiring writers&#8217; point of view:  the section known as the platform paragraph.  Why dreaded?  Because the overwhelming majority of mistakenly hear [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/damn-yankees.jpg" alt="damn-yankees" title="damn-yankees" width="500" height="322" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-5792" /></p>
<blockquote><p><strong><em>&#8220;A little brains, a little talent &#8212; with an emphasis on the latter.&#8221;</em></strong>
</p></blockquote>
<p>Last time, we embarked upon an in-depth discussion of that most-dreaded part of a good query letter, from most aspiring writers&#8217; point of view:  the section known as the platform paragraph.  Why dreaded?  Because the overwhelming majority of mistakenly hear a professional request for their book&#8217;s credentials as, &#8220;You have to prove to us that we should take you seriously as a writer, oh unpublished one, before we will deign to read your work.&#8221;  Or as, &#8220;We only want to know this because we&#8217;re not interested in writers who don&#8217;t already have arm-length lists of published books.&#8221;   Or even, &#8220;Who the heck do you think you are, believing you should write a book at all?&#8221;</p>
<p>Naturally, writers querying with their first manuscripts would find such expectations threatening.  But if you have few or no previous publications, awards, writing degrees, etc. to your credit, do not panic, even for an instant.  All of these are legitimate selling points for most books, <em>there are plenty of other possible selling points for your manuscript</em>.</p>
<p>How do I know that?  Because the fine folks who work in agencies don&#8217;t actually expect the platform paragraph to answer any of the questions above.  What questions do they want you to answer?  <strong> &#8220;Why are you uniquely qualified to write this book, tell this story, and/or make this particular argument?&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>Substantially less stressful to think of it that way, isn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>Try not to get too bogged down in worrying about the standard prestige points.  Today,  we shall be going through a long list of potential selling points for your book.  Pretty much everyone should be able to recognize at least a couple of possibilities that might fit the bill. </p>
<p>But I&#8217;m not going to be doing all of the work here.  Dig out your trusty pad and pencil; you&#8217;re going to be coming up with a list of your book&#8217;s selling points.</p>
<p>And I&#8217;m not talking about mere vague assertions about why an editor at a publishing house would find your manuscript an excellent example of its species of book &#8212; that much is assumed, right? &#8212; but reasons that an actual real-world book customer might want to pluck that book from a shelf at Barnes &#038; Noble and carry it up to the cash register.  It may seem like a pain to generate such a list before you query, but believe me, it is hundreds of times easier to land an agent for a book if YOU know why readers will want to buy it. </p>
<p>Trust me, “But I spent three years writing it!” is <em>not</em> a reason that is going to fly very well with anyone in the publishing industry.  Nor is the astonishingly common, &#8220;But I want to get published so much!&#8221;</p>
<p>Why won&#8217;t these excuses fly?  Well, pretty much everyone who queries has expended scads of time, energy, and heart&#8217;s blood on his book.  Contrary to what practically every movie involving a sports competition has implicitly told you, a writer&#8217;s wanting to win more than one&#8217;s competitors is not going to impress the people making decisions about who does and doesn&#8217;t get published.  </p>
<p>I&#8217;m bringing this up advisedly.  Sad to report, a disproportionately high percentage of queriers make the serious marketing mistake of giving into the impulse to talk about how HARD it was to write this particular book, how many agents have rejected it, at how many conferences they&#8217;ve pitched it, etc.   </p>
<p>First-time pitchers are even more likely to tumble down this rabbit hole, alas.  The more disastrously a pitch meeting is going, the more furiously many pitchers will insist, often with hot tears trembling in their eyes, that this book represents their life&#8217;s blood, and so &#8212; the implication runs &#8212; only the coldest-hearted of monsters would refuse them Their Big Chance.  (For some extended examples of this particular species of pitching debacle, please see my <a href="http://www.annemini.com/wp-admin/post.php?action=edit&#038;post=524">earlier post on the subject</a>.)</p>
<p>Sometimes, pitchers will get so carried away with the passion of describing their suffering that they will forget to pitch the book at all.  (Yes, really.)  And then they&#8217;re surprised when their outburst has precisely the opposite effect of what they intended:  rather than sweeping the agent or editor off her feet by their intense love for this manuscript, all they&#8217;ve achieved is to convince the pro that these writers have a heck of a lot to learn how and why books get published.</p>
<p>In other words:  &#8220;Next!&#8221;</p>
<p>Why is this an instant-rejection offense?  Well, I hate to be the one to break it to these self-revealers, but this is not the way to gain an agency screener&#8217;s sympathy, or even her attention.  In fact, such emotional outbursts are a waste of Millicent&#8217;s time.  </p>
<p>Why?  Well, you tell me:  what, if anything, in a litany of complaints about how the publishing industry works, however well-justified, tells Millicent one single thing about the book being queried.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll answer that one for you:  nothing.  But it does give her some indication of whether the querier has done any homework about how agencies work, or how books get published.</p>
<p>A writer who melts down the first time he has to talk about his book in a professional context generally sets off flashing neon lights in an agent&#8217;s mind:  <em>this client will be a heck of a lot of work</em>.  Once that thought is triggered, a pitch would have to be awfully good to wipe out that initial impression of time-consuming hyper-emotionalism.</p>
<p>The same holds true, of course, for queries.  Sadly, queriers who play the emotion card often believe that it&#8217;s the best way to make a <em>good</em> impression.  Rather than basing their pitch on their books&#8217; legitimate selling points, they fall prey to what I like to call the Great Little League Fantasy:  the philosophy so beloved of amateur coaches and those who make movies about them that decrees that all that&#8217;s necessary to win in an competitive situation is to <em>believe</em> in oneself.</p>
<p>Or one&#8217;s team.  Or one&#8217;s horse in the Grand National, one&#8217;s car in the Big Race, or one&#8217;s case before the Supreme Court.  You&#8217;ve gotta have heart, we&#8217;re all urged to believe, miles and miles and miles of heart.</p>
<p>Given the pervasiveness of this dubious philosophy, you can hardly blame the writers who embrace it.  They believe, apparently, that querying (or pitching) is all about demonstrating just how much their hearts are in their work.  Yet as charming as that may be (or pathetic, depending upon the number of teardrops staining the letter), this approach typically does not work.  In fact, what it generally produces is profound embarrassment in both listener and pitcher.</p>
<p>Which is why, counterintuitively, figuring out who will want to read your book and why IS partially about heart:  preventing yours from getting broken into 17 million pieces while trying to find a home for your work.</p>
<p>Aspiring writers&#8217; hearts are notoriously brittle.  Why else would anyone query only once, or twice, or a small handful of times, then give up altogether, assuming (wrongly) that if his book were <em>really</em> meant to get published, it would have been snapped up instantly?  </p>
<p>The common misconception that good writing will inevitably and immediately attract an agent, regardless of how unprofessionally it is presented, can be even more damaging at query-writing time:  when believers in the Agent-Matching Fairy sit down to write their queries,  they often become depressed at the very notion of having to make the case that their manuscripts are worth reading.  Frequently, these poor souls mistake the need to market their books  for critique, hearing the fairly straightforward question, “So, why would someone want to read this book?” as “Why on earth would ANYONE want to read YOUR book?  It hasn’t a prayer!” </p>
<p>Faced with what they perceive to be scathing criticism, many writers shrink away from this perfectly reasonable question.  So much so that they become positively terrified of querying at all.  “They’re all so mean,” such writers say, firmly keeping their work out of the public eye.  &#8220;It&#8217;s just not worth it.&#8221;  </p>
<p>This response makes me sad, because <strong>the only book that hasn’t a prayer of being published is the one that sits in a drawer, unqueried.  There are niche markets for practically every taste, after all. </strong></p>
<p>Did that little diatribe fill you with heart, miles and miles and miles of heart?  Good.  Let&#8217;s start generating your list of selling points.</p>
<p>Before I start making suggestions, let&#8217;s be clear on what you&#8217;re going to want on your list.  <strong>A selling point should  SHOW (not tell) why you are the best person to write this book, what about your book is likely to appeal to readers in your target market, and/or that the intended audience is larger (and, ideally, more interested in your subject matter) than Millicent might have been aware. To be most effective, you won&#8217;t want to make these arguments in a general, “Well, I think a lot of readers will like it,” sort of way, but by citing specific, fact-based REASONS that they will clamor to read it.  </strong></p>
<p>Preferably backed by the kind of verifiable statistics we discussed last time.  Include any fact that will tend to boost confidence in your ability to write and market this book successfully &#8212; and that includes references to major bestsellers on similar topics, to show that there is already public interest in your subject matter.</p>
<p>Why?  Because it will make your query look professional &#8212; and, I must say it, better than the 17 queries Millicent has already seen today that did not talk about their books in marketing terms.  Not to mention that dear, pitiful person who whose entire query was devoted to how frustrating it is to try to find an agent for a cozy mystery these days. </p>
<p>Don&#8217;t skimp on the brainstorming stage; the more solid reasons you can give for believing that your book concept is marketable, the stronger your platform paragraph will be.  Think about it:  no agent is going to ask to see a manuscript purely because its author <em>says</em> it is well-written, any more than our old pal Millicent the agency screener would respond to a query that mentioned the author’s mother thought the book was the best thing she had ever read with a phone call demanding that the author overnight the whole thing to her.</p>
<p>“Good enough for your mom?  Then it’s good enough for me!” is not, alas, a common sentiment in the industry.  (But don&#8217;t tell Mom; she&#8217;ll be so disappointed.)</p>
<p>So on your marks, get set, go:  <strong>why are you the best person in the universe to tell this story or make this argument, and why will people who are already buying books like yours want to read it?</strong>  </p>
<p>Other than, obviously, the great beauty of the writing.  Because absolutely the only way to demonstrate that to Millicent is by getting her to read your manuscript, right?</p>
<p>I already hear all of you literary fiction writers out there groaning &#8212; and we come to a stop again.  &#8220;But Anne,&#8221; you protest in dulcet tones, &#8220;you astonish me.  Surely, if any book category should be exempt from being marketed on anything but the beauty of the writing, it&#8217;s mine. I always thought that the primary benefit of writing fiction was that I wouldn&#8217;t ever have to sully my art with sordid marketing concerns.  Yes, aspiring nonfiction writers have to produce book proposals, and thus are forced to brainstorm about marketing, but until fairly recently, fiction writers could concentrate on storytelling, craft, and, of course, lovely writing.  I&#8217;ve been nervously watching as more and more, genre fiction writers are being expected to market their own work, but gosh darn it, I write for a relatively tiny target audience  deeply devoted to beautiful writing.  Please, please tell me that I can just leave the platform paragraph out of my query, and thus don&#8217;t have to let you drag me kicking and screaming toward the list below!&#8221;</p>
<p>Wow.  Hadn&#8217;t I mentioned that emotional outbursts aren&#8217;t adequate substitutes for well-reasoned selling points?</p>
<p>Seriously, literary novelists, I think you&#8217;re missing the point here.  No Millicent can possibly be bowled over by the beauty of your writing <em>unless she reads it.</em>  And she will only read it if she is impressed by your query.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s just no way around that.  So it behooves you not only to craft your descriptive paragraph to be as lyrical and moving as humanly possible, but also to use your platform paragraph to make your book sound different &#8212; and easier to market &#8212; than all of the other literary fiction books Millicent will see queried that day.  It will cause your query to jump out of the stack at her:  your tribe&#8217;s collective reluctance toward thinking about marketing virtually guarantees that if you do it well, your query will shine out as preeminently professional. </p>
<p>In other words:  no, I shan&#8217;t absolve you of writing a platform paragraph.  It&#8217;s just too likely to help you.</p>
<p>Where should a literary fiction writer start in coming up with selling points?  Precisely where every other writer does:  the subject matter.  As I&#8217;ve said before and will doubtless say again, even the most abstruse literary fiction is about something other than just the writing.  So ask yourself:  <strong>why will the subject matter appeal to readers?  How large is the book’s target demographic?  </strong></p>
<p>Or, if you prefer to put it in highbrow terms:  if you were the publicity person assigned to promote the book, what would you tell the producer of an NPR show in order to convince him to book the author?</p>
<p>For fiction, the subject matter you choose as the focus of your platform paragraph need not be the central issue of the book, by the way.  Even if your novel is about post-apocalyptic government restructuring, if a major character is the gardener charged with replanting the White House&#8217;s Rose Garden in newly-toxic soil, and you&#8217;ve been a landscaper for a decade, that&#8217;s relevant.  (It informed what you chose to have that character plant, didn&#8217;t it?)</p>
<p>Some prompts to get you &#8212; and everybody else &#8212; brainstorming.  Some effective selling points include&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>(1) Experience that would tend to bolster your claim to be an expert on the subject matter of your book.</strong><br />
This is the crux of most nonfiction platforms, of course, but it&#8217;s worth considering for fiction, too.  If you have spent years on activities relating to your topic, that is definitely a selling point.  Some possible examples:  </p>
<blockquote><p>Marcello Mastroianni has been a student of Zen Buddhism for thirty-seven years, and brings a wealth of meditative experience to this book.</p>
<p>Clark Gable has been Atlanta’s leading florist for fifteen years, and is famous state-wide for his Scarlett O’Hara wedding bouquets.</p>
<p>Tammy Faye Baker originally came to public attention by performing in a show featuring sock puppets, so she is well identified in the public mind with puppetry.</p></blockquote>
<p>(Actually, I think this last one is at least partially true.  But I should probably state up front that otherwise, my examples will have no existence outside my pretty little head, and should accordingly remain unquoted forever after.)</p>
<p><strong>(2) Educational credentials.</strong><br />
Another favorite from the platform hit parade.  Even if your degrees do not relate directly to your topic, any degrees (earned or honorary), certificates, or years of study add to your credibility.  </p>
<p>Yes, even if you are a novelist: a demonstrated ability to fulfill the requirements of an academic program is, from an agent or editor’s point of view, a pretty clear indicator that you can follow complex sets of directions.  (Believe me, the usefulness of a writer’s ability to follow directions well will become abundantly apparent before the ink is dry on the agency contract: deadlines are often too tight for multiple drafts.)  Some possible examples:  </p>
<blockquote><p>Audrey Hepburn holds an earned doctorate in particle physics from the University of Bonn, and thus is eminently qualified to write on atomic bombs.</p>
<p>Charlton Heston was granted an honorary degree in criminology from the University of Texas, in recognition of his important work in furthering gun usage.</p>
<p>Jane Russell completed a certificate program in neurosurgery at Bellevue Community College, and thus is well equipped to field questions on the subject.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>(3) Honors.</strong><br />
If you have been recognized for your work (or volunteer efforts), this is the time to mention it.  Finalist in a major contest, in this or any other year, anybody?    </p>
<p>And it need not be recognition for your writing, either:  the point here is to demonstrate that there are people (translation for Millicent:  potential book-buyers) who already have positive associations with your name.  Some possible examples:  </p>
<blockquote><p>Myrna Loy was named Teacher of the Year four years running by the schools of Peoria, Kansas.</p>
<p>Keanu Reeves won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1990 for his research on THE MATRIX.</p>
<p>Fatty Arbuckle was named Citizen of the Year of Fairbanks, Alaska.  As a result, newspapers in Fairbanks are demonstrably eager to run articles on his work.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>(4) Your former publications and public speaking experience. </strong><br />
Yes, yes, I know:  I spent most of this morning&#8217;s post convincing you that you needn&#8217;t despair if you had no previous publications.  That doesn&#8217;t mean that I&#8217;m not going to urge those who do to bring them up in the platform paragraph &#8212; are you crazy?  Millicent has a reverence for the published word the borders on the devout.  </p>
<p>So if you have any previous publication whatsoever, list it, EVEN IF IT IS OFF-TOPIC.  If your last book in another genre sold well, or if you were affiliated somehow with a book that sold well, mention it.  </p>
<p>And please, don&#8217;t fall into the trap of thinking that only fiction credentials count if you&#8217;re pushing a novel, or that your published short story won&#8217;t help you get your memoir past Millicent:  a publication is a publication is a publication.  Some editor took a chance on you; Millie needs to know that in order to assess your query properly.</p>
<p>If you have ever done any public speaking, mention it, too: it makes you a better bet for book signings and interviews.  If you have done a public reading of your work, definitely mention it, because very few first-time authors have any public reading experience at all.  </p>
<p>Some possible examples:  </p>
<blockquote><p>Diana Ross writes a regular column on hair care for Sassy magazine.</p>
<p>Twiggy has published over 120 articles on a variety of topics, ranging from deforestation to the rise of hemlines.</p>
<p>Marcel Marceau has a wealth of public speaking experience.  His lecture series, “Speak Up!” has drawn crowds for years on eight continents.</p></blockquote>
<p>I&#8217;m going to hold off on the rest of the list until tomorrow morning, to give everyone a chance to digest both this and this morning&#8217;s gargantuan post before we move on.  Get good sleep, everyone, and keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, part XII:  what do you mean, you want me to talk about my writing credentials?</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=12006</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=12006#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Sep 2010 17:08:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.annemini.com/?p=12006</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Sorry that I&#8217;m posting our latest Querypalooza installment a few minutes late today, campers.  First, I overslept a bit (probably predictable, seeing as I had committed to last weekend&#8217;s post-every-eight-hours schedule before it occurred to me that such a posting regimen would necessarily preclude my ever sleeping more than, say, seven hours and twenty [...]]]></description>
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<p>Sorry that I&#8217;m posting our latest Querypalooza installment a few minutes late today, campers.  First, I overslept a bit (probably predictable, seeing as I had committed to last weekend&#8217;s post-every-eight-hours schedule before it occurred to me that such a posting regimen would necessarily preclude my ever sleeping more than, say, seven hours and twenty minutes at a stretch), then I got embroiled in answering readers&#8217; questions on earlier posts in this series.  I aspire to being more prompt with today&#8217;s 6 p.m. post.</p>
<p>As long-time readers of this blog are, I hope, already aware, I welcome questions and comments from my readers.  They keep things lively, and frankly, without them, Author! Author! would not have grown, evolved, and some would say mushroomed over the past five years into the seething cauldron of ideas it has.  Your input has transformed it from a series of editorial pieces (which is, really, what it was for the first year, when I was Resident Writer for the Pacific Northwest Writers&#8217; Association; their board insisted on column format without visible comments) into a vibrant, ever-burgeoning community.  </p>
<p>A fierce ragoût, as Charlotte Brontë would put it.  Heck, even the super-specific categories on the archive list at right were initially suggested by a reader.  My very first commenter, in fact.  So the next time you go scrolling down that now-immense list of options, you should send mental thanks to <a href="http://www.stoneislandseastories.com/">inveterate commenter Dave</a>.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s another, slightly less obvious way that your input has been &#8212; and shall continue to be, I devoutly hope &#8212; so good for this blog:  every so often, someone asks a question that would simply never occur to anyone who works with manuscripts for a living.  I&#8217;ll never forget the first time it happened.  Someone wrote in because she was confused by something I had said in passing about how manuscripts should be formatted:  how was it possible, she asked in all sincerity, to have a slug line in the top margin when the rules said there should be a one-inch border of white space all around the page?</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a cliché, but my jaw actually did drop.  Having grown up surrounded by professional writers, not only would this question never have occurred to me &#8212; I had no personal experience that would lead me to guess that anyone else might have formulated it.  My parents made me write my elementary school term papers in standard format.  Typed, no less.  I had never even thought about how difficult it would be for someone who had never seen a professionally-formatted manuscript to envision what it should look like.</p>
<p>And that, my friends, was the inspiring spark for my notoriously explanation-heavy semi-annual <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=8534">HOW TO FORMAT A BOOK MANUSCRIPT</a> series.  So the next time any of you have a question about format, you should be thanking that early questioner.</p>
<p>Ditto, incidentally, for Querypalooza.  My explanations have definitely been enriched over the years by readers&#8217; comments and questions.  Why, only recently, <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=6358">curious and insightful reader Janet</a> raised an interesting query-related issue in the comments:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>The thing that stymies me is the credentials part.  If you&#8217;re trying to interest an editor (as I write mostly short stories at the moment, although I&#8217;m Working On A Novel) but you&#8217;ve only really just gotten started again and haven&#8217;t won or published anything (that&#8217;s not fan fiction), how do you deal with that?</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>That part stymies nearly everyone, Janet &#8212; and not only short story writers trying to interest editors in their work.  It is, in fact, the classic first-time book writer&#8217;s dilemma, and certainly most queriers&#8217;.</p>
<p>The classic answer to this question is <em>if you don&#8217;t have writing credentials, get some.</em>  Most aspiring writers are turned off by this, because they assume this is referring to formal publishing credentials, but that&#8217;s not the only possible option in the platform paragraph of a query.  The goal of including publishing credentials there is not just to show that some editor out there has already taken a chance on you, but to show that others have read your work &#8212; and thus you have an already-existing audience, however small.  </p>
<p>Thus, a published book review in a local free paper is in fact a credential; so is being the resident writing expert for a public library (almost always a volunteer proposition), interviewing someone for a workplace newsletter, being a member of a regularly-meeting writers&#8217; group, or even &#8212; dare I say it? &#8212; maintaining a blog. </p>
<p>All of these things demonstrate professional intent &#8212; which, if you do not have professional credentials, is the next best thing.  I have some tips on brainstorming more possibilities in the posts under the BUILDING YOUR WRITING RESUME category on the archive list at right, but it all boils down to <em>be creative</em>.</p>
<p>Okay, my work here is done.  Moving on&#8230;</p>
<p>No, but seriously, folks, that is how quickly most of us who deal with books for a living would answer this sort of question.  It just wouldn&#8217;t occur to us that someone new to the industry might want or need to hear more.  Being me &#8212; and thus having the benefit of five years&#8217; worth of your questions and comments &#8212; I know better. </p>
<p>So for the next couple of posts, I&#8217;m going to talk about the query&#8217;s platform paragraph assuming that there must be many readers out there who have never seen a professional query before.  Let&#8217;s start by defining our terms, shall we?  </p>
<p><strong>A platform is the collection of credentials, life experience, and specific expertise that forms the basis of a writer&#8217;s claim to be the best person on earth to write the particular book he is pitching, querying, or proposing.</strong>  Until fairly recently, the term applied only to nonfiction: platform was industry-speak for the background that renders a nonfiction author qualified to write a particular book, but now, it&#8217;s not uncommon for agents and editors to speak about a novelist&#8217;s platform as well.</p>
<p>And you know what I mean by the platform paragraph in a query, right?   It&#8217;s the third paragraph in the example below, the part that begins, not entirely coincidentally, with <em>I am uniquely qualified to tell this story, due to&#8230;</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/mars-query--791x1024.jpg" alt="mars query" title="mars query" width="466" height="603" class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-12018" /></p>
<p>Now that we&#8217;re all on the same page, so to speak, we&#8217;re ready to ask the $64,000 question:  <strong>what kinds of credentials are literary enough to constitute a legitimate platform?  Or, to put it a bit more practically:  other than previous publications, what&#8217;s going to impress Millicent the agency screener?</strong></p>
<p>And 85% of you just tensed up again.  Not too surprising:  most aspiring writers &#8212; novelists in particular, I notice &#8212; become abashed when asked about their platforms, and downright depressed while trying to write the credentials paragraph for their query letters.   Even for a writer crammed to the gills with self-esteem tend to wilt a little when confronted with the prospect of having to justify having sat down to write her book.  </p>
<p>I have long suspected that part of the fear stems from that seemingly hostile agency guide notation, <em>prefers previously published writers</em>.  That&#8217;s the kind of statement that makes those talented souls trying to break into the biz wander down the street, grumbling and kicking the nearest tin can.  </p>
<p>&#8220;What credentials do <em>I</em> have?&#8221; they murmur mournfully.  &#8220;It&#8217;s a Catch-22:  I have to be published in order to get published.&#8221;</p>
<p>A not-unreasonable argument, oh can-kickers, but I can&#8217;t help feeling that as a querying concern, it&#8217;s a trifle misplaced.  I ask you:  when would you rather learn that an agency would prefers to represent writers who already have a book or article out, after you queried &#8212; or before, when you could save yourself a stamp by not approaching such agents at all?</p>
<p>It may not be nice to hear, but let&#8217;s face it:  in terms of stamp-consumption, agencies willing to state in print or on their websites that they only want to hobnob with those with clippings are actually doing aspiring writers a favor.  They are saving the previously-unpublished some wasted time.</p>
<p>Besides, even the quickest flip through the rest of that agency guide that drove you onto the streets, abusing recyclables, will abundantly demonstrate that there are <em>hundreds</em> of wonderful agents out there that represent first-time writers.  Why not start with them, instead of squandering your energies resenting the others?</p>
<p>I hear that can rattling against the curb again.   &#8220;Fine, Anne,&#8221; the credentials-impaired reluctantly concede, &#8220;I won&#8217;t fritter away my time dwelling on the others.  But I still have to write a platform paragraph for my query letter, and I have no idea what to say.&#8221;</p>
<p>Again, a fair worry.  May I make a couple of suggestions for alleviating it?  What if you thought of that paragraph as dealing with <em>your book&#8217;s</em> selling points, rather than yours personally?  And while we&#8217;re on the subject of your personal credentials, is it possible that you&#8217;re thinking too narrowly?</p>
<p>That got you to stop kicking that can, didn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>Let me take the second suggestion first, the one about expanding one&#8217;s conception of platform.  <strong>Technically, any fact about your background or the book&#8217;s appeal could conceivably be a legitimate platform plank.  As long as it might spur readers to buy the book, it&#8217;s fair game.</strong></p>
<p>So if you have previous publications, and thus a readership, you&#8217;re definitely going to want to mention it &#8212; yes, even if those publications don&#8217;t happen to be books.  Articles are great, as are online publications and even blogs:  what you are proving here is that you have an existing audience, one that might conceivably recognize your name enough to pick up a volume in a bookstore.</p>
<p>That, in case you had been wondering, is the primary reason agents harbor a preference for working with previously-published authors, as well as why self-published books don&#8217;t tend to work well as platform credentials unless they&#8217;ve sold a ton of copies. A previously-published author has already demonstrated that somebody out there is interested in what s/he has to say.  </p>
<p>That&#8217;s a perfectly legitimate selling point, isn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>But that&#8217;s not the only reason that you might want to list any previous publications &#8212; and I do mean <em>any</em> &#8212; in your query.  The previously published also tend to have an edge because, presumably, they have experience pleasing an editor.  </p>
<p>Why might that conceivably be important to an agent?  Well, for one thing, that experience implies that the writer in question has met at least one deadline, a perennial concern of agents and editors alike.  It shows that the writer can follow directions.  It also implies that the writer has at some point in his or her checkered existence successfully accepted editorial feedback without flying into bits &#8212; again, something about which agents and editors worry, because a writer unable or unwilling to handle feedback professionally makes their respective jobs significantly harder. </p>
<p>Getting the picture?  Previous publications of <em>any</em> sort silently signal that you are a pro.  Why wouldn&#8217;t you mention any and all that you might have?</p>
<p>The can just bounced off the lamppost again, didn&#8217;t it?  &#8220;I can think of one might good reason, Anne:  I wasn&#8217;t paid for my past publications.&#8221;</p>
<p>The professional response to that is immensely complicated, of course, but here goes:  so what?</p>
<p>Seriously, why should it matter, as long as actual readers got to see your work?  Admittedly, Millicent is probably going to be <em>more</em> impressed if you can legitimately state that you have published three short stories in <em>The New Yorker</em> than if you wrote periodic columns on boosting homeowners&#8217; recycling acumen for your community&#8217;s free newspaper, but you had to meet a deadline, didn&#8217;t you?  You had to conform to submission standards without throwing a tantrum, didn&#8217;t you?</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t you want the agent of your dreams to be aware of that experience?</p>
<p>Ditto with contest wins and placings, incidentally:  since they are tangible proof that others have liked your writing, you&#8217;re going to want to mention them in your query.  Yes, even if the writing for which you received recognition is completely unlike the manuscript you&#8217;re querying.  </p>
<p>In the first place, what makes you think Millicent has the time to check whether the Edna St. Vincent Millay Award was for poetry, plays, or prose?  Even if she made an educated guess that you won for a poem and you are marketing an urban vampire fantasy, she&#8217;s still going to regard it, rightly, as a sign that you might conceivably know how to write.</p>
<p>And the down side is?</p>
<p>Successful contest entries also demonstrate that &#8212; wait for it &#8212; the writer who won them can, you guessed it, follow directions and meet deadlines.  In case the sheer number of times I have brought up these laudable traits hasn&#8217;t tipped you off yet, these are surprisingly rare abilities in writers, especially those new to the publishing process.</p>
<p>Why?  Well, you didn&#8217;t hear it from me, but all too often, neophyte writers labor under the impression that they should be concerned with only the artistic side of getting their books published.  Artsy writers chafe at deadlines, because they want to write only when inspiration hits; they become enraged at editorial suggestions, because after all, who is the publishing house that bought their manuscript to interfere with their artistic vision?  And, if you believe the horror stories agents and editors like to tell in that bar that&#8217;s never more than 100 yards from any writers&#8217; conference held in North America, plenty of art-loving writers simply throw a fit if anyone at all suggests at any point in the publication process that they  should change a sentence or two.</p>
<p>Such writers are, in short, a pain to the agents and editors unfortunate enough to work with them.  </p>
<p>But you&#8217;re willing to be reasonable, right?  And if you&#8217;ve published before, in any context, you worked and played well with the editorial staff, didn&#8217;t you?  Any particular reason you <em>wouldn&#8217;t</em> want Millicent to know that when she&#8217;s considering your query?</p>
<p>&#8220;Okay, Anne,&#8221; the can-kickers admit, &#8220;that makes some sense, in theory.  But my previously-published writing has nothing to do with my current book!  Won&#8217;t Millicent just laugh at it?&#8221;</p>
<p>Probably not, for precisely the reasons I mentioned above:  those publications tell her that you already have an audience (albeit in a different field), that you can follow directions, that you can meet deadlines&#8230;</p>
<p>Need I go on?</p>
<p>Perhaps I do, because the question implies that the asker is unaware that <em>many, many professional authors write in different genres</em>.  But think about it: if the Millicents of the world discounted journalists who had never written memoirs before, or nonfiction writers who have just produced their first novels, what would <em>we prefer working with previously-published writers</em> even mean, in practice?  That they were only interested in reading work by those who already had a book out from a small press &#8212; or authors with larger presses already represented by other agents?</p>
<p>Okay, so that is indeed what some of them mean.  But most of them are just looking for writers who have worked with an editor before, have an existing audience&#8230;</p>
<p>You know the tune by now, right?  Keep humming it in the key of G.</p>
<p>I spot a few raised hands out there.  &#8220;Back up a minute, Anne.  What do you mean, many pros write in different book categories?  Why on earth would they do that?&#8221;</p>
<p>Finances, usually.  Most aspiring writers seem unaware of it, but it&#8217;s gotten pretty hard to make a living solely by being a novelist &#8212; or from a single book in any category, unless it sells awfully well.  Even established novelists often supplement their incomes with other writing.  Magazine articles, for instance, or nonfiction books.  Book reviews.  They might even develop another voice and write books in their own genre.</p>
<p>Which is why, in case you had been wondering, <strong>Millicent is going to want to hear about your educational degrees and certificates, even if they have nothing to do with the book you are querying.  Or even your writing. </strong></p>
<p>Yes, really.  While an MFA certainly makes for some ECQLC (Eye-Catching Query Letter Candy), so does a master&#8217;s degree in anything else, especially to a Millicent whose boss happens to like nonfiction book proposals.  While an exciting new novelist is, well, exciting for Millicent to discover, she knows how the business works:  if that particular book category&#8217;s sales slow, a writer with an unrelated degree might well be able to write a book about something else.</p>
<p>If that argument doesn&#8217;t appeal to you, try this one on for size:  in order to make it through most degree programs, somebody generally needs to be able to follow directions, met deadlines, etc.  (See, I told you to keep humming.)</p>
<p>Or this:   you never know whether Millicent or her boss shares an alma mater with you &#8212; it shouldn&#8217;t make a difference, of course, but occasionally, it does.  Try not to think of it as nepotism.  Think of it as the industry&#8217;s liking demonstrably smart people.</p>
<p>Is that a much-dented can I see hurtling in my general direction?  &#8220;I&#8217;m totally confused, Anne,&#8221; an aspiring writer with remarkably good aim calls out.  &#8220;You asking us to cram an awful lot of argument into just three or four lines of letter.  Have you forgotten that this missive must be only a page long?&#8221;</p>
<p>No, I hadn&#8217;t, oh can-booter:  you&#8217;re going to have to be brief.</p>
<p>And that, in case you&#8217;d been wondering, is why agents and editors who talk about platforms at conferences so often use celebrities as examples:  the market appeal of their names may easily be described very tersely &#8212; not an insignificant advantage in a context where only a 1-page argument is permitted.  </p>
<p>It takes only a couple of words to explain that an author had been a Monkee, after all.  </p>
<p>The more visible one is, the higher one&#8217;s platform, generally speaking.  Try not to get huffy about that:  it&#8217;s purely a marketing reality, not a question of literary quality. (If you are puzzled about why Millicent might believe that already-existing fame might prove useful in moving some books, maybe you should get out more.)</p>
<p>Yet fame and platform are not synonymous, as many aspiring writers depress themselves by believing:  <strong>fame is just one of the better-known ways to construct a platform.  Another way is by establishing one&#8217;s credibility as the teller of a particular story.</strong></p>
<p>Nonfiction book proposers have been expected to do this for quite some time, but it often doesn&#8217;t occur to novelists or even memoirists that their credibility might be a factor in how Millicent responds to their queries.  Obviously, one’s 9 years as a marriage counselor  would add credibility to one’s self-help book for couples experiencing problems sharing the medicine cabinet &#8212; so why wouldn&#8217;t that same experience add credibility to a memoir on the same subject, or even a novel?</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t believe me?   Would it surprise you to learn that although my doctorate has absolutely nothing to do with the subject matter of my memoir, my agents mentioned it every time they pitched the book?  Or the novel they pitched after it?</p>
<p>Why?  For the same reason that any skilled lawyer would establish my credentials if I were called as a witness to a crime:  my Ph.D. would might not render me a better observer of a hit-and-run accident, but it would tend to make the jury believe that I was a reasonable human being whose perceptions of reality could be trusted.</p>
<p><strong>A personal platform is like a pitch for oneself, rather than one’s book.  Whereas a pitch makes it plain to people in the industry why the book is marketable and to whom, the platform also demonstrates why people in the media might be interested in interviewing the author.</strong></p>
<p>While your extensive background as a supermodel might not be relevant to your credibility if you have written the definitive book on weevils, for instance, it would most assuredly mean that you would be a welcome guest on TV shows.  Perhaps not to talk about weevils, but hey, any publicity you can garner is bound to be good for book sales, right?</p>
<p>Which is yet another reason that celebrities enjoy a considerable advantage in marketing their books.  Case in point, as gleaned from the original Publishers&#8217; Marketplace announcement of this NF sale:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Jenna Bush&#8217;s <a href="http://www.harpercollins.com/books/9780061379086/Anas_Story/index.aspx">ANA&#8217;S STORY: A Journey of Hope</a>, based on her experiences working with UNICEF in Central America, focusing on a seventeen-year-old single mother who was orphaned at a young age and is living with HIV, with photographs by Mia Baxter, to Kate Jackson at Harper Children&#8217;s, for publication in fall 2007 (Harper says they&#8217;ll print about 500,000 copies), by Robert Barnett at Williams &#038; Connolly (world). Her proceeds will go to UNICEF, where she is working as an intern.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Hands up, anyone who thinks that the phrase <em>First Daughter</em> appeared nowhere in the query for this book.</p>
<p>I haven&#8217;t read the book in question, but I find this listing a miracle of platform-raising, both for what it says and what it doesn’t say.  Plenty of people write books based upon time living and working abroad, and a YA-aimed book of this sort is certainly a good idea.  However, this is an unheard-of run for such a volume, so we must look elsewhere for an explanation of what made the publisher decide that this particular YA book is so very valuable:  the author is, of course, the President’s daughter, presumably following in the well-worn footsteps of Amy Carter, the author of a YA book herself.</p>
<p>Amy Carter, however, was not summarily ejected from any major Latin American country for hardcore partying at any point in her long and colorful career, unlike Ms. Bush and her sister.  (How much carousing would one have to do to be declared undesirable in Rio, one wonders?)  Ms. Carter did occasionally turn up chained to South African embassies next to Abbie Hoffman during the bad old days of apartheid, though, if memory serves.</p>
<p>It just goes to show you:  when you’re building a platform, any kind of fame is a selling point.  </p>
<p>Some cans have started their forward motion again, haven&#8217;t they?  &#8220;All that sounds great, Anne &#8212; for folks who happen to have previous publications, degrees, or presidents for fathers.  All I have is 27 years volunteering in a hospice, which provided the inspiration for my novel, HOSPICE HA-HAS.  What am I supposed to use for a platform?&#8221;</p>
<p>I may be going out on a limb here, but how about those 27 years of experience directly applicable to your book&#8217;s subject matter?</p>
<p>Again, it doesn&#8217;t matter whether you were paid or not &#8212; any experience that makes you an expert on your topic is worth including in your platform.  Extensive interviews you&#8217;ve done on the subject, for instance, or years of reading.  That summer you spent following the caribou herd.</p>
<p>Seeing where I&#8217;m going with this?  At the risk of sounding like, well, pretty much anybody else who gives advice on platform:  <strong>if you do not already have a platform that makes the case that you are an expert in your subject area, you can always go out and get some.</strong></p>
<p>I&#8217;m quite serious about this &#8212; constructed platforms can be every bit as convincing ECQLC as publication-based ones.  So why not spend the autumn making a wise time investment or two?  </p>
<p>Think about it:   if you&#8217;re writing about wild animals, what&#8217;s a better use of your time, sitting around for six months regretting that you don&#8217;t have a doctorate in zoology, or spending every other Saturday volunteering at your local zoo?  I&#8217;m betting that Millicent is going to want to read the manuscript by the lady who fondles juvenile tigers in her spare time.</p>
<p>Or if your subject matter is not conducive to practical application, why not approach your local free paper with an article idea?  Heck, with the current level of layoffs in journalism, you might try the local not-free paper, too &#8212; good unpaid labor is hard to come by.  </p>
<p>You&#8217;re an expert in <em>something</em>, right?</p>
<p>If you&#8217;d rather not beard an editor face-to-face, the Internet is rife with writing opportunities.  Fair warning, though:  while technically, everything posted on the web is published, unless your blog is fortunate enough to garner an impressive number of hits on a regular basis (thanks again, readers!), Millicent is unlikely to regard a blog as a writing gig per se.  If it&#8217;s going to impress her, it will be due to its potential as a promotional platform for your book and your understanding of the Internet, whose promotional potential the major publishing houses have been slow to exploit.</p>
<p>Conference goers, are those statements from the dais about how agents now expect to see some sort of writing credential in a query letter making more sense now?  Or those comments that in the electronic age, publication credentials are easier to come by than ever?  The folks who spout those sentiments almost certainly were not thinking only of books; they meant the kind of credential that a good writer with persistence can manage to get.</p>
<p>Think of it as DIY ECQLC.</p>
<p>Ready to stop abusing that can yet?  No?  &#8220;Okay, Anne,&#8221; some impatient souls say, &#8220;I can see where this would be very good advice for a writer who was halfway through her first novel, or even someone who is still a few months away from being ready to query.  But I&#8217;ve been querying my book for a few years now &#8212; perhaps not many agents at a time, but I&#8217;ve been persistent.  As much as I would love to take a season or two off to build up some ECQLC, I barely have time to get out one individualized query a month and still write.  Any advice for me, something that I can apply to my already-existing query letter to beef up my platform paragraph?&#8221;</p>
<p>This kind of question drives those of us who teach querying nuts, just so you know; asking something like it is not typically a particularly good way to become teacher&#8217;s pet in a conference seminar.  Basically, my straw man is saying, &#8220;I&#8217;m not willing to put in the time to follow the advice you&#8217;ve already given &#8212; how may I get the same results with less work?&#8221;</p>
<p>Shame on you, straw man.  Go ask the wizard to give you some brains.</p>
<p>But I have to say, I understand our stuffed friend&#8217;s frustration:  good writers who have not yet cracked the query code often send out letters for years without landing an agent.  So I&#8217;m going to go ahead and answer the question &#8212; in boldface, no less.</p>
<p><strong>The quickest way to upgrade a manuscript&#8217;s apparent marketability in Millicent&#8217;s eyes is to add statistics to the platform paragraph, demonstrating that your target market is larger than she might think. For this tactic to work, though, you&#8217;re going to have to make the case that the target market you identify is likely to be interested in your book.</strong></p>
<p>Again, this is old hat to anyone who has ever written a nonfiction book proposal, yet it often seems to come as a shock to novelists and memoirists that the market appeal of their manuscripts is not self-evident.  The single best thing you can do for your querying prospects is to assume that it isn&#8217;t.</p>
<p>Why?  Well, among other things, it may prompt you to do a spot of market research.  Who is your target reader, and why does s/he need your book?  Not in general terms, but specifically:  what in particular will appeal to him or her?  What will she learn?  Why will she enjoy it?</p>
<p>Yes, yes:  that beautifully-written descriptive paragraph that presents your premise or argument intriguingly will go a long way toward answering that last question, but a well-argued platform paragraph can only bolster the book&#8217;s appeal.  Don&#8217;t go overboard and claim that everyone in the continental U.S. will rush out and buy your book; instead, give a couple of interesting (and truthful) selling points that would render your book attractive to your target reader.</p>
<p>Again, why?  Well, I hate to be the one to break it to you, but <strong>if Millicent gets to the end of your query letter and doesn&#8217;t still doesn&#8217;t know what your manuscript&#8217;s appeal to an already-established market is, she is very, very unlikely to ask to see the manuscript.</strong>  </p>
<p>Yes, even if the query itself is very well written.  Remember, she&#8217;s on the business side of the business; you&#8217;re on the artistic side.</p>
<p>No cans seem to be flying at my head this time, but I do spot a few raised hands.  &#8220;But Anne, I&#8217;m worried that the writing credentials I have don&#8217;t really count.  I&#8217;ve heard, for instance, that mentioning fan fiction just makes Millicent chuckle.  And I&#8217;m not the only one, judging by Janet&#8217;s parenthetical observation about not having &#8216;won or published anything (that&#8217;s not fan fiction).&#8217;  Aren&#8217;t you being, you know, insanely optimistic?&#8221;</p>
<p>Not really.  A publication is a publication, whether it is fan fiction or not:  if someone else decided whether to put your writing in print or online, it&#8217;s technically published, and thus a perfectly legitimate credential.    The pervasive rumor that fan fiction credentials don&#8217;t count does have some basis in fact, though &#8212; as writing credentials go, they are taken <em>less</em> seriously than print pieces, but that doesn&#8217;t mean that they don&#8217;t count at all.  </p>
<p>So why is the caution almost invariably phrased as <em>fan fiction and web credentials don&#8217;t count</em>?  Because like so many of the <em>soi-disant</em> Thou Shalt Not Do This in a Query rules floating around out there, the nuances of the true situation have fallen out of the advice as it has passed from mouth to mouth.  In the usual style of rumor-based fact-checking, what almost nobody goes on to mention is that just because it&#8217;s not the best writing credential doesn&#8217;t mean it&#8217;s completely worthless.</p>
<p>Especially if you happen to write in that genre.  If you write fan fiction in your chosen book category, you&#8217;re obviously familiar with its storylines, conventions, and current market, right?   </p>
<p>Millicent may not be as impressed by that proof of professional preparedness, but that doesn&#8217;t mean she will ignore it altogether. Besides, having something publishing-related to put in the platform paragraph always beats having only non-writing credentials there.  </p>
<p>&#8220;Okay, Anne,&#8221; some ECQLC-seekers murmur wearily, &#8220;I can understand how each of these types of platform planks might appeal to Millicent.  But heavens, woman, make up your mind!  You&#8217;ve told us to put two very different things in a single paragraph:  a statement of our credentials, up to and including our possibly irrelevant academic degrees and any years we might have spent on television, AND an argument for why the book is marketable, complete with supporting statistics.  Can&#8217;t I just pick one and be done with it?&#8221;</p>
<p>You could &#8212; and should, if that&#8217;s the best way to produce an intriguing, brief platform.  However, for most aspiring writers, a composite paragraph (or even two, if they&#8217;re short) pulling from several different types of selling point makes the most credible case.</p>
<p>Is your brain buzzing like a beehive, awash in the multiplicity of options?  If not, don&#8217;t panic &#8212; in my next post (roughly 6 pm PST, wakefulness permitting), I shall be churning out one of my patented lists in order to kick-start your brainstorming.  Keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza XI:  making your book sound like a real page-turner</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11995</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11995#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Sep 2010 01:00:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency screeners' pet peeves of the notorious variety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Anne's favorite posts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Autobiographical fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bad laughter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Being an agent's dream client]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cliché avoidance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dated manuscripts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dialogue that moves TOO quickly]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freshness in queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jargon usage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Literary fiction marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Passive voice and why you should eschew it]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protagonist likability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protagonist memorability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letter troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Real stories told as fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Realistic expectations for writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Voice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing clichés]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memoir querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying memoir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[avoiding the passive voice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bad laugh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nonfiction querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[passive voice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query clichés]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying nonfiction]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[                          
How was the first workday after the long weekend, campers?  Dragging a bit today?
If it&#8217;s any consolation, Millicent the agency screener probably is, too.  Imagine walking into [...]]]></description>
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<p>How was the first workday after the long weekend, campers?  Dragging a bit today?</p>
<p>If it&#8217;s any consolation, Millicent the agency screener probably is, too.  Imagine walking into your office after a lovely Labor Day holiday (or, in many agency offices, an even more lovely multi-week break) to discover your desk has totally disappeared under the backlog of incoming queries and submissions?  Or that your e-mail inbox is crammed so full that if you are going to do anything else over the next few days, you&#8217;ll have to be doing nothing but hitting the DELETE key constantly for hours on end?</p>
<p>(Confidential to the three readers who started as Millicents today:  congratulations on the new gig!  But I wasn&#8217;t kidding about the volume of work, was I?)</p>
<p>I hope you&#8217;ve been whipping those manuscripts into shape for submission, because this week, I&#8217;m going to be wrapping up my ongoing series on writing a compelling query letter.  In fact, I anticipate polishing off the infamous troubleshooting checklist today.  I&#8217;m going to be tackling a few readers&#8217; questions on the subject later in the week, so now would be a great time to leave a comment with any lingering concerns on the subject that might be troubling your mind in the dead of night.</p>
<p>Hey, it happens.  Writers have magnificently creative minds, gifted at creating angst.  Speaking of which, after Querypalooza, it&#8217;s right back to close textual analysis, self-editing, and more of those fascinating winners of the <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=11293">Author! Author!/WHISPER Great First Page Made Even Better Contest</a>.</p>
<p>Speaking of fascinating prose presented well (a clumsy segue, but hey, it was an awfully long weekend chez Mini), the last batch of questions focus upon conveying that your book is INTERESTING, in addition to being marketable in the current literary market.  Contrary to what most aspiring writers seem to think, it&#8217;s not necessarily self-evident in a plot description for an interesting book how or why it is interesting.  Or exciting.  Or even vaguely original. </p>
<p>Blessed are the Millicents, for they shall be plowing through it all.  </p>
<p>Of course, some of those queries must be for books that are neither interesting, exciting, or original in any way, but you’d be astonished at how many query letters for genuinely interesting books fail to make them sound even remotely so.  (At least, I hope you would.) It&#8217;s as though half the aspiring writers out there believe that the mere fact of having completed the manuscript is in itself a merit badge of fascination.</p>
<p>Just not true, I&#8217;m afraid; the ability to produce complete manuscripts is the beginning of the professional writer&#8217;s job description, not the end.  Truth be known, an astonishingly high percentage of the query letters that fall onto agents’ desks make the books sound dull as the proverbial dishwater. </p>
<p>Which, I hasten to add, isn&#8217;t necessarily a reflection upon the book being queried at all.  It is, however, a damning indictment of the effectiveness of the query letter. </p>
<p>Some of you are already annoyed, aren&#8217;t you?  &#8220;But Anne,&#8221; a few purists protest, &#8220;I&#8217;m a NOVELIST/MEMOIRIST/NARRATIVE NONFICTION WRITER, not an ad copywriter.  If everything I had to say could be summarized in a single-page letter, I wouldn&#8217;t have much material for a 400-page book, now would I?  Surely Millicent the agency screener must be aware of that &#8212; and if she isn&#8217;t, why doesn&#8217;t she have the intellectual curiosity/open-mindedness/common decency to take a gander at my manuscript before deciding that it and I are dull, rather than leaping instantly at that conclusion?&#8221;</p>
<p>The short answer:  time.  </p>
<p>The long answer:  our Millie has a heck of a lot of queries to plow through on any given day.  (See earlier expression of sympathy for the newbies&#8217; eyestrain.)  Since her boss agent could not possibly read every manuscript queried, it&#8217;s her job to weed out the ones that don&#8217;t seem like good fits, are not well written, are not likely to do well in the current market &#8212; and yes, the dull ones.</p>
<p>Darned right, that requires a snap judgment, and certainly a subjective one.  A Millicent who bores easily tends to be very, very good at her job &#8212; which, lest we forget, primarily involves rejecting aspiring writers.</p>
<p>Still seem unfair?  Think about that massive pile of queries on her desk for a moment:  the authors of every single one of those find their own books fascinating, too, but that&#8217;s not enough to intrigue our favorite agency screener.  To be the one query out of a hundred for which she will request pages (a more generous proportion of acceptance to rejection than most, incidentally), the letter is going to have to make HER believe that the book is fascinating.</p>
<p>Which is a pretty tall order &#8212; and virtually impossible when a writer forgets that <>the query is a writing sample, just as much as the manuscript is.  Long-time readers of this blog, please open your hymnals and sing along:  </p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Realistically, every English sentence a writer looking to sell a book places under an agent or editor’s nose is a writing sample:  the query, the synopsis, the bio, the book proposal.  Every paragraph is yet another opportunity to show these people that you can <strong>write</strong>.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Not to mention demonstrating that your book &#8212; and you &#8212; are interesting enough for them to want to be embroiled with for the next couple of years.</p>
<p>Again, this is where adhering to a pre-set formula for query letter perfection can really harm a manuscript&#8217;s chances.  By definition, cooking-mix prototypes are generic; you really don’t want to add your title to one of the many templates out there and stir.  </p>
<p>It&#8217;s conducive to boredom, amongst other drawbacks.  Instead, you will want to use every ounce of writing skill to make that agency screener forget that you are hitting the basic points that a solid, professional query letter hits.  </p>
<p>Yes, cramming all of that info into a page is an annoying exercise &#8212; your job is to make it look easy.  Not entirely coincidentally, the next couple of items on the query checklist speak to these very issues.  </p>
<p><strong>(30) Is my query letter 100% free of clichés? </strong><br />
In a manuscript, the desirability of steering clear of the hackneyed and well-worn is self-evident &#8212; or should be  &#8212; the goal here, after all, is to convince an agent or editor that the manuscript is <em>original</em>; by definition, clichés have been done before.  </p>
<p>Yet clichés turn up with surprising frequency in query letters, synopses, and even author bios.  </p>
<p>There are some pretty good reasons for that, actually:  generalities are the next-door neighbors of clichés, and anybody who has ever had any contact with marketing copy, particularly for movies, might easily fall into the mistaken belief that using the usual shorthand (boy meets girl, doctor who can&#8217;t heal himself, protagonist in high-risk job who cannot commit, etc.) is just the way that creative people talk about their projects amongst themselves.</p>
<p>It isn&#8217;t.  So don&#8217;t.  Use the space instead to make her exclaim, &#8220;Wow, I&#8217;ve never seen <em>that</em> before.&#8221;  </p>
<p>How?  Remember what I was saying earlier in this series about wowing Millicent with amazing details?  That&#8217;s the best cure for the common cliché.</p>
<p>The other way that clichés often creep into queries and synopses is when writers invoke stereotypes, either as shorthand (that descriptive paragraph can’t be very long, after all) or in an attempt to put a spin on a hackneyed concept.  </p>
<p>News flash:  the first almost never works, especially for fiction.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re wondering why, please see my earlier comment about how the industry wants to see YOUR ideas, not the common wisdom.</p>
<p>The second is just hard to pull off in a short piece of writing, for much the same reason that experimental spellings, innovative sentence structures, and imaginative punctuation tend not to lend magic to a writing sample.  (Unfortunately for writers of cutting-edge literary fiction.)  To a professional eye seeing any given writer’s work for the first time, it’s pretty hard to tell what is a deliberate play upon language and what is simply evidence that the submitter did not pay very close attention in English class.</p>
<p>Similarly, on a quick read of a short sample, it can be pretty hard to tell the difference between a reference to a tired old concept like:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>She’s a ditsy cheerleader who dominates her school, but learns the true meaning of caring through participation in competitive sport </strong></p></blockquote>
<p>and a subtle subversive twist on a well-worn concept: </p>
<blockquote><p><strong>She’s a ditsy cheerleader, apparently, but in reality, she’s young-looking nuclear physicist acting a role so she can infiltrate the local high school to ferret out the science teacher bent upon world domination.  </strong></p></blockquote>
<p>I don’t mean to shock anyone, but it’s just a fact that skimmers will often read only the beginnings of sentences.  And since both descriptions begin with <em>she’s a ditsy cheerleader</em>…</p>
<p>Getting the picture?</p>
<p>Save the subtle social criticism for the manuscript; in your query letter and synopsis, stick to specifics, and avoid stereotypes like the proverbial plague.  Cut anything that has even the remotest chance of being mistaken for a cliché.</p>
<p><strong>(31) Is my query letter free of catchphrases? </strong><br />
Sometimes, writers will include hackneyed phrases in an effort to be hip &#8212; notoriously common in older writers&#8217; queries for books aimed at the YA or twentysomething market, incidentally.  However, there can be a fine line between a hip riff on the zeitgeist and a cliché, and few human creations age faster than last year&#8217;s catchphrase.   </p>
<p>And nothing signals an older writer faster to Millicent than a teenage character who rolls her eyes, pouts, habitually slams doors, and/or quotes the latest catchphrase every 42 seconds at the dinner table.  Certainly if he does it in the summary paragraph of a query letter.  </p>
<p>Yes, some teenagers have been known to do all of these things in real life; Millicent&#8217;s seen it, too.  Telling her again is just going to bore her.  </p>
<p><em>When in doubt, leave it out</em>, as my alcoholic high school expository writing teacher used to hiccup into my cringing adolescent ear.</p>
<p>Why?  Well, many people in the publishing industry have a hatred of clichés that sometimes borders on the pathological.  “I want to see THIS writer’s words,” some have been known to pout, “not somebody else’s.”  </p>
<p>Don’t tempt these people &#8212; they already have itchy rejection-trigger fingers.</p>
<p><strong>(32) Is my query letter free of jargon? </strong><br />
Not all boredom springs from predictability,:  sometimes, it&#8217;s born of confusion.  A common source of the latter:  the over-use of technical terms in a query letter.</p>
<p>Predictably, jargon pops up all the time in nonfiction queries and proposals, especially for manuscripts on technical subjects:  how better to impress Millicent with one&#8217;s expertise, the expert thinks, than by rattling off a bunch of terms a layperson couldn&#8217;t possibly understand?</p>
<p>I can think of a better way:  by presenting one&#8217;s credentials professionally &#8212; and by explaining complex concepts in terms that even someone totally unfamiliar with the subject matter will understand.  </p>
<p>Remember, even if Millicent works for an agent who happens to specialize in your type of nonfiction book, she&#8217;s almost certainly not a specialist in your area.  Nor is her boss &#8212; or, in all probability, the editor.  For marketing purposes, it&#8217;s safest to assume that they were all English majors, and choose your words accordingly.</p>
<p>Novelists also tend to use jargon quite a bit in their queries, especially if their protagonists are doctors, lawyers, physicists like our cheerleader friend, or members of another legitimately jargon-ridden profession.  These writers believe, not entirely without cause, that incorporating jargon will not only make these characters sound credible (&#8221;But they really sound that way!&#8221;), but will make the writers themselves sound as though they know what they&#8217;re talking about.</p>
<p>Laudable goals, both &#8212; but if Millicent can&#8217;t understand what either is saying, this strategy is not going to work.  (The same holds true with contest judges, by the way.)</p>
<p>Remember, one of the things any successful query needs to demonstrate is that the sender can <em>write</em>; since jargon is by definition shorthand, it tends to be a substitute for evocative descriptions.  </p>
<p>Wow Millicent with your vivid descriptions &#8212; in layman&#8217;s terms.  Speaking of writing talent&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>(33)  Does the sentence structure vary enough to show off my writing talent? </strong><br />
Writers tend not to think about sentence structure much in this context, but remember, Millicent is reading a whole lot of these missives in a row.  The fact that your garden-variety query letter is stuffed to the brim with simple declarative sentences &#8212; or with four-line beauties with two semicolons in each &#8212; is bound to make those queries start to blur together after a while.  Take a peek at this fairly typical gem:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>I have written a book called <em>Straightforward Metaphors</em>.  I hope it will interest you.  It is about two sailors who go to sea.  They get wet.  </strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Sorry, writer-who-loves-simplicity, but THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA has already been done.  There&#8217;s a reason that book is taught to 15-year-olds:  the sentence structure is definitely YA, and thus probably not reflective of the narrative voice in this particular narrative.  Despite the current popularity and burgeoning innovation of the YA market, using YA language is not the best way to pitch adult fiction.    </p>
<p>Too-simple sentence structures are not the only reason Millicent might draw unflattering conclusions about a writer&#8217;s skill level from a query letter &#8212; far more common reason is poor grammar and spelling.  However, even subtle structural repetition can set off some red flags, as in this example.</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>I have written a novel, <em>Straightforward Metaphors</em>, and I hope you will be interested in representing it.  Two sailors put to sea, and they find their clothing all wet in record time.  They toss their uniforms into the ocean, and their captain sees them dancing about the deck in their very non-regulation underwear.  Hilarity ensues, and a court-martial has never been funnier.<br />
</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Did you catch the problem?  As I have argued about narrative writing, it’s tiring for a reader to scan the same sentence structures back-to-back, line after line.  </p>
<p>Mixing it up a little is a relatively painless way to make your writing seem more sophisticated and lively without altering meaning.  After all, that single-page letter is your big chance to wow Millicent with your writing acumen.</p>
<p><strong>(34)  Have I avoided the passive voice altogether in my query letter?</strong><br />
Eschewing the passive voice in every piece of writing you submit to an agency or a publishing house is an excellent idea because &#8212; not to put too fine a point on it&#8230;</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Pretty much every professional reader is specifically trained to regard the passive voice as inherently poor writing, by definition.  At minimum, it&#8217;s less vibrant than more direct and active sentences.  If you want to impress a pro with the quality of your writing, you should avoid the passive voice as much as possible. </em></p></blockquote>
<p>Have you been left in doubt by me as to why?  (Yes, well might that sentence make you cringe, campers.  It is incumbent upon me as your writing teacher to be brutal in my application of the passive voice in this example.)  It is designed to avoid mention of who is actually doing what in a sentence.  It makes it look as though things are making themselves happen, rather than things being done by protagonists.  Characters seem to be acted-upon, rather than acting.  The plethora of subordinate clauses to which writers fond of this indirect style appear constitutionally drawn to as if they were being pulled by a giant magnet is bound to result in sentences to which there appears to be no end.   There are even instances where so many passive-voiced sentences appear in a row that it becomes quite confusing for the reader of the page in front of him to be impressed with a clear view of what is happening in the story.  </p>
<p>Had enough of that reader-abusing structure?  Millicent has &#8212; and frankly, so have I.  After years of yanking such sentences out of query letters, synopses, and manuscripts, I actually found it mentally painful to construct that last paragraph.</p>
<p>Because the literary disdain for the passive voice is so close to universal, most of you probably already take active steps to avoid using it in your manuscripts, but surprisingly few queriers seem to realize that the norms of good writing apply to query letters as well.  In a way, that&#8217;s understandable:   when a writer is in the throes of trying to sum up the appeal of a 400-page book in the space of a single paragraph (or a 3-5 page synopsis, even), it can be awfully tempting to trim some space by letting the sentence structure imply that actions happened entirely of their own accord.  </p>
<p>So instead of <em>Harold’s teacher went around the room, rapping the students who had received grades of B- or lower over their quivering knuckles with a ruler</em>, many queries will opt for <em>The students who had received grades of B- or lower got their knuckles rapped</em>, or even <em>after receiving a C, Harold found himself with rapped knuckles</em>, as if ruler-wielding cherubim descended from the heavens and did the rapping without human intervention of any kind.</p>
<p>And the Millicents of this world roll their eyes, just like the teenage characters in so many novel submissions.</p>
<p>There’s another, subtler reason to avoid the passive voice in queries and synopses.  On an almost subliminal level, the passive voice tends to imply that your protagonist is being acted-upon, rather than being the primary actor in an exciting drama.  Which conveniently brings us to…</p>
<p><strong>(35)   Does my descriptive paragraph make my protagonist come across as the primary actor in an exciting drama?  Or simply a character acted-upon by forces swirling around her?</strong><br />
As I have pointed out before, agents and editors see a LOT of novel submissions featuring passive protagonists, stories about characters who stand around, observing up a storm, being buffeted about by the plot.  </p>
<p>We’ve all read stories like this, right?  The lead watches the nasty clique rule the school, silently resenting their behavior until the magic day that the newly-transferred halfback notices her; the amateur detective goes to the prime suspect’s house and instead of asking probing questions, just waits to see what will happen.  The shy couple is madly in love, but neither will make a move for 78 pages &#8212; until that hurricane forces them to share the same cramped basement.</p>
<p>I’ve ranted at length in the past (for evidence of same, see the PURGING PROTAGONIST PASSIVITY category, right) about why first novels with passive protagonists tend to be harder to sell than ones with strong actors.  My point at the moment is that in the course of trying to summarize a complex premise, many queriers present their protagonists as mere pawns buffeted about by forces beyond their control, rather than interesting people in interesting situations.  Particularly, I&#8217;ve noticed, if those protagonists happen to be female.</p>
<p>So can you really blame Millicent for drawing the conclusion that the protagonists in these books are passive, when these queries present her as so?</p>
<p>Yes, it’s unfair to leap to conclusions about an entire book’s writing choices based upon only a paragraph’s worth of summary.  But lest we forget, that exercising that particular bit of unfairness forms a crucial part of Millicent’s job description.</p>
<p>Don’t risk it. <strong> It&#8217;s not enough for your protagonist to be the heroine of her own story; your query has to make her <em>sound</em> like the heroine.</strong></p>
<p><strong>(36)  For fiction and memoir, does my query (particularly the descriptive paragraph) make the stakes seem high enough for my protagonist that readers will care about the outcome?  Does the conflict come across as both plausible and compelling?  For other nonfiction, have I made the problem or issue I&#8217;m addressing appear important?</strong><br />
There&#8217;s a truism in editing:  if a dialogue scene is dragging, raise the stakes for one of the speakers.  The more the characters care about the outcome of a conflict, the easier it will be for the reader to care, too.  By the same token, a fine revision tactic for keeping the reader turning nonfiction pages is to make a strong and continual case for why the subject matter of the book is vital &#8212; to the individual reader, to the society, to the world.</p>
<p>The same principle holds true for queries:  if Millicent understands what a protagonist stands to gain or lose from confronting a clearly-defined problem, she&#8217;s more likely to find the story compelling.  Similarly, if the query makes it pellucidly clear why she should care about its central question &#8212; and, more importantly, why readers in the target audience should care &#8212; the argument is more likely to grab her.</p>
<p>Or, to cast it in #35 terms:  <strong> it&#8217;s not enough to impress upon reader over the course of for your manuscript or book proposal that your subject matter, characters, and/or situation is gripping enough to justify reading an entire book about it; your query has to make it sound gripping, too.</strong> </p>
<p>Memoir queries are especially prone to underselling the importance of what&#8217;s at stake for the protagonist.  After all, from the memoirist&#8217;s perspective (and frequently for writers of autobiographical fiction as well), the primary significance of the story may well be that (a) it&#8217;s a true story, and (b) it happened to the writer.  Shouldn&#8217;t the very truth of the story, combined with the single person most able to give an inside perspective, be enough to captivate readers?</p>
<p>That&#8217;s certainly an understandable point of view, from a writerly perspective, but from a professional viewpoint, the answer is usually no. No one buys a non-celebrity memoir simply because the events described in it happened to the author; there are far, far too many truthful memoirs out there for that to be the sole criterion for book buyers.  Readers always weigh other factors into their choice of book.</p>
<p>So does Millicent in evaluating a query to decide whether she should request pages.  Just as it&#8217;s the writer&#8217;s job to construct a manuscript or book proposal&#8217;s narrative to render the story compelling not just for herself, it&#8217;s incumbent upon the querying memoirist to give a screener plenty of reason to say, &#8220;Wow, this sounds not only like the narrator is an interesting person in an interesting situation &#8212; the conflict he faces comes across as one that will fascinate many readers in the already well-saturated memoir market.&#8221;</p>
<p>Yes, her thoughts really are that prolix.  Our Millie is a complex reasoner.</p>
<p>Obviously, you don&#8217;t want to go overboard in making your case for your story or argument&#8217;s importance:  implying that resolving leaf droppage on neighbors&#8217; yards is the single most important factor in attaining world peace is only going to provoke peals of laughter from Millicent.  The line between conveying importance and self-importance can be distressingly thin.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s the beauty of raising the stakes:  ideally, you won&#8217;t have to make positive statements about the importance of your subject matter at all, at least for fiction.  (For nonfiction, go ahead and explain why the world should care.)  Your sterling description of the dynamic tension in the narrative will allow the reader to draw his own conclusion.  Your just leading him toward the conclusion you wish him to draw.  </p>
<p><strong>(37)  Is my query letter in correspondence format, with indented paragraphs?</strong><br />
Yes, yes, I know:  I brought this up in question #1, but enough queries get rejected every year on this basis alone that I couldn&#8217;t resist an end-of-list reminder.  Ahem:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>For a paper query, it&#8217;s absolutely imperative that the paragraphs are indented.  No exceptions.  Business format is simply inappropriate for a query letter.<br />
 </em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>(38)  Does my query letter read as though I have a personality? </strong><br />
I like to save this question for last, since it so frequently seems to come as a surprise to writers who have done their homework, the ones who have studied guides and attended workshops on how to craft the perfect query letter.  </p>
<p>“<em>Personality</em>?” they cry, incredulous and sometimes even offended at the very thought.  “A query letter isn’t about personality; it’s about saying exactly what the agent wants to hear about my <em>book</em>, isn&#8217;t it?”</p>
<p>I beg to differ.  A cookie-cutter query is like the man without a face we were discussing last night:  he may dress well, but you’re not going to be able to describe him five minutes after he walks out of the room.</p>
<p>The fact is, the various flavors of perfect query are pervasive enough that a relatively diligent agency screener will be familiar with them all inside of a week.  In the midst of all of that repetition, a textbook-perfect letter can come across as, well, unimaginative.  </p>
<p>In a situation where you are pitching your imagination and perceptiveness, is this the best impression you could possibly make?  </p>
<p>Your query letter should sound like you at your very best:  literate, polished, and unique.  You need to sound professional, of course, but if you’re a funny person, the query should reflect that.  If you are a writer whose prose tends to be quirky, the query should reflect that, too.  </p>
<p>Of course, if you spent your twenties and early thirties as an international spy and man of intrigue, that had better come across in your query. Because, you see, <em>a query letter is not just a solicitation for an agent to pick up your book; it is an invitation to an individual to enter into a long-term relationship with you.</em></p>
<p>As I mentioned at the very beginning of Querypalooza, I firmly believe that there is no 100% foolproof formula, my friends, whatever the guides tell you.  But if you avoid the classic mistakes, your chances of coming across as an interesting, complex person who has written a book worth reading goes up a thousand fold.</p>
<p>Next time &#8212; that&#8217;s 10 am PST tomorrow, campers; although we&#8217;re still in Querypalooza mode, it would be madness to try to maintain the three-shift schedule of the weekend &#8212; I shall be tackling that perennial bugbear of query-constructors:  figuring out is and is not a credential worth including in the platform paragraph of your query.  Or, as we like to call it here at Author! Author!, Eye-Catching Query Letter Candy.</p>
<p>Yum, yum.  Keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, part X:  it’s been a hard day’s night.  Several in a row, actually.</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11935</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11935#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Sep 2010 17:00:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency screeners' pet peeves of the notorious variety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Book categories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Critique groups]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[E-mailing queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eye-Catching Query Letter Candy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to figure out your book's category]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Industry terminology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Platform paragraph in a query]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letter troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying fatigue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying or submitting to US agencies from outside the US]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Realistic expectations for writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection and how to cope with it]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection: when they don't tell you why]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[When are the best and worst times to query?]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memoir querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying memoir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[best and worst times to query]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[coping with rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[credentials paragraph]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dealing with rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-mailed queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nonfiction queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Platform]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[platform paragraph]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying nonfiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying US agents from outside the US]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[writing a query]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[writing queries]]></category>

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As promised, we&#8217;re nearing the end of Querypalooza, our high-speed crash course on how to write a better-than-average query letter &#8212; if, by the end of Labor Day week, your query letter is not polished to a high gloss, I shall not be to blame.  But oh, as the old joke goes, are my [...]]]></description>
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<p>As promised, we&#8217;re nearing the end of Querypalooza, our high-speed crash course on how to write a better-than-average query letter &#8212; if, by the end of Labor Day week, your query letter is not polished to a high gloss, I shall not be to blame.  But oh, as the old joke goes, are my arms ever tired!</p>
<p>You know how much I enjoy being thorough.  Let&#8217;s turn our attention back to query letter diagnostics.</p>
<p>And already eyes across the English-speaking world roll.  &#8220;Isn&#8217;t there an easier way to go about this?&#8221;  the time-strapped cry.  &#8220;No offense, Anne, but you&#8217;ve been making me concentrate so intensely on a single piece of paper for three days straight.  Now, on day 4, every fiber of my being ties itself in a sailor&#8217;s knot at the very mention of a query.  On top of everything you&#8217;ve pointed out here, I&#8217;m also going to have to do some research on each of the agents to whom I intend to address my highly-personalized queries.  PLEASE tell me that I won&#8217;t need to write an entirely fresh missive for each one.&#8221;</p>
<p>Not entirely, no:  quite a few paragraphs will probably be recyclable, unless you plan to gain a new credential or two between the time you send Query A and when you pop Query B into the mailbox.  However, it&#8217;s never, ever, EVER a good idea to use an entire query letter again wholesale.</p>
<p>Why not, you ask?  Do I hear sweet music in the distance?</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Like any other reader, individual agents have individual likes and dislikes.  As a logical result, there is no such thing as a query letter that will please every agent currently in practice.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Thus Querypalooza:  the goal here is not to help you construct a generic letter that will work for every agent to whom you might conceivably decide to send it, but to assist you in ferreting out problems with the personalized missives you&#8217;re constructing for each one.  Yes, you may well reuse sentences and even entire paragraphs from letter to letter, but as anyone who has had much contact with agents can tell you, these are not generalists.</p>
<p>Which means, to put it bluntly, that while Millicents share common pet peeves, <strong>each is looking for slightly different things in a query letter.</strong></p>
<p>Stop groaning; it wouldn&#8217;t have made good strategic sense to send an identical letter out to everyone, anyway, for reasons we have been discussing for days. Besides, there is no such a thing as a universally perfect query letter, one that will wow every agent currently hawking books on the planet.  It is logically impossible:  agents represent different kinds of books, for one thing, so the moment you mention that your book is a Gothic romance, it is going to be rejected by any agent who does not represent Gothic romances.  </p>
<p>It honestly is as simple as that.</p>
<p>More fundamentally, though, I do not accept the idea of a magical formula that works in every case.  Yes, the format I have been going over here tends to work well; it has a proven track record across many book categories.  However &#8212; and I hate to tell you this, because the arbitrary forces of chance are hard to combat &#8212; even if it is precisely what your targeted agency’s screener has been told to seek amongst the haystack of queries flooding the mailroom, <em>it might still end up in the reject pile if the screener or agent is having a bad day</em>.  </p>
<p>What factors might produce that outcome, you ask?  A million and one that are utterly outside the querier&#8217;s control.</p>
<p>If the agent has just broken up with her husband of 15 years that morning, for instance, it’s probably not the best time to query her with a heartwarming romance.  If she slipped on the stairs yesterday and broke both her wrists, she&#8217;s probably not going to be all that receptive to even the best knitting book today.  And if he has just sprained his ankle in tripping over that stack of manuscripts he meant to read two months ago, it’s highly unlikely that any query is going to wow him within the next ten minutes, even if it were penned by William Faulkner, Toni Morrison, and William Shakespeare in an unprecedented show of time-traveling collaboration.  </p>
<p>No writer, however gifted, can win in such a situation; even the query that wins most will lose some.  Don&#8217;t squander your precious energies worrying about it.  </p>
<p>A strategic-minded querier can, however, avoid sending e-mailed queries or submissions over the weekend, the most popular time to hit the SEND button:  Millicent&#8217;s inbox is pretty much guaranteed to be stuffed to the gills on Monday morning.  Ditto with the first few days after her boss has returned from a writers&#8217; conference, Labor Day (hint, hint), or, heaven help us, the single heaviest querying time of all, immediately after January 1.</p>
<p>Trust me, all of those New Year&#8217;s resolution-fulfillers will provide her with more than enough reading material to keep her cross and rejection-happy for a few weeks.  Best to avoid slipping anything you want her to approve under her nostrils then.  Unless, of course, she&#8217;s just fallen in love, or her college roommate just won the Pulitzer Prize in journalism, or she&#8217;s found a hundred-dollar bill on the street.</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>There will always be aspects of querying success that you cannot control, and you will be a significantly happier writer in the long run if you accept that there is inevitably an element of luck involved &#8212; as well as writing talent, marketing savvy, and query-construction skill.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Frankly, the luck part took me quite a long time to accept myself.  I once received a rejection from an agent who had hand-written, <em>This is literally the best query letter I have ever read &#8212; but I’ll still have to pass</em> in the margins of my missive &#8212; as if that was going to make me feel any better about being rejected.</p>
<p>To tell you the truth, this compliment annoyed me far more than it pleased me, and like so many aspiring writers, my mind flooded with resentful questions.  Had the agent just completed a conference call with every editor in the business, wherein they held a referendum about the marketability of my type of novel, voting it down by an overwhelming margin?  Had she suddenly decided not to represent the kind of book I was presenting due to a mystical revelation from the god of her choice?  Or had the agent just gotten her foot run over by a backhoe, or just learned that she was pregnant, or decided to lay off half her staff due to budget problems?  </p>
<p>Beats me; I’ll never know.  Which is kind of funny, because I&#8217;ve had some very nice chats with this agent at conferences since.</p>
<p>The important thing to recognize is that whatever was going on at that agency, it was beyond my control.  Until I am promoted to minor deity, complete with smiting powers, love potions, and telepathic control of the mails, I just have to accept that I have no way of affecting when any query &#8212; or manuscript, or published book &#8212; is going to hit an agent, editor, reviewer, or reader’s desk.  </p>
<p>(Okay, so I   do have more control over when my agent sees my manuscripts &#8212; but even then, it&#8217;s up to him when to read them.  You can lead a horse to water, etc.)</p>
<p>My advice:  concentrate on the aspects of the interaction you CAN control.   Like, say, the matters on our troubleshooting list.</p>
<p><strong>(25) If I intend to submit this query to agents based in the United States, have I used ONLY US-spellings throughout my query packet?  Or UK spellings, if I am sending it there or to Canada?</strong><br />
This is true of submissions as well.  While <em>honour</em>, <em>judgement</em>, and <em>centre</em> are perfectly correct in some places in the English-speaking world, they are technically incorrect in the US, just as <em>honor, judgment</em>, and <em>center</em> are on the other side of the pond, or even north of the border.</p>
<p>Tailor your query and submission to what will look right to your intended audience:  the agent.  You don&#8217;t want Millicent to think that you just don&#8217;t know how to spell, do you, oh centred, honourable person of sound judgement?</p>
<p><strong>(26)  When I mentioned the book category in the first paragraph of my query, did I use one of the established categories already in use by the publishing industry, or did I make up one of my own?</strong><br />
Queriers new to the game often believe, mistakenly, that claiming that their books are so completely original, so unlike anything else currently for sale to the English-reading public, that even trying to squeeze them into one of the conceptual boxes provided by the industry would undersell their originality.  Instead, these well-meaning souls just make up their own categories with names like <em>Hilarious Western Romance Travelogue</em> or <em>Time-Travel Thriller</em>.</p>
<p>They think &#8212; again, mistakenly &#8212; that such names are helpful to agents.  How could being more specific than the average bookseller&#8217;s shelving system be bad?</p>
<p>In quite a number of ways, actually.  To name but two, mythical book categories are unprofessional, and using them betrays a misunderstanding of why agents want to see them in query letters:  to figure out whether the book presented is the kind that they currently want to sell.  Also, an aspiring writer who clearly knows that he&#8217;s supposed to name a book category but tries to wiggle around it is playing rules lawyer, not a strategy likely to convince Millicent and her boss that he&#8217;s the type who just loves following directions without a fight.</p>
<p>Do it because they say so.  If you&#8217;re at a loss about how to go about narrowing down the choices, please see the HOW TO FIGURE OUT YOUR BOOK&#8217;S CATEGORY section on the archive list at right.</p>
<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t make me!&#8221; some rebels shout.  &#8220;No one&#8217;s going to put MY book in a conceptual box.&#8221;</p>
<p>That&#8217;s quite true:  no one can force an aspiring writer to commit to a book category &#8212; at least before she&#8217;s signed with an agent, of course.  Agents make their clients commit all the time; in fact, it&#8217;s not all that unusual for an agent to accept a new project as one category, ask for targeted revisions, then pitch it to editors as a different category.  </p>
<p>A book category is nothing but a conceptual box, after all, merely a marketing label used to get a manuscript to the people who represent and sell similar books.  So a categorical (so to speak) refusal to allow your work to be labeled at the query stage isn&#8217;t going to impress anybody familiar with how books are sold in this country.  </p>
<p>Especially not Millicent &#8212; and especially if she happens to open your query at an inopportune moment.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t believe me?  Okay, picture this:  Millicent&#8217;s subway train from her tiny apartment in Brooklyn that she shares with four other underpaid office workers has broken down, so she has arrived at work half an hour late.  There&#8217;s an agency-wide meeting in an hour, and she needs to clear her desk of the 200 query letters that came yesterday, in order to be ready for the 14 manuscripts her boss is likely to hand her at the meeting.  After she has speed-read her way through 65 of the queries, a kind co-worker makes a Starbucks run.  Just before Millicent slits open your query (#126), she takes a big gulp of much-needed caffeine &#8212; and scalds her tongue badly.</p>
<p>Your query with its fanciful pseudo book category is now in her hand.  What is she more likely to do, to humor your reluctance to place your book in the traditional conceptual box, as her boss will require her to do if she recommends picking you up as a client, or to shrug, say, &#8220;Here&#8217;s another one who doesn&#8217;t understand how the business works,&#8221; and move on to the next envelope?</p>
<p>Blistered tongue or not, do you really want to bait her?</p>
<p>If you’re absolutely, positively convinced that it would be an outrage upon the very name of truth to commit your novel to any one category, <strong>PLEASE</strong> don’t make up a hyphenate like <em>Western-Fantasy-How-to</em>, in order to try to nail it with scientific precision.  In a pinch, if your novel doesn’t fall clearly into at least a general category, just label it FICTION and let the agent decide.</p>
<p>Provided, of course, that you are querying an agent who routinely represents fiction that does not fit neatly into any of the major established categories.  I definitely wouldn’t advise this with, say, an agent who represents only romantica or hard-boiled mysteries.</p>
<p>But whatever you do, avoid cluttering up your query letter, synopsis &#8212; or indeed, <em>any</em> communication you may have with an agent or editor prior to clutching a signed contract with them in your hot little hand &#8212; with explanations about how your book transcends genre, shatters boundaries, or boldly goes where no novel has gone before.  </p>
<p>Even if it’s true.  Perhaps especially if it&#8217;s true.</p>
<p>Yes, such a speech makes a statement, but probably not the one the writer intends.  Here’s how it translates into agent-speak:  “This writer doesn’t know how books are sold.”</p>
<p><strong>(27) Have I listed my credentials well in my platform paragraph?  Do I come across as a competent, professional writer, regardless of my educational level or awards won? </strong><br />
I&#8217;m going to be revisiting the platform paragraph in more detail in a future post, but here&#8217;s the short version:  if you have any background that substantially aided you in writing this book, you need to make sure you mention it in your query.  Period.   Even your camp trophy for woodworking can be a selling point, in the proper context.  Ditto with any publication, anytime, anywhere, regardless of whether you were paid for writing it.</p>
<p>But truthfully, unless you are writing a book that requires very specific expertise, most of your credentials will not actually be relevant to your book.  But do say where you went to school, if you did, and any awards you have won, if you have.  To professional eyes, these too are what I like to call ECQLC (Eye-Catching Query Letter Candy).  </p>
<p>If you are a member of a regularly-meeting writers’ group, feel free to mention that, too:  anything that makes you sound like a serious professional is appropriate to include.  But if you don&#8217;t have anything you feel you can legitimately report here, don&#8217;t stretch the truth:  just leave out this paragraph. </p>
<p>Unless, of course, you happen to be trying to find an agent or editor for a nonfiction work.  Which brings me to&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>(28) If I am querying nonfiction, have I made my platform absolutely plain?  Would even a Millicent in a hurry understand why I am uniquely qualified to write this book, if not actually the best-qualified person in the known universe to do it?</strong><br />
A platform, for those of you unfamiliar with the term, is the background that renders a nonfiction author qualified to write a particular book.  Consequently, &#8220;What&#8217;s the author&#8217;s platform?&#8221; is pretty much always the first question either an agent or an editor will ask about any nonfiction book.</p>
<p>Which means &#8212; and I do seem to being blunt quite a bit today, don&#8217;t I?  Blame it on lack of sleep &#8212; that <strong>a nonfiction query that does not make its writer&#8217;s platform absolutely clear and appealing will practically always be rejected.</strong></p>
<p>And yes, you do need to satisfy this criterion if your nonfiction field happens to be memoir.  </p>
<p>I know, I know:  it&#8217;s self-evident that a memoirist is the world&#8217;s leading authority on his own life, but as I&#8217;ve mentioned before, a memoir is almost invariably about something other than the author&#8217;s sitting in a room alone.  If your memoir deals with other subject matter,  the platform paragraph of your query letter is the ideal place to make the case that you are an expert on that.</p>
<p><strong>(29) Have I made any of the standard mistakes, the ones about which agents often complain?  </strong><br />
I like to think of this as a primary reason to attend writers’ conferences regularly:  they are some of the best places on earth to collect massive lists of the most recent additions to agents and editors’ pet peeves.  I&#8217;ve been going through most of the major ones throughout this series, but some of them can be quite itty-bitty.    </p>
<p>Referring to your book as a <em>fiction novel</em>, for instance, is invariably on the top of every agent’s list; in point of fact, all novels are fiction, by definition.  A <em>nonfiction memoir</em>, a <em>real-life memoir</em>, a <em>true memoir</em>and <em>nonfiction based on a true story</em>, as well as permutations on these themes, are all similarly redundant.</p>
<p>Just don&#8217;t do it.</p>
<p>Waffling about the book category is also a popular choice, as are queries longer than a single page, including promotional blurbs from people of whom the agent has never heard (<em>Chester Smith says this is the most moving book about trout fishing he’s ever read!</em>), or &#8212; chant it with me now, folks &#8212; ANY mention of the book’s potential for landing the author on Oprah. Any or all of these will generally result in the query being tossed aside, unread.</p>
<p>Especially the last; the average screener at a major NYC agency could easily wallpaper her third-floor walk-up in Brooklyn seven times over with query letters that make this claim &#8212; and I&#8217;m talking about ones received within a single month.  </p>
<p>Is this the last of the query checklist, since it&#8217;s now officially after Labor Day?  Not quite, but close.  I can&#8217;t absolutely promise that my arms are going to be up to posting again today &#8212; I&#8217;m due to drag myself to the physical therapist in a few hours, and he&#8217;s bound to frown at least a little on how much I&#8217;ve been typing this weekend &#8212; but I really would like to polish off Querypalooza as soon as possible.</p>
<p>So tune in this evening at our usual Querypalooza time &#8212; and, of course, to keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, part IX:  toiling productively in the vineyards of literature, or, would Pavlov’s doggie like a biscuit?</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11890</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11890#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Sep 2010 09:00:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dear Agent letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[E-mailing queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freshness in queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Keeping the faith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Present-tense narratives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query + sample pages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letter troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying a multiple protagonist novel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying fatigue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection and how to cope with it]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection: when they don't tell you why]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Target audience]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Voice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[back jacket blurbs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memoir querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying memoir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Book of Hours]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memoir queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nonfiction queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query voice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying nonfiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[self-rejecting queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[writing query letters]]></category>

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Good evening, campers!  Since we began our last post with an image of a crowd storming a castle, I thought it might be nice to open our night shift Querypalooza post with an image of an un-stormed one.  
Besides, I like to yank this gorgeous image from the Book of Hours out of [...]]]></description>
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<p>Good evening, campers!  Since we began our last post with an image of a crowd storming a castle, I thought it might be nice to open our night shift Querypalooza post with an image of an un-stormed one.  </p>
<p>Besides, I like to yank this gorgeous image from the Book of Hours out of the mothballs every now and again, because it is such an accurate depiction of how so many aspiring writers view the work of querying these days:  a long, toilsome effort aimed toward impressing the powerful folks in the white castle on the hill &#8212; who may or may not be paying attention &#8212; under a sky that (we hope) conceals at least a few minor deities rooting for the underdog&#8217;s eventual success.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s that you say, campers?  That&#8217;s what it felt like back I was trying to find the right agent way back in the dimly-remembered mists of the Paleolithic era, but everyone concerns feels perfectly marvelous about the process today?  Whew, that&#8217;s a relief &#8212; thanks for clearing up that little misconception.</p>
<p>On the off chance that I <em>wasn&#8217;t</em> the only writer who ever shivered in the face of seemingly unalterable industry coldness, I feel an obligation to point out from the other side of the Rubicon that even those newest to querying are not as entirely helpless in the face of it as we writers tend to tell ourselves we are.  Although much of a writer&#8217;s progress along the road to publication is dependent upon factors outside her control &#8212; fads in writing style, fashions in content, and what kind of memoir has garnered the most scandals recently, to name but three &#8212; how an aspiring writer presents her work to the industry is in fact entirely under her own control.</p>
<p>Which is a really, really nice way of saying that from a professional reader&#8217;s point of view, scads of query letters traject themselves like lemmings straight from the envelope into the rejection pile with scarcely a pause in between, for problems that the writers who sent them could have fixed.  Sadly, the vast majority are rejected for reasons that don&#8217;t necessarily have anything to do with the potential personality fit between the author and agent, the agent&#8217;s ability to sell the book in question, or even the quality of the writing.  </p>
<p>Because agents and their screeners read hundreds of the darned things every week, even if only 20 of them share the same basic mistake &#8212; and trust me, more of them will &#8212; the 21rst query that carries even a shade of similarity is likely to trigger a knee-jerk reaction so strong that even Dr. Pavlov would shake his head and say, “No kidding?  Just because the letter was addressed to <em>Dear Agent</em>, rather than to an individual?”</p>
<p>Oh, yes, Dr. Pavlov, there are few epistolary errors that engender a stronger &#8212; or quicker &#8212; negative response than a Dear Agent letter.  But that&#8217;s merely the best-known of the notorious query-readers&#8217; pet peeves.</p>
<p>In response to that giant collective huff of indignation I just out there:  you&#8217;re probably thinking that Millicent the agency screener is hyper-sensitive, far more eager to reject a query than to accept it, and perhaps even downright mean.  Heck, judging by the expressions on your faces, you probably wouldn&#8217;t be remotely surprised to learn that she regularly eats live kittens for breakfast, snarls at babies, and honks her horn when Boy Scouts assist people with canes across the street.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t be ridiculous.  Millicent lives in New York City; she doesn&#8217;t drive a car.</p>
<p>Perhaps she does reject writers for a living, but that doesn&#8217;t mean that rejections are necessarily her fault:  many, many, MANY query letters just scream from their very first paragraph, &#8220;Reject me!  I have no idea what I&#8217;m doing on your desk, much less what book category the manuscript my rambling prose professes to promote might best fit into, so why not put me out of my misery right away?&#8221;</p>
<p>The ubiquity of such self-rejecting queries &#8212; yes, they&#8217;re really called that &#8212;  means that the all-too-common writerly practice of blaming the rejecter is not in the long run the best strategy for landing an agent.  Call me zany, but if a query elicits a rejection for <em>any</em> reason other than that the storyline or argument in the proposed book didn&#8217;t grab Millicent or her boss, my first question is not, &#8220;Oh, how could the screener have made such a mistake?&#8221; but &#8220;May I have a look at that letter, so see how the writer may improve it?&#8221;</p>
<p>Why do I tend to leap straight to that conclusion, you ask?  Experience, mostly.  Out comes the broken record again:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>If there is a single rule of thumb that may be applied at every stage of any successful author&#8217;s career, it&#8217;s that it ALWAYS behooves us to look critically at our own writing, rather than assuming that the only possible explanation for frowned-upon writing lies in the eye of the predisposition of the reader to frown.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Let me put it more simply:  offense does not always lie in the propensity of the affronted to take umbrage.  Millicent may indeed be a bit rejection-happy &#8212; it&#8217;s her job to reject 98% of what she sees, recall &#8212; but any writer can learn how to avoid provoking her. </p>
<p>As with a manuscript, the writer of a query will virtually always be better off taking steps to improve what she <em>can</em> control than blaming the rejection upon other factors. It <em>is</em> possible to learn from one&#8217;s own mistakes, even in the current insanely competitive agent-seeking environment, where the vast majority of queriers are never told precisely what made Millicent slide their letters directly into their SASEs with a copy of the agency&#8217;s prefab one-size-fits-all rejection note.  </p>
<p>Or, in the case of e-queries, to hit the REPLY key, sending the prefab rejection reply.  (You didn&#8217;t honestly believe that Millicent or her boss actually re-typed <em>I&#8217;m sorry, but I just didn&#8217;t fall in love with this</em>every time, did you?)</p>
<p>In the spirit of trying to avoid being the object of either dismal fate, let&#8217;s plunge back into our ongoing efforts to elevate a merely okay query letter into a really good one, shall we?  At this point, we&#8217;ve moved far past the most basic mistakes; now, we&#8217;re well into the more sophisticated problems.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s <em>good</em> news, by the way.  You should be proud of yourself for taking your own writing prospects seriously enough to make it this far.  As a reward for virtue, we begin tonight with a few an exceptionally easy problems to fix.</p>
<p><strong>(18) If I am querying anything but a memoir, is my descriptive paragraph written in the third person and the present tense? </strong><br />
Regardless of the narrative perspective of the manuscript itself, descriptive paragraphs in queries are always written in the third person.  So if your description of your first-person chick lit begins <em>I had just landed my dream job</em>, change it right away:  to Millicent&#8217;s eyes, it will read like a description for a memoir.  Ditto for pitches and synopses, by the way.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t you wish someone had mentioned <em>that</em> little tidbit to you at least three months before you sent out your first query? </p>
<p>The proper tense choice, too, may strike some as counter-intuitive:  one-paragraph book descriptions, like pitches and synopses, are always written in the present tense.  Even when the author is describing events that happened before the fall of the Roman Empire.  </p>
<p>And apparently, writers are supposed to know both of these things because the synopsis fairy descends from the heavens when one reaches a certain level of craft and bops one on the head with her magic wand.  Or because they have attended an expensive class or conference that told them so.  Or so I surmise from the fact that this particular piece of advice isn&#8217;t given much these days.</p>
<p>I’m not a big fan of keeping expectations like this secret, so let’s shout it to the rooftops:  <em><strong>YOUR DESCRIPTIVE PARAGRAPH SHOULD BE IN THE THIRD PERSON AND THE PRESENT TENSE.</strong></em></p>
<p>The only major exception is, interestingly enough, memoir.  Which leads me to:</p>
<p><strong>(19) If I am querying a memoir, is my descriptive paragraph written in the present tense and the first person? </strong><br />
The logic behind describing memoir in the first person doesn&#8217;t really require much explanation &#8212; the book&#8217;s about you, isn&#8217;t it? &#8212; but the tense choice might.  It simply doesn’t make sense for an adult to say:  </p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Now I am six, and my father tells me to take out the garbage.  But I don&#8217;t want to take out the garbage, and in a decision that will come back to haunt me in high school, I chose to bury it in the back yard instead.  </strong></p></blockquote>
<p>It’s confusing to a sane person’s sense of time.  But then, so are the querying and submission processes, frequently.  </p>
<p>All too often, memoirists refer to themselves in the third person in query letters, pitches, and synopses of their books, puzzling Millicents exceedingly.  If your memoir is about you, say so; go ahead and use the perpendicular pronoun.</p>
<p>Otherwise, <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=11923">the same basic structures we applied last time to describing novels</a> will work perfectly well for memoir.  Just make yourself sound like an interesting person in an interesting situation overcoming obstacles to your happiness in a different tense.  For example:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Back in my days as a silent movie star of the 1920s, women ruled the silver screen.  I was paid more than my male counterparts; I had my pick of projects (and extras for my private pleasures); my dressing room&#8217;s cushions were trimmed in mink.  But once the talkies came, I was faced with an impossible choice:  take a massive pay cut or allow my public to be told that my opera-trained voice was too squeaky for the new technology.  If I was going to make the films that I wanted, I realized I would have to start writing and directing for myself.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>See?  By describing herself as the protagonist in a story, rather than just a person talking about herself, our starlet has made a compelling case that both she and the challenges she confronted would make for fascinating reading.</p>
<p><strong>(20) Is the tone and language in my descriptive paragraph representative of the tone and language of the manuscript? </strong><br />
Yes, yes, I know:  I&#8217;ve just finished telling you that the tense and perspective choice in the description should not be dictated by the voice of the narrative in the book.   But all the same,  just as a stellar verbal pitch gives the hearer a foretaste of what the manuscript is like, so does a well-constructed descriptive paragraph in a query letter.  Just bear in mind that nice writing is not the only goal here; if you really want to make a great first impression, allow the descriptive paragraph to reflect the voice of the book.</p>
<p>Stop laughing.  Query letters do so have narrative voices.  It&#8217;s just that most of the boilerplates we see are so businesslike in tone and generic in content that you&#8217;d never notice.</p>
<p>So if the book is funny, go for a laugh; if it&#8217;s scary, make sure to include at least one genuinely frightening image; if it&#8217;s sexy, make Millicent pant in her cubicle.</p>
<p>Getting the picture?</p>
<p>Some of you find this suggestion a trifle wacky, don&#8217;t you?  &#8220;But Anne,&#8221; a scandalized few protest, &#8220;didn&#8217;t you say earlier in this series that part of the goal here was to come across as <em>professional</em>?  Won&#8217;t making the descriptive paragraph sound like my surly protagonist/whiny narrator/a lighthearted romp through the merry world of particle physics make me seem like a grump/annoying to work with/like I don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;m talking about?&#8221;</p>
<p>Good questions, scandalized few.  Your concerns are precisely why I&#8217;m advising that <em>only</em> the descriptive paragraph match the tone of the book, rather than the entire letter.</p>
<p>Surprised?  Don&#8217;t be.  You&#8217;re entirely right that Millicent might well draw the wrong conclusions if your ENTIRE letter were written in an entertaining tone.  And let&#8217;s face it, it&#8217;s kind of hard to turn the credentials paragraph of a query into much of a comedy.</p>
<p>Seriously.  Even if you happen to have taught comedic theory for 52 years at the Sorbonne, it would hard to turn that fact into a giggle line.</p>
<p>But in the part of the letter where you&#8217;re supposed to be telling a story, why not let your manuscript&#8217;s voice come out to play for a few lines?  Can you think of a better way to demonstrate to Millicent how your narrative voice is unique?</p>
<p><strong>(21) Am I telling a compelling story in my descriptive paragraph, or does it read as though I&#8217;ve written a book report about my own manuscript? </strong><br />
All too often, aspiring writers will construct their descriptive paragraphs as though they were writing high school English papers.  There&#8217;s usually a pretty good reason for that:  writers tend to have been excellent high school English students.  So were most agents and editors, as it happens, and certainly most Millicents who screen submissions.  </p>
<p>But collective nostalgia for the happy days in Intro to American Literature doesn&#8217;t mean that a descriptive paragraph demonstrating that glorious past too clearly is smart book marketing at the query stage.  Analytical descriptions distance the reader from the story being told. </p>
<p>Don&#8217;t believe me?  Take a gander:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>MIXED SIGNALS is a nuanced slice-of-life tale of interpersonal and intergenerational misunderstanding set against the backdrop of the turbulent 1960s.  The protagonist is a troubled man, an employee caught up in a realistic conflict with his boss while his fantasies of perfect love are constantly thwarted by a lackluster family life.  Told in alternating first person voices and the present tense, character is revealed through slice-of-life episodes before reaching the denouement.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Doesn&#8217;t exactly draw you into the protagonist&#8217;s world, does it?  This description is essentially about a man without a face.  While all of these things may well be <em>true</em> of the book being discussed, what is this book ABOUT?  WHO is it about?  What&#8217;s the central conflict, and what is at stake for the protagonist in overcoming it?</p>
<p>As a rule, Millicent is eager to know the answer to those questions.  She is also likely to roll her eyes and mutter, &#8220;English term paper,&#8221; and swiftly move on to the next query.</p>
<p>Why apply that particular epithet?  Because this kind of description talks about the novel, rather than telling its story.  </p>
<p>Because Millicent&#8217;s job is to spot great storytellers, not great textual analysts, she would have preferred it if  the querier simply told the story directly.  Then, too, the writer&#8217;s choice to concentrate upon the themes and construction of the novel,  rather than who the protagonist is and what conflicts he wants or needs to battle in order to fulfill his dreams keeps the reader from getting into the story.  </p>
<p>Indeed, we&#8217;re left wondering what it is.  Here&#8217;s the same plot, presented in a manner Millicent is far more likely to find pleasing:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Troubled Harry (47) can&#8217;t seem to make it through even a single work day at the squid ink pasta factory without running afoul of his boss, chronic aquatic creature abuser Zeke (52). Since the pasta factory is the town&#8217;s only employer, Harry has little choice but to stomach the flogging of innocent carp &#8212; until Zeke&#8217;s merciless sarcasm at the expense of a dolphin cracks his stoic veneer.  After an unsuccessful attempt to unionize the squid, Harry must face the truth:  Zeke has been just stringing him along for the last seventeen years about that promotion.  But now that he is cast adrift in a rudderless sailboat, what is he going to do about that?</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>I spy some hands raised out there, do I not?  &#8220;But Anne,&#8221; some terrific English essay-writers point out, &#8220;doesn&#8217;t the second version leave out a couple of pretty important items?  Like, say, that the book is written in the first person, or that it has multiple protagonists?&#8221;</p>
<p>Actually, I left those out on purpose; as important as those facts may be to the writer, they would only distract Millicent at the querying stage.  Or in a synopsis.  </p>
<p>Do you English majors want to know why?  Cue the music department.</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em> Neither the point of view choice nor the number of protagonists is germane at the query stage:  the goal of the descriptive paragraph is to show what the book is ABOUT, not how it is written.  Let the narrative tricks come as a delightful surprise.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>That&#8217;s what the manuscript is for, right?  As Millicent&#8217;s boss, the agent, likes to say, it all depends on the writing.  </p>
<p><strong>(22) Does my descriptive paragraph emphasize the SPECIFIC points that will make the book appeal to my target audience? </strong><br />
Since a query letter is, at base, a marketing document (and I do hope that revelation doesn’t startle anybody, at this juncture; if so, where oh where did I go wrong, I had such high hopes when I raised you, etc.), it should be readily apparent to anyone who reads your summary what elements of the book are most likely to draw readers.  Or, to put it another way, if you printed out your list of selling points and read it side-by-side with your query, would the summary paragraph demonstrate that at least a few of those elements you identified as most market-worthy?</p>
<p>If not, is the descriptive paragraph doing your book justice as a marketing tool?</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t look at me that way:  there is absolutely nothing anti-literary about making it clear why habitual readers of your book category will be drawn to your work.  Remember, no matter how beautifully your book is written or argued, Millicent isn&#8217;t going to know you can write until she reads your manuscript &#8212; and if your query does not convince her that your book is potentially marketable, she&#8217;s not going to ask to see the manuscript.  </p>
<p>Even if she happens to work at one of the increasingly many agencies that allow aspiring writers to send pages of text along with their queries, the query is going to determine whether Millicent reads anything else you sent.  So just in case any of you have been receiving form-letter rejections based upon query + pages agent approaches:  I know that it&#8217;s tempting to assume that the problem is in the text itself, but strategically, the first place you should be looking for red flags is your letter.  In a query + approach, it&#8217;s the gatekeeper for your pages.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m going to take that chorus of great, gusty sighs as a sign that I&#8217;ve made my point.  If it&#8217;s any consolation, it&#8217;s great experience for working with an agent:  when their clients bring them book ideas, the first question they tend to ask is, &#8220;Okay, who needs this book, and why?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>(23) Even if Millicent skipped my opening paragraph, would the descriptive paragraph that followed prompt her to exclaim, &#8220;Oh, that story is perfect for {fill in my target audience here}?  Or have I forestalled that spontaneous cry by describing my book in back-jacket terms?</strong><br />
This is a corollary of the last one, obviously, but still worth considering as a separate question.  One of the most common mistakes made in descriptive paragraphs is to confuse vague statements about who MIGHT conceivably buy the book with specific, pithy descriptions of what in the book might appeal to the market you’ve already identified in your first paragraph. Compare, for instance: </p>
<blockquote><p><strong>CANOE PADDLING MAMAS is designed to appeal to the wild, romantic adventurer in every woman.  Set along the scenic Snake River, well known to whitewater rafters, the story follows two women in their journey through fast water and faster men.   It belongs on the bookshelf of every paddle-wielding woman in America.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>With:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Caroline Bingley (26) and Elizabeth Bennet (20) are floating down a lazy river, the sun baking an uneasy outline around their barely-moving paddles.  Suddenly, the rapids are upon them &#8212; as is a flotilla of gorgeous, shirtless, rapids-navigating men on generous inner tubes.   When a violent hailstorm traps them all in a dank, mysterious cave that smells of recently-departed grizzly bear, shivering in their thin, wet clothes, tempers flare &#8212; and so does romance.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>The first sounds an awful lot like the summary a publisher&#8217;s marketing department might construct for a book&#8217;s back jacket, doesn&#8217;t it?  It&#8217;s all breathless hype and promotional persuasion, leaving the reader thinking, &#8220;Um, I know <em>where</em> this story takes place, but what is this book <em>about</em>?&#8221;</p>
<p>As you <em>may</em> have already gathered, that&#8217;s not a question Millicent is fond of muttering in the middle of reading a query.  Which is a shame, really, as so many queriers give her such excellent provocation to mutter it.</p>
<p>The second version answers that question very directly:  CANOE PADDLING MAMAS is about Caroline and Elizabeth&#8217;s trip down a river, where they meet some sizzling potential love interests.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now that&#8217;s what I like to see,&#8221; Millicent cries, reaching for the seldom-used <em>Yes, please send us the first 50 pages</em> boilerplate.  (Oh, you thought that they wrote a fresh letter for every acceptance?)</p>
<p>Unfortunately, as we saw earlier in this series, most aspiring writers are so used to reading marketing copy that they think the first version is inherently more professional than the second.  In fact, it&#8217;s far from uncommon to see this type of marketing rhetoric in synopses, or even in contest entries.</p>
<p>To clear up this misconception once and for all, I&#8217;m going to ask you to join me in a little experiment.  Scroll down so those last two examples above are hidden, please.</p>
<p>All gone?  Good.  Now take this multi-part pop quiz.</p>
<blockquote><p>1)  What do you remember most from the first summary paragraph?  </p>
<p>The title?  The Snake River?  The bad cliché?  Your speculation that my reference to “every paddle-wielding woman in America” might cause this blog to spring up in some unlikely Internet searches from now until Doomsday?</p>
<p>2)  What do you remember about the second?  </p>
<p>As a writer, I’m betting that the image that popped first into your mind was that floating phalanx of nearly naked hunks.</p>
<p>3)  If you were an agent handling romances, which image would impress you as being easiest to market to outdoorsy heterosexual women?  </p></blockquote>
<p>I rest my case.</p>
<p>Except to say:  in the first summary, a reader is unlikely to remember the STORY, rather than the query.  And in the second, the query-reader is encouraged to identify with the protagonists &#8212; who are, like the reader, contemplating all of those inner tube-straddling guys.</p>
<p>Okay, try to shake that image from your mind now, so we can move on.  No, seriously:  stop picturing those floating bodies.  We have work to do.</p>
<p>The other reason that the second summary is better is that it presumably echoes the tone of the book.  Which brings me to&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>(23) If my descriptive paragraph were the <em>only</em> thing a habitual reader in my book category knew about my manuscript, would s/he think, <em>Oh, that sounds like a great read</em>?  Or would s/he think, <em>I can&#8217;t tell what this book would be like, because this summary could apply to a lot of different kinds of books</em>? </strong><br />
This is a question that often makes even seasoned queriers do a double-take, but actually, it&#8217;s closely related to #20, <em>is the tone and language in my description representative of the tone and language of the manuscript?</em> </p>
<p>Most query letters share one of two tones:  unprofessional or serious, serious, serious.  The first is never a good idea, but the second is fine &#8212; if you happen to have written the 21rst century&#8217;s answer to MOBY DICK.  </p>
<p>Which I&#8217;m guessing no one currently reading this actually has.  If, however, you&#8217;ve written this year&#8217;s answer to BRIDGET JONES&#8217; DIARY, a super-serious summary paragraph is probably not the best marketing tactic.  Quite apart from the fact that it&#8217;s hard to make a lighthearted romp seem either lighthearted or like a romp if it&#8217;s described in a turgid manner, a deadpan presentation is probably not the best strategy for convincing Millicent that you can write <em>comedy</em>.</p>
<p>So why not use the description as a writing sample to demonstrate that you can?  In fact, why not take the opportunity to show how well you understand your target readership by including images, wording, and details likely to appeal to them?</p>
<p>The same logic applies to any category of book &#8212; and it&#8217;s a great way to figure out whether a plot point is worth mentioning in your summary paragraph.  If you have written a steamy romance, select the sexy detail over the mundane one.  If it’s a western, make sure there’s at least one line in the summary that elicits a feeling of the open range.  If it’s a horror novel, opt for the creepy detail, and so forth.</p>
<p>The sole exception to this rule is if you happen to have written a really, really dull book on a mind-bendingly tedious topic.  Then, and only then, do you have my permission to construct a descriptive paragraph that doesn&#8217;t sound anything at all like the tone of the book.</p>
<p>Hey, you have to pique Millicent&#8217;s interest somehow.</p>
<p><strong>(24) Wait &#8212; have I given any indication in the letter who my target audience IS? </strong><br />
Despite my utmost efforts in spreading advice on the subject, most queries include no reference whatsoever to the target audience, as though it were in poor taste to suggest to an agent that somebody somewhere might conceivably wish to purchase the book being pitched.  </p>
<p>Call me mercenary, but I think that is rather market-unwise, don’t you?  If an agent is going to spend only about thirty seconds on any given query letter before deciding whether to reject it out of hand, is there really time for the agent to murmur, &#8220;Hmm, who on earth is going to want to buy this book?” </p>
<p>No extra credit for guessing the answer to that one:  no.</p>
<p>As those of you who went through the identifying your target market exercises in my earlier series on pitching (easily found under the obfuscating category title IDENTIFYING YOUR TARGET AUDIENCE on the archive list at right) already know, figuring out the ideal readership for a book is not always a simple or straightforward task, even for someone who knows the text as intimately as its author.  Don’t expect its appeal to be self-evident.</p>
<p>Yes, even for a book like CANOE PADDLING MAMAS, where the appeal is pretty close to self-evident.</p>
<p>To revisit one of my earlier mantras:  structure your marketing materials to make it as easy as possible for folks in the industry to help you.  You want Millicent to cast her eyes over your query and go running to her boss, the agent, saying, “Oh, my God, we <em>have</em> to see this manuscript.”</p>
<p>Once again, we see that it is a far, far better thing to induce the screener to exclaim, “This book belongs on the bookshelf of every paddle-wielding woman in America!” than to have the query tell her that it does.  Even if it’s true.</p>
<p>Just a little something to ponder while our heroines explore some wild, largely unexplored river with scantily-clad men who obviously spend a suspiciously high percentage of their time at the gym.   </p>
<p>Since I&#8217;m not going to be able to wrest that image from your mind, this seems like an excellent place to stop for the day.  More probing questions follow at 10 am, of course.</p>
<p>Oh, you thought I was going to bring Querypalooza to a screeching halt the instant Labor Day weekend was over?  Oh, but we still have exciting material to cover, campers.  So while I shan&#8217;t be able to keep up this weekend&#8217;s blistering pace once the working week has started, you might want to check back in tomorrow morning.  And early evening, if I have not collapsed into a quivering heap of exhaustion by then.</p>
<p>I wouldn&#8217;t send you out to query only partially prepared, after all.  Keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, part VIII:  polishing up that pesky descriptive paragraph, or, differentiating yourself from the rest of the crowd intent upon storming the castle</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11923</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11923#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Sep 2010 01:00:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency screeners' pet peeves of the notorious variety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Being an agent's dream client]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dealing with fear of rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frankenstein queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freshness in queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Originality in manuscripts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queries that are too long]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letter troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection: when they don't tell you why]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Telling details]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Voice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Why generic queries don't work]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memoir querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying memoir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[editing query letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Everyman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[form-letter queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[generic queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mail-merge queries]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[writing queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[writing query letters]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Still hanging in there, Querypalooza attendees?  Or are you getting a trifle impatient to pop those query letters into the mail?
Actually, I wouldn&#8217;t be at all surprised if some of you had the opposite reaction:  visiting the site, glancing at the title of this series, exclaiming, &#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t want to think about [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/angry-mob2.jpg" alt="angry mob2" title="angry mob2" width="512" height="343" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-11927" /></p>
<p>Still hanging in there, Querypalooza attendees?  Or are you getting a <em>trifle</em> impatient to pop those query letters into the mail?</p>
<p>Actually, I wouldn&#8217;t be at all surprised if some of you had the opposite reaction:  visiting the site, glancing at the title of this series, exclaiming, &#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t want to think about that!&#8221; and clicking hastily away to another, less challenging writerly forum.  Who could blame the hasty retreaters?  Throughout this impossibly swift series, I have been urging you to take a hard, critical look at your query letter, to make sure that you are projecting the impression that you are an impressively qualified, impeccably professional writer waiting to be discovered.</p>
<p>As opposed to the other kind, who in agents’ minds swarm in legions like the mobs in Frankenstein movies, wielding pitchforks, pitch-soaked flaming torches, and unbound manuscripts, chanting endlessly, “Represent my book!  Represent my book!”  (Alternated with, of course, &#8220;It&#8217;s a natural for Oprah!&#8221;)   It&#8217;s like a bad horror film:  no matter how many of those manuscripts Millicent the agency screener rejects, they just keep coming, relentlessly, pouring into the agency seemingly through every crack and crevice, appearing magically from some ever-renewing source.</p>
<p>You hadn&#8217;t been thinking of your query as part of an implacable daily onslaught on Millicent&#8217;s defenses, had you?  In this post, I&#8217;m going to talk a bit about the inevitability of a query letter&#8217;s being part of that perpetually angry mob &#8212; and how to avoid sounding in your query letter as if you are wielding the third pitchfork from the left.</p>
<p>Why might that be to your advantage?  Sheer novelty, among other things:  you wouldn&#8217;t believe how many query letters read virtually identically.  (If that still comes as a surprise to you at this point in Querypalooza, I can only suggest that you go back and re-read the earlier discussions of the dreaded cloning effect of mail-merge querying.)  And that&#8217;s bad for aspiring writers, because generic queries are among the easiest to reject:  not only are they comparatively unmemorable &#8212; a boilerplate account of even a thrilling plotline tends to fall a bit flat &#8212; but your garden-variety Millicent finds them somewhat insulting.</p>
<p>And if that comes as a surprise to you, you might want to take a gander at just how many <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=11804">cut-and-paste operations intended to update old queries for reuse end up in disaster</a>.  Even when the address and salutation match AND end up in the right envelope, recycling the same query for every conceivable agent renders it effectively impossible to make sure your query ends up on the right desk.</p>
<p>Think about it:  if you don&#8217;t do individual research on each agent&#8217;s likes, dislikes, and placement record, how can you possibly know that any given one will be the best fit for your book?  You don&#8217;t want just any agent to handle it, after all &#8212; your manuscript deserves the professional assistance of an agent with a proven track record of (and concomitant connections for) selling books like yours.  </p>
<p>A realistic writer is market-savvy enough to know that he&#8217;s unlikely to find such an agent by the simple (and unfortunately common) means of doing a web search on <em>agents + fantasy</em>.  Or by the formerly most popular alternative, snatching one of the standard agency guides off the shelf at the nearest bookstore, flipping to the index, and making a list of every agency that lists itself as representing fantasy.  While neither is a bad first step toward tracking down the ideal agent for a particular book, you must admit that neither is exactly a fine-tuned agent-seeking instrument.</p>
<p>In the face of this undeniable reality, you can&#8217;t really fault Millicent for regarding the lack of a clear statement of why a writer selected her boss off a list of agents representing that book category as evidence that he <em>might</em> not have done his homework, can you?  Most of the mob beating on the gate at any given moment is made up of homework-avoiders, after all.</p>
<p>Which brings me to the other primary reason for striving for an individual voice in your query letter.  To Millicent, a well-written, personalized letter that describes a manuscript in clear, enticing, market-oriented terms is &#8212; wait for it &#8212; professional.  As in the minimum level of performance for getting her stamp of approval.</p>
<p>That means, in practice, being <em>specific</em>.  And yes, I know that&#8217;s hard, in a document must contain a summary of your book.  </p>
<p>Therein lies the problem, often.  The first thing most aspiring writers learn about a query is that it should contain a description of the book it is hoping the agent will represent.  (Okay, the <em>second</em> thing:   the requirement that a query be a page or less long is more widely known.)  To the first-time querier, that can sound an awful lot like <em>you have only a page to summarize a 400-page manuscript!</em></p>
<p>That&#8217;s ridiculous, of course &#8212; a querier has only a paragraph (or two, at most) to describe her book.  Less, if the description isn&#8217;t particularly interesting.  A 1-page synopsis is where she has to summarize her 400-page book.</p>
<p>Note the distinction here, because it&#8217;s vital for your sanity while composing a query &#8212; or trying to keep it under a single page, for that matter.  In fact, I feel an aphorism coming on:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>A query&#8217;s descriptive paragraph <strong>describes</strong> the manuscript; a synopsis <strong>summarizes</strong> it.   The query presents the premise and central conflict (or, for nonfiction, the subject matter and central question), while the summary gives a complete, if brief, overview of the plot, including some indication of its resolution.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Why is being aware of this distinction vital for a savvy querier&#8217;s sanity?  Because<strong> if you try to summarize the entire plot of your book in a query letter, you will drive yourself mad.</strong></p>
<p>As we may see all too clearly manifested in the generality-fest that is average descriptive paragraph:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>THE SIMPLEST PLOT OF ALL tells the story of boy meets girl set against the turbulent backdrop of the type of war aptly described as hell.  Although Dwayne and Mimette fall madly in love, they encounter numerous obstacles.  Through meeting them, they come to know themselves better and learn important life lessons before finding their very own happy ending. </strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Okay, so that one was a cliché-fest as well.  Aspiring writer with a bit more knowledge about how agencies work may veer off into another type of generality, the lit class description:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>THE NUCLEAR FALLOUT WITHIN is a classic political thriller written in a literary fiction voice.  Told in the first person from four different and conflicting points of view:  a handsome protagonist (Senator Brad Manlison, 38), a brainy yet uninhibited love interest (Tiffani Bambi Cheri Dignityfree, PhD, 23), an odious antagonist (Snarly Weaponwielder, 52), and a deaf-mute unrelated bystander (Cheapdevice Smith, 13).  Deftly alternating between these distinct voices, the narrative draws the reader into a beautifully-described world of intrigue, power, and intense introspection.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Both of these examples are factually correct, in all probability, but that&#8217;s really beside the point at the querying stage.  &#8220;What <em>specifically</em> are these books about?&#8221; Millicent is left muttering.  &#8220;And why aren&#8217;t either of these writers using the scant space afforded in a query to demonstrate that they know how to tell a <em>story</em>?&#8221;</p>
<p>Most descriptive paragraphs don&#8217;t go to either of these extremes, of course; many are combinations of both, with perhaps a sprinkling here and there of detail.  That&#8217;s not all that astonishing, given how little attention most query-writing classes/seminars/online discussions seem to devote to the part of the letter where Millicent is within her rights to expect your writing to shine.</p>
<p>Hey, every writer can talk compellingly about his own manuscript, right?  It&#8217;s the rest of the query that really matters, doesn&#8217;t it?  And If the query reads just like what the writer has seen online, it has to be fine, doesn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>Apparently and unfortunately, no, on all counts. <strong> The overwhelming majority of descriptive paragraphs are not sufficiently descriptive &#8212; a real shame, because the descriptive paragraph is the querier&#8217;s single best opportunity to make the case that her manuscript is unique.  Preferably in the a voice similar to the narrative voice of the book.</strong></p>
<p>Does that gargantuan gulping sound I heard out there in the ether mean that two-thirds of you with queries already circulating just realized that they did not do justice to the storytelling magic of your manuscript?  Did you think the point of the description was to make your book sound identical the most recent bestseller?  </p>
<p>Or &#8212; and I suspect that this is going to be the more common gulp-generator &#8212; were you previously unaware that <strong>the descriptive paragraph (and the query in general) is a writing sample</strong>?  Time to drag out the broken record player again:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em><strong>Everything</strong> an aspiring writer submits to an agency is in fact a writing sample.  Since the agent of your dreams is new to your writing, it&#8217;s only reasonable to expect that he will use your query letter, your synopsis, any requested pages, and even your e-mails and cover letters for submissions as bases for evaluating your writing ability.  These are literate people; they expect good writers to express themselves well 100% of the time.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>At minimum:  spell-check everything before you hit the SEND key.  Proofread everything.  If you don&#8217;t know the difference between <em>its</em> (belonging to it) and <em>it&#8217;s</em> (a contraction for <em>it is</em>), or how to make a word plural (hint:  almost never by adding an apostrophe + s), learn it.  And if you have any doubts about your own grammar or proofreading abilities, run, don&#8217;t walk, to someone whose skills are impeccable.</p>
<p>But most of all, use your query as an opportunity to demonstrate to Millicent that, in addition to being charming, literate, and creative enough to come up with a great premise, you can tell a story well.  Specifically, the story of your book.</p>
<p>Generally speaking, summary statements are not the best way to pull this off.  Too many aspiring writers mistakenly believe that a generic query filled either with overly-broad generalities (<em>my protagonist is Everyman struggling with quotidian life.</em>), promotional copy  (<em>this is the most exciting book featuring childbirth since GONE WITH THE WIND!&#8221;</em>), or just plain one-size-fits-all rhetoric (<em>This is a fiction novel with great writing based on a true story.</em>) is sufficient to pique an agent&#8217;s interest.  All of these tactics are problematic, because a vague query will sound just like a good two-thirds of the query letters Millicent&#8217;s seen that week, and thus hardly likely to stand out amongst the forest of torches storming the castle.  </p>
<p>Or, as she likes to put it:  &#8220;Next!&#8221;</p>
<p>But the news is not all bad here, campers:  when a query is simultaneously unique and yet professional, the result can be semi-miraculous.   For a talented querier, the ubiquity of poorly-constructed queries is actually helpful.  </p>
<p>Why?  Call up that angry mob in your mind, the one that&#8217;s casually dropping by en masse to ask Dr. Frankenstein if that undead thing that&#8217;s been lurching about Geneva lately belongs to him.  Now picture yourself pushing through that crowd, impeccably dressed, to knock on that castle door.  For Dr. F to open the door, she&#8217;s going to have to believe that you&#8217;re not merely a cleverly-disguised villager intent upon destroying her secret laboratory where he dabbles in revivifying the dead.</p>
<p>So, too, with Millicent:  a politely-worded, grammatically impeccable, well-written query is going to catch her eye, simply because such a low percentage of what crosses her desk meets those criteria.  And frankly, that fact is very useful to her, because she can quickly reject the vast majority of the angry mob&#8217;s attempts to get her attention.</p>
<p>Okay, so that analogy was a trifle forced.  Very few of the screeners of my acquaintance actually make a habit of prying open those well-known doors that mankind is not meant to open, and not all rejections are that knee-jerk.  But you can&#8217;t deny that picturing Millicent triple-bolting the castle door made a change from imagining her burning her lip on yet another too-hot latte, right?</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>A good agent typically receives in the neighborhood of 800-1500 queries per week &#8212; more, if the agency makes it easy for aspiring writers to submit pages online with their queries.  In the face of that constant barrage, even the most prose-loving Millicent is going to have to reject the vast majority that cross her desk, if only in self-defense. The generally-accepted figure is 98%.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Starting to make more sense that I&#8217;ve devoted my entire Labor Day weekend to concentrate this hard upon a page of writing that isn’t even in your manuscript?  I’m just trying to save you some time, and some misery &#8212; and a whole lot of rejection.  </p>
<p>So print up your latest query letter draft, please, and let’s ask ourselves a few more probing questions before you pop that puppy in the mail.  But please, before we do, take a moment now to read your current draft in its entirely aloud, so it is clear in your mind &#8212; and to catch any lapses in logic or grammar, of course.  </p>
<p>To stop the protest already halfway out of your mouth:  I don’t care if you did it yesterday.  Do it again, because now you’re doing it in hard copy, where &#8212; long-time readers, chant it with me now &#8212; you’re significantly more likely to catch itty-bitty errors like missed periods.  </p>
<p>Why aloud?  Because it’s the best way to catch a left-out word or logic problem.  </p>
<p>Don’t feel bad if you find a few:  believe me, every successful author has a story about the time that she realized only <em>after</em> a query or a manuscript was in the mailbox that it was missing a necessary pronoun or possessive.  Or misspelled something really basic, like the book category.</p>
<p>Yes, it happens.  All the time.  Millicent has good reason to regard queries as Frankenstein manuscripts.</p>
<p>And if you don’t read it aloud IN HARD COPY one final time between when you are happy with it on your computer screen and when you apply your soon-to-be-famous signature to it…well, all I can do is rend my garments and wonder where I went wrong in bringing you up.  </p>
<p>All right, I’ll hop off the guilt wagon now and back onto the checklist trail.  Now that you&#8217;re thinking of your query as a writing sample, let&#8217;s take a quick foray back up the page before we move on.</p>
<p><strong>(15) Does the first paragraph of my query show that I am a good writer, as well as convey the necessary information?  Does it get to the point immediately?  Or, to but it a bit more bluntly, if I were an agency screener with 200 other queries on my desk or in my inbox, would <em>I</em> keep reading into the next paragraph?</strong><br />
This may seem like draconian questions, but think about it from Millicent’s perspective:  if you had to get through all of those queries before the end of the afternoon, would you keep reading the one in front of you if its first paragraph rambled?  Or if, heaven forefend, it contained a typo or two?</p>
<p>Oh, you SAY you would.  But honestly, would you? </p>
<p>I have been dwelling upon the first paragraph of the query letter because &#8212; oh, it pains me to be the one to tell you this, if you did not already know &#8212; countless query letters are discarded by agents and their screeners every day based upon the first paragraph alone.  (Yet another reason I advise against e-mail queries, incidentally, except in the case of agents who specifically state they prefer them over the paper version:  it’s too easy to delete an e-mail after reading only a line or two of it.)</p>
<p>Take a good, hard look at your first paragraph, and make sure it is one that will make the agent want keep reading.  Does it present the relevant information &#8212; why you are querying this particular agent, book category, title, etc. &#8212; in a professional, compelling manner?  </p>
<p>Cut to the chase.  All too often, when writers do not make their intentions clear up front &#8212; say, by neglecting to mention the book category &#8212; the letter simply gets tossed aside after the first paragraph.  </p>
<p>All right, on to paragraph two:</p>
<p><strong>(16) Is my descriptive paragraph short, clear, and exciting to read? Have I actually said what the book is ABOUT? </strong><br />
Frequently, authors get so carried away with conveying the premise of the book that they forget to mention the theme at all.  Or, as we discussed above, they try to cram the entire synopsis into the query letter.  Given that the entire letter should never be longer than a page, that strategy tends to result in a missive that neither presents the book&#8217;s story or argument well nor leaves room for the necessary other elements of the query.</p>
<p>So what should you do instead?  Limit the scope of what you are trying to achieve to making the book&#8217;s premise or argument sound fascinating.</p>
<p>How might one go about that?  Well, for starters, buy yourself some space by axing the lit class terminology:  this is not the place to talk about <em>protagonists, antagonists</em>, or <em>plot twists</em>, at least not using those words.  Ditto with introductory statements like <em>ALTERED REALITIES is the story of&#8230;</em> or <em>SIMILAR FANTASIES tells the tale of&#8230;</em> If the opening paragraph has done its job properly, these kind of clauses are never actually necessary.  </p>
<p>Second, concentrate upon presenting the protagonist as an interesting person in an interesting situation.  A time-honored structure demonstrates why the lead is special in the first sentence or two (utilizing parenthetical age references to save space), devotes the second sentence to the plot&#8217;s central conflict, and the third to what&#8217;s at stake for the protagonist.  As in:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Photojournalist Nana Angelopoulous (27) is far from an inexperienced traveler:  her passion for documenting vanishing wildlife has brought her face-to-face with more charging rhinos, furious rattlesnakes, and irate, weapon-brandishing game wardens than even her worried mother (Irene, 56) can remember.  Yet now that her favorite preserve is going to be sealed off from human contact forever, she has abruptly begun having panic attacks the moment she steps on a plane.  Has the shutter come down permanently on both Nana&#8217;s career and the endangered red pandas she loves?</p></blockquote>
<p></strong></p>
<p>For a character-driven plot, you can focus even more closely on the main character.  Try opening with your protagonist&#8217;s hopes and dreams, moving on to the primary barriers to his achieving them, and then wrap up by telling Millicent what he stands to win if he overcomes those obstacles &#8212; or what he stands to lose if he doesn&#8217;t.  For example:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>All retired paleontologist Sven Olafson (87) wants is a little peace and quiet, but who could relax with intrepid junior explorer Tammi (11) constantly digging for dinosaur bones in his back yard?  Or twin grandsons borrowing in his stone tool collection to reconfigure the neighbors&#8217; treasured marble birdbath?  Or, worst of all, a malignant postman (Marvin, 62) determined to drive Sven from the only settled home he has ever had outside of a dig site? </p></blockquote>
<p></strong></p>
<p>Either structure will work for memoir, of course:  treat yourself as a character in the book, change the pronouns to <em>I</em>, and tell Millicent what happened to you.  Easy as the proverbial pie.  </p>
<p>For other nonfiction, just set out the central problem of the book and give some indication of how you plan to address it.  If you want to get fancy, toss in a sentence or two making the case that the problem is important, and to whom:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Giant sloths once roamed every continent, but thanks to human overpopulation, few living children have ever even seen one.  Once-mighty herds are now reduced to just a few square acres next to a Bigfoot preserve in southwestern Oregon.  Ironically, just as human needs have nearly wiped out these magnificent beasts, human needs may save them from total extinction:  new research indicates that molted sloth hair may be the long-sought cure for male pattern baldness.  Begging the question:  is the recent establishment of megalonychid-shaving factories a triumph in the fight against extinction, or merely vanity-induced animal abuse?</p></blockquote>
<p></strong></p>
<p>What you&#8217;re doing here is not generalizing &#8212; you&#8217;re winnowing down the story to its essential elements.  That&#8217;s doable, isn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>When in doubt, err on the side of brevity over completeness.  Remember, you honestly do have only &#8212; chant it with me now, long-time readers &#8212;  3-5 sentences to grab an agent’s interest, so generally speaking, you are usually better off emphasizing how interesting your characters are and how unusual your premise is, rather than trying to outline more of the plot.  </p>
<p>But do make sure it sounds like a great story or interesting argument.  As in a pitch, the first commandment of querying is <em>thou shalt not bore</em>, and believe me, nothing is more boring to someone who reads for a living than seeing the same kind of descriptions over and over again.  </p>
<p>One of those torches waving in the night might be pretty, but when everyone in the village is brandishing one, it gets old fast. </p>
<p>Hark!  Do I hear an angry mob beating on my battlements, chanting, &#8220;How may we both brief and interesting simultaneously?&#8221;  In a word:  juicy details.</p>
<p>Okay, so that was two words.  It&#8217;s still a great strategy.  Why not spice things up with details that only you could devise?  </p>
<p><strong>(17) Does my description use unusual details and surprising juxtapositions to make my story come across as unique or my argument as original?  Or is the descriptive paragraph a collection of generalities that might apply to many different books within my chosen category?</strong><br />
What makes a book description memorable, whether it is fiction or nonfiction, is not merely its overall arc, but also its vividly-rendered details.  Especially to a reader like Millicent who reads 50 such descriptions in a sitting, the difference between a ho-hum descriptive paragraph and one that makes her sit up and say, &#8220;Hey, I&#8217;d like to read this book!&#8221; tends to lie in the minutiae.</p>
<p>Not in a superabundance of minutiae, mind you:   just a few careful-selected details she&#8217;s not likely to have seen before.  </p>
<p>Unsure where the line between too many generalities and too much detail lies, flaming torch-bearers?  <em>When in doubt, stick to the central conflict</em>.</p>
<p>Why, you ask?  Okay, let’s step into Millie&#8217;s shoes for a minute.  Read these three summaries:   which would make <em>you</em> ask to see the first fifty pages of the book and why?</p>
<blockquote><p><strong><>Basil Q. Zink, a color-blind clarinetist who fills his hours away from his music stand with pinball and romance novels, has never fallen in love &#8212; until he meets Gisèle, the baton-wielding conductor with a will of steel and a temper of fire.  But what chance does a man who cannot reliably make his socks match have with a Paris-trained beauty?  Ever since Gisèle was dumped by the world’s greatest bassoonist, she has never had a kind word for anyone in the woodwind section.  Can Basil win the heart of his secret love without compromising his reputation as he navigates the take-no-prisoners world of the symphony orchestra?</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Quite a few unique and unexpected quirks packed in there, aren&#8217;t there?  I&#8217;d ask to read that book.  Contrast this description with the far more common style of entry #2: </p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Clarinetist Basil Zink has fallen hopelessly in love with his conductor, temperamental and beautiful Gisèle.  On the rebound from a ten-year marriage with Parisian bassoonist Serge, Gisèle scarcely casts a glance in Basil&#8217;s direction; she hardly seems to be aware that he&#8217;s alive.  Menaced by an ultra-competitive co-worker, Basil must overcome his fears to capture the woman he loves and save his orchestra.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Interesting how different it is from the first, isn&#8217;t it, considering that both describe the same story?  Yet since #2 relies so heavily on generalities and is so light on unusual details, it comes across as a tad generic, not to say cliché-ridden.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s take a gander at version #3, where a love of detail has apparently run amok:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>BATON OF MY HEART is a love story that follows protagonist Basil Q. Zink, whose congenital color-blindness was exacerbated (as the reader learns through an extended flashback) by a freak toaster-meets-tuning-fork accident when he was six.  Ever since, Basil has hated and feared English muffins, which causes him to avoid the other boys’ games:  even a carelessly-flung Frisbee can bring on a flashback.  This circle metaphor continues into his adult life, as his job as a clarinetist for a major symphony orchestra requires him to spend his days and most of his nights starting at little dots printed on paper.  </p>
<p>Life isn’t easy for Basil. Eventually, he gets a job with a new symphony, where he doesn’t know anybody; he’s always been shy.  Sure, he can make friends in the woodwind section, but in this orchestra, they are the geeks of the school, hated by the sexy woman conductor and taunted by the Sousaphonist, an antagonist who is exactly the type of Frisbee-tossing lunkhead Basil has spent a lifetime loathing.    The conductor poses a problem for Basil:  he has never been conducted by a woman before.  This brings up his issues with his long-dead mother, Yvonne, who had an affair with little Basil’s first music teacher in a raucous backstage incident that sent music stands crashing to the ground.  Basil’s father never got over the incident, and Basil…”</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Okay, ersatz agency screener:  how much longer would you keep reading?   We’re all the way through a lengthy paragraph, and we still don’t know what the essential conflict is! </p>
<p>Contrary to popular belief amongst queriers frightened by the prospect of having to talk about their manuscripts in marketing terms in Paragraph 1, what makes a descriptive paragraph great is not its ability to show how similar the book is to what is already published, but rather how it is <em>different</em>.  </p>
<p>Oh, I don&#8217;t mean that a querier is likely to get anywhere with Millicent by claiming that his manuscript is like nothing she has ever seen before &#8212; that, too, has been said so often in queries that it has become a cliché &#8212; or that it&#8217;s a good idea to ignore the current literary market.  You won&#8217;t, and it isn&#8217;t.  </p>
<p>In order to sell any first book, however, a writer needs to be able to demonstrate that (a) it fits into an existing book category but (b) offers readers who already buy books in that category something they can&#8217;t already get by just walking into a bookstore.</p>
<p>Or, to cast it in grander terms:  what will your book add to the literary world that it hasn&#8217;t already got?  Why will the reading world be a better place if your book is published?</p>
<p>Deep questions, eh?  I leave you to ponder them.  But as you do, don&#8217;t lose sight of the fact that part of what a writer is marketing is her unique voice.  How could a query letter that sounds just like everyone else&#8217;s possibly do justice to that?</p>
<p>Another post follows at 2 am, of course.  We wouldn&#8217;t want to lose momentum so close to this end of our long weekend&#8217;s labor, would we?  Keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, Part VII:  pretty is as pretty does, or, what makes you think that bell bottoms are still in style, Barbie?</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11887</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11887#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Sep 2010 17:00:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency guides]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency screeners' pet peeves of the notorious variety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Being an agent's dream client]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Conference lore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dealing with rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dear Agent letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[E-mailing queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Finding agents to query]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frankenstein queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Industry etiquette]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Is it OK to query several agents at once?]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letter troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying multiple agents at once]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying or submitting to US agencies from outside the US]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection:  when they don't tell you at all]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Small publishers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Why generic queries don't work]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[addressing a query]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[addressing an agent]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[agent of record]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-mailed queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[exclusive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[exclusive request]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[generic queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[independent publishers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[multiple queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[niche market]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[proper salutations for queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query packets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[simultaneous queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[writing queries]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Still hanging in there, campers?  Last night, I threw all of you queriers a bit of a curve ball:  in the midst of talking about how to polish a basic query letter &#8212; polite salutation, title, book category, brief description, writing credentials/platform for writing the book, courteous sign-off, your contact information, SASE if [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Barbie-ad.jpg" alt="Barbie ad" title="Barbie ad" width="421" height="275" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-11021" /></p>
<p>Still hanging in there, campers?  Last night, I threw all of you queriers a bit of a curve ball:  in the midst of talking about how to polish a basic query letter &#8212; polite salutation, title, book category, brief description, writing credentials/platform for writing the book, courteous sign-off, your contact information, SASE if you&#8217;re going to send it via mail &#8212; I <del datetime="2010-09-06T08:33:12+00:00">insisted</del> <del datetime="2010-09-06T08:33:12+00:00">ordered</del> <del datetime="2010-09-06T08:33:12+00:00">blandished you into</del> suggested that you write it not in your own good prose, but in the language of the publishing industry.  </p>
<p>Why might you want to invest the time in doing that?  To elevate a ho-hum query that features just the basics into one that veritably leaps off the incoming mail stack at Millicent the agency screener.</p>
<p>That made your eyes pop open this fine morning, didn&#8217;t it?  &#8220;Wait,&#8221; some of the bleary-eyed call out, &#8220;back up a little.  Did you just give a formula for a bare-bones query in the middle of that paragraph?  Before I was fully awake?  Is that fair?&#8221;</p>
<p>Never mind that &#8212; you&#8217;re beyond basic querying now, my friends.  You&#8217;ve even, if you have been following Querypalooza with an open heart and inquisitive mind (or even vice-versa) moved past <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=11697">the quite good query letter we discussed in Part I of this series</a>.  (Was that only 48 hours ago?  This weekend has, I must confess, been a lengthy one for me.)  You&#8217;re ready to become so conversant with the logic of querying that you could toss out future queries in a pain-free hour or two, instead of an anguish-filled week or month.</p>
<p>And what&#8217;s the magic wand that&#8217;s going to enable you to make that radical transformation?  Learning how to describe your work as an agent or editor would.  </p>
<p>The first two steps:  nailing down a book category for it and figuring out who your ideal reader is.  A savvy querier needs to do more than assert that such a reader exists, however; she must provide some evidence of it.</p>
<p>Which is to say:  once you&#8217;ve identified your target audience, it&#8217;s greatly to your advantage to do a bit of research on just how big it is.  Throwing some concrete numbers into your query, demonstrating just how big your target market actually is, will make it MUCH easier for Millicent to talk about your book to higher-ups &#8212; and, in turn, for an agent to pitch it to anyone at a publishing house.</p>
<p>Why?  Well, sales and marketing departments expect agents and editors to be able to speak in hard numbers &#8212; and no matter how much the editors at a publishing house love any given book, they’re unlikely to make an actual offer for it unless the sales and marketing folks are pretty enthused about it, too.  So doesn&#8217;t it make sense to make sure the agent and editor fighting for your book have that demographic information at their fingertips, when it&#8217;s relatively easy for you to put it there?</p>
<p>Some of you are still not convinced that it would behoove you to go to the additional effort, aren&#8217;t you?  &#8220;But Anne,&#8221; I hear those of you writing for some of the bigger markets protest.  &#8220;Surely, everyone with a pulse is aware of how big my particular target audience is and why they would find my book appealing.  Wouldn&#8217;t it be, you know, a little insulting if my query assumed that the agent wasn&#8217;t sufficiently aware of the world around him to know these things?&#8221;</p>
<p>Well, yes, if you happen to be pitching a YA book about a teenage girl&#8217;s relationship with a vampire or another book whose appeal to a recent bestseller&#8217;s already-established readership is so self-evident that any agent with a brain would pitch it as, &#8220;It&#8217;s basically TWILIGHT, but with twist X&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>But the fact is, few books that aren&#8217;t really, really derivative of current bestsellers have that obvious a target audience.  Let me tell you a parable about what can happen if a writer is vague about her target market&#8217;s demographics.  </p>
<blockquote><p>Aspiring writer Suzette has written a charming novel about an American woman in her late thirties who finds herself reliving the trauma of her parents’ divorce when she was 12.  Since the book is set in the present day, that makes her protagonist a Gen Xer, as Suzette herself is.  (&#8221;It&#8217;s sort of autobiographical,&#8221; she admits, but only amongst friends.)  Like the vast majority of queriers, she has not thought about her target market before approaching agent Briana.  </p>
<p>So she’s stunned when Briana tells her that there’s no market for such a book.  But being a bright person, quick on her feet, Suzette comes up with a plausible response:  “<em>I’m</em> the target market for this book,” she shoots back in an e-mail.   (Something a rejected querier should NEVER, EVER do, by the way, but necessary here for the sake of drama.)  “People like me.”</p>
<p>Now, that’s actually a pretty good answer &#8212; readers are often drawn to the work of writers like themselves &#8212; but it is vague.  What Suzette really meant was:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>“My target readership is women born between 1964 and 1975, half of whom have divorced parents.  Just under 12 million Americans, in other words &#8212; and that’s just for starters.”</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>But Briana heard what Suzette SAID, not what she MEANT.  Since they&#8217;ve just met, how reasonable was it for Suzette to expect Briana to read her mind?</p>
<p>Given this partial information, Briana thought:  “Oh, God, another book for aspiring writers.”  (People like the author, right?)  “What does this writer think my agency is, a charitable organization?  I’d like to be able to retire someday.”</p>
<p>And what would an editor at a major publishing house (let’s call him Ted) conclude from Suzette’s statement?  Something, no doubt, along the lines of, “This writer is writing for her friends.  All four of them.  Next!”</p></blockquote>
<p>Clearly, being vague about her target audience has not served Suzette’s interests. Let’s take a peek at what would have happened if she had been a trifle more specific, shall we?</p>
<blockquote><p>Suzette says:  “Yes, there is a target market for my book:  Gen Xers, half of whom are women, many of whom have divorced parents.”</p>
<p>Agent Briana thinks:  “Hmm, that’s a substantial niche market.  5 million, maybe?”</p>
<p>Sounding more marketable already, isn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>But when Briana pitches it to editor Ted this way, he thinks:  “Great, a book for people who aren’t Baby Boomers.  Most of the US population is made up of Baby Boomers and their children.  Do I really want to publish a book for a niche market of vegans with little disposable income?”</p></blockquote>
<p>So a little better, but still, no cigar.  Let’s take a look at what happens if Suzette has thought through her readership in advance, and walks into her pitch meetings with Briana and Ted with her statistics all ready to leap off her tongue.</p>
<blockquote><p>Suzette says (immediately after describing the book in her query):  “I’m excited about this project, because I think my protagonist’s divorce trauma will really resonate with the 47 million Gen Xers currently living in the United States.  Half of these potential readers have parents who have divorced at least once in their lifetimes.  Literally everybody in that age group either had divorces within their own families as kids or had close friends that did.  I think this book will strike a chord with these people.”</p>
<p>Agent Briana responds:  “There are 47 million Gen Xers?  I had no idea there were that many.  I want to see the manuscript; this has market potential.”</p>
<p>And editor Ted thinks:  “47 million!  Even if the book actually appealed to only a tiny fraction of them, it’s still a market well worth pursuing.  Yes, Briana, send me that manuscript by your new client.”</p></blockquote>
<p>The moral of this exciting fairy tale:  even the best book premise can be harmed by vague assertions about its target audience; it can only helped by the query&#8217;s talking about in marketing terms.</p>
<p>There is one drawback to using up-to-the-minute demographic statistics, of course &#8212; if you end up querying the same project over a long period (not at all unusual for even very well-written manuscripts, at this point in literary history), you may have to go back and update your numbers.  Actually, it&#8217;s not a bad idea to reexamine your query&#8217;s arguments every so often anyway.  it&#8217;s quite easy to fall into the habit of pumping out those queries without really pondering their content &#8212; or whether this particular letter is the best means of marketing to that particular agent.  </p>
<p>Speaking of which, let&#8217;s return to our ongoing query-improvement list.</p>
<p><strong>(10) Have I addressed this letter to a <em>specific</em> person, rather than an entire agency or any agent currently walking the face of the earth?  Does it read like a form letter?</strong><br />
Some of you just did a double-take, didn&#8217;t you?  &#8220;But Anne,&#8221; you cry in unison, and who could blame you?  &#8220;I&#8217;m experiencing déjà vu.  Didn&#8217;t we already cover this in #5, <em>Is it clear from the first paragraph that I am querying the appropriate agent for my work?</em>&#8221;</p>
<p>Well, yes and no.  Yes, I made some suggestions in <a href=" http://www.annemini.com/?p=11761">Querypalooza VI</a> (was that only last night?) for some tried-and-true reasons for explaining why approaching a particular agent makes sense for your book.  But no, we didn&#8217;t discuss how to fix a generic-sounding first paragraph.</p>
<p>Basically, you fix it by not using the same first paragraph in every query.</p>
<p>As I mentioned in <a href=" http://www.annemini.com/?p=11804">an earlier post in this series</a>, experienced queriers will tweak their basic query letters to personalize them for each agent on their list.  Less experienced serial queriers, though, often do not change anything but the first paragraph, address, and salutation between each time they sent out their mailed letters, more or less insuring that a mistake made once will be replicated a dozen times.  Copying and pasting the text of one e-mailed query into the next guarantees it.</p>
<p>And those of you who habitually did this were <em>surprised</em> to receive form-letter rejections?  The electronic age has made it much, much easier to be dismissive.  Although it may seem needlessly time-consuming, <strong>it&#8217;s worth reviewing every single query to ascertain that the opening paragraph speaks specifically to the recipient&#8217;s tastes and placement record</strong>.  </p>
<p>Most aspiring writers don&#8217;t even consider doing this &#8212; and frankly, it&#8217;s easy to see why.  Many approach quite a few agents simultaneously &#8212; and with good reason.  At this point in publishing history, when many agencies don&#8217;t even respond to e-mailed queries if the answer is no, waiting to hear back from one agent before approaching the next is poor strategy.  One-by-one queries can add years to the agent-finding process.</p>
<p>Do I sense some restless murmuring out there?  &#8220;But Anne,&#8221; some of you conference veterans protest, &#8220;I heard that some agents will become furious if they find out that a writer is sending out many queries simultaneously.  I don&#8217;t want to scare them away from my book by breaking their rules right off the bat!&#8221;</p>
<p>I agree with the general principle imbedded in this <em>cri de coeur</em> &#8212; it&#8217;s only prudent to check an agency&#8217;s website and/or its listing in one of the standard agency guides to ascertain what precisely the agent you are addressing wants to see in a query packet.   The differentials can be astonishing:  some want queries only, others want synopses, many ask for pages to be placed in the body of an e-mail, a few ask queriers just to go ahead and send the first 50 pages unsolicited.</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>There is no such thing as a one-size-fits-all query packet.  In order not to run afoul of these wildly disparate expectations, a querier must be willing to do a bit of homework and follow individualized directions.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Admittedly, sometimes an agency&#8217;s listing in one of the standard guides, its website, and what one of its member agents will say at a conference are at odds.  In the event of a serious discrepancy, don&#8217;t call or e-mail the agency to find out which they prefer.  Go with the information that appears to be most recent &#8212; in my experience, that&#8217;s usually what&#8217;s posted either on the website or on <a href="http://www.publishersmarketplace.com/">Publisher&#8217;s Marketplace</a>.   </p>
<p>What no agency will EVER leave off any of its expressions of preference, however, is mention of a policy forbidding simultaneous querying, the practice of sending out queries to more than one agent at a time &#8212; if it has one, which is exceedingly rare.  Some do have policies against simultaneous <em>submissions</em>, where more than one agent is reading requested materials at the same time, but believe me, the agencies that want an exclusive peek tend to be VERY up front about it.</p>
<p>So If you have checked to ascertain that the agent of your dreams &#8212; or at least the next on your list &#8212; does not have an exclusivity policy, you should assume that s/he doesn&#8217;t.  Trust me, if an agent who does prefer an exclusive peek doesn&#8217;t want other agents seeing it, s/he will let you know.  </p>
<p>Until then, it&#8217;s a waste of your valuable time to grant a de facto exclusive to someone who hasn&#8217;t asked for it.  (For some tips on dealing with an actual request for an exclusive if and when it comes up, please see the EXCLUSIVES TO AGENTS category on the list at right.)</p>
<p>So why does the rumor that that agents secretly crave exclusives (and thus penalize queriers who don&#8217;t read their minds and act accordingly) remain so pervasive?  Beats me.  If I had to guess, I would say that it is an unintended side effect of agents&#8217; standing up at writers&#8217; conferences and saying, &#8220;For heaven&#8217;s sake, don&#8217;t send out mass queries &#8212; if I see a query that&#8217;s clearly been sent to every agent in the book, I send straight it into the rejection pile.&#8221;  </p>
<p>In other words, <strong>don&#8217;t send out generic queries.  They&#8217;re just not worth your time.</strong></p>
<p>A query letter designed to please all is unlikely to be geared to the specific quirks and literary tastes of any particular agent &#8212; one of the many reasons that this shotgun approach seldom works.  The other, believe it or not, is that mass submitters often render the fact that they don&#8217;t know one agent on their lists from another by sending out what is known in the biz as a <em>Dear Agent letter</em>.  As in one that begins:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Dear Agent,</p>
<p>I haven’t the vaguest idea who you are or what you represent, but since the big publishing houses don’t accept submissions from unagented authors, I come to you, hat in hand, to beg you to represent my fiction novel&#8230;</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Why, when there is so much to resent in this (probably quite honest) little missive, would the salutation alone be enough to get this query rejected without reading farther?  Well, to folks who work in agencies, such an opening means only one thing:  the writer who sent it is sending an identical letter to every agent listed on the Internet or in one of the standard agency guides.  </p>
<p>Willy-nilly, with no regard to who represents what and consequently who is likely to be interested in the book at hand.  </p>
<p>Which means, they reason, that it is unlikely to the point of mockery that the book being proposed is going to fit the specific requirements and tastes of any of the agents currently domiciled at the agency.  And, most will additionally conclude, the writer hasn’t bothered to learn much about how the publishing industry works.  Virtually any Millicent will simply toss it into the reject pile, if not actually the trash.   (Dear Agent letter-writers seldom know to include SASEs, alas.)</p>
<p>Since this is such a NOTORIOUS agents’ pet peeve, I&#8217;m going to trouble you with yet another question aimed at making that first paragraph a beautiful case that you &#8212; yes, you &#8212; are the best possible fit for the agent you happen to be querying at the moment.  And to make that case pellucidly clear even to a Millicent who has only 30 seconds or so to devote to each query.</p>
<p><strong>(11) Do I make it clear in the first paragraph of the letter SPECIFICALLY why I am writing to THIS particular agent &#8212; or does it read as though I could be addressing any agent in North America? </strong><br />
This is a corollary of the last, of course &#8212; to put it another way, writers aren&#8217;t the only ones screaming at the heavens, &#8220;Why me?  Why me?&#8221;  (Agents scream it, too, but with a slightly different meaning.)</p>
<p>No, but seriously, agents (and their screeners) wonder about this.  So it&#8217;s worth taking a look at your query letter and asking yourself if it answers the question:  <em>there are hundreds and hundreds of literary agents in the United States alone &#8212; why did you choose this one, out of all others, to query?</em>   What specifically about <em>this</em> agent&#8217;s track record, literary tastes, and/or bio led you to say, <em>By gum, I would like this person to represent my work</em>?</p>
<p>And no, in this context, <em>because she is an agent and I desperately want to sell my book to a publisher</em> is not a reason likely to impress Millicent.  She hears it too often.</p>
<p>The best way to justify your agent choice is by mentioning one of the agent&#8217;s recent sales.  Remember, agents &#8212; like most other people &#8212; tend to be proud of their best work:  if you want to get on their good side, showing a little appreciation for what they have done in the past is just good strategy.  Especially if you can honestly compliment them on a project they really loved, or one that was unusually difficult to sell.</p>
<p>I picked this little trick up not at writers’ conferences, but in academia.  When a professor is applying for a job, she is subjected to a form of medieval torture known as a job talk.  Not only is she expected to give a lecture in front of the entire faculty that is thinking of hiring here, all of whom are instructed in advance to jump on everything she says with abandon, but she is also expected to have brief private meetings with everyone on the faculty first.  </p>
<p>It’s every bit as horrible as it sounds, like going through a series of 20 or 30 interviews with authors who think simply everyone in the universe has read their work.  (Everyone smart, anyway.) If you’re the job candidate, you’d better have at least one pithy comment prepared about each and every faculty member’s most recent article, or you’re toast.  </p>
<p>Gee, I can’t imagine why I didn’t want to remain in academia.  But it did teach me something very valuable indeed:  <strong>pretty much every human being affiliated with any book ever published likes to be recognized for the fact.</strong></p>
<p>Fortunately, it&#8217;s very easy to work a compliment into a query letter without sounding cheesy or obsequious.  If the agent you are querying has represented something similar to your work in the past, you have a natural beginning:  </p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Since you so ably represented X’s excellent book, {TITLE}, I believe you may be interested in my novel…”</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>There are many ways to find out what an agent has represented.  Check the acknowledgments of books you like (authors often thank their agents), or check the agency’s website to see whom the agent represents.  If all else fails, call your favorite book’s publisher, ask for the publicity department, and ask who the agent of record was; legally, it’s a matter of public record, so they have to tell you.  </p>
<p>Actually, with small publishers, this isn’t a bad method for finding out what they are looking to publish.  I once had a charming conversation with an editor at a small Midwestern press, who confided to me that when she had acquired the book about which I was inquiring, the author did not yet have an agent.  Sensing an opportunity, I promptly pitched my book to her &#8212; and she asked me to send her the first fifty pages right away. </p>
<p>Sometimes opportunities are hiding in some unexpected places.  For instance&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>(12) If I met this agent or editor at a conference, or am querying because I heard him speak at one, or picked him because s/he represents a particular author, do I make that obvious immediately?  If I picked him purely because he represents my book category, have I at least made that plain?</strong><br />
Queriers often seem reluctant to mention bring up having heard an agent speak, but since such a low percentage of the aspiring writers out there attend conferences (under 4%, according to the last estimate I saw), attending a good one that the agent you’re querying also attended is in fact a minor selling point for your book.</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>The prevailing wisdom dictates that writers who make the investment in learning how to market their work professionally tend to have more professional work to present.  A kind of old-fashioned notion, true, but if you’re a conference-goer, it&#8217;s one you should be riding for all it is worth.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>I would suggest being even more upfront than this, if the conference in question was a reputable one and you did in fact attend it.  Why not write the name of the conference on the outside of the envelope, in approximately the same place where you would have written REQUESTED MATERIALS had you pitched to the agent successfully there?  </p>
<p>And if you are an e-querying type, why not mention it in the subject line of the e-mail?   (Also a good idea to include:  the word QUERY.)</p>
<p>If you have not heard the agent speak at a conference, read an article she has written in a writer’s magazine or online, or noticed that your favorite author thanked her in the acknowledgments of a book you liked &#8212; all fair game to mention in the first line of your query &#8212; don&#8217;t give in to the temptation not to personalize the first paragraph.  Be polite enough to invent a general explanation for why you added her to your querying list:  </p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Since you represent such an interesting array of debut fiction about women in challenging situations, I hope you will be interested in my novel… </strong></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>(13) Am I sending this query in the form that the recipient prefers to receive it?  If I intend to send it via e-mail, have I quadruple-checked that the agency accepts e-mailed queries?  If I am sending it via regular mail, have I checked that the agency still accepts paper queries?</strong></p>
<p>Stop laughing, hard-core web fiends.  The publishing world runs on paper &#8212; even as I write this, it&#8217;s still far from unusual for a prestigious agency not to accept e-submissions at all.  Even agencies with websites (which not all of them maintain, even today) that accept submissions directly through the website often employ agents who prefer paper queries, even from writers residing in foreign countries for whom getting the right stamps for the SASE is problematic. </p>
<p>Double-check the agency&#8217;s policy before you e-query.  This information will be in any of the standard agency guides, and usually on the website as well.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re in doubt, query via regular mail &#8212; strategically, it&#8217;s a better idea, anyway.</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>it&#8217;s far, far less work to reject someone by the press of a single button than by stuffing a response into a SASE.  Also, the average reader scans words on a screen 70% faster than the same words on paper.  Thus, a truly swift-fingered Millicent can reject 50 writers online in the time that it would take her to reject 10 on paper.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The relative speed of scanning e-queries is why, in case you&#8217;re wondering, quite a few of the agencies that actively solicit online queries tend to respond more quickly than those that don&#8217;t.  Or not at all &#8212; which means that it&#8217;s also worth your while to check an agency&#8217;s policy on responding to e-queries before you approach them; many have policies that preclude responding to a querier if the answer is no.</p>
<p>&#8220;But Anne,&#8221; I hear many of you shout, &#8220;what happens if I accidentally send an e-query to an agent who doesn&#8217;t like them, or a paper query to one who prefers to be approached electronically?  That won&#8217;t result in an automatic rejection, will it?&#8221;</p>
<p>Not necessarily, but often.  But let me ask you this:  who would you prefer to read your letter, an agent calmly going through a stack (or list) of queries, or an agent whose first thought upon seeing your epistle is, &#8220;Oh, God, not another one!  Can&#8217;t any of these writers READ?  I&#8217;ve said in the last ten years&#8217; worth of <a href="http://www.jeffherman.com/guide/">Herman&#8217;s Guides</a> that I don&#8217;t want to be queried via e-mail!&#8221;</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know about you, but given my druthers, I would select the former.</p>
<p>Call me old-fashioned, but I believe that just as it&#8217;s polite to address a person the way he prefers to be addressed, rather than by a hated nickname, a courteous writer should approach an agent in the manner she prefers to be approached.   Those with strong preferences either way seldom make a secret of it; verify before you send.</p>
<p>And before anyone out there asks:  yes, most agents will assume that a writer worth having as a client will have gone to the trouble of learning something about their personal preferences.  If they have expressed a pet peeve in one of the standard agency guides, they will assume that you are aware of it.</p>
<p>While we&#8217;re on the subject of double-checking, allow me to sneak in one more quick question before I sign off for the morning:</p>
<p><strong>(14) Am I absolutely positive that I have spelled the agent&#8217;s name correctly, as well as the agency&#8217;s?  Am I positive that the letter I have addressed to <em>Dear Mr. Smith</em> shouldn&#8217;t actually read <em>Dear Ms. Smith</em>?  Heck, am I even sure that I&#8217;m placing the right letter in the right envelope?</strong><br />
I hear some titters out there, but you wouldn&#8217;t BELIEVE how common each of these gaffes is.  The last is usually just the result of a writer&#8217;s being in a hurry to get the next set of queries in the mail, and tend to be treated accordingly, but the first two constitute major breaches of etiquette.  </p>
<p>And yes, an agent with a first name that leaves gender a tad ambiguous is every bit as likely to resent an incorrect salutation as a Rebecca or Stephen would.  Often more, because a Cricket, Chris, or Leslie would constantly be receiving queries apparently addressed to someone of the opposite sex.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re in serious doubt, call the agency and ask point-blank whether the agent is a Mr. or Ms. (Quick note for those querying US agents from other parts of the world:  currently, Mr. or Ms. are the only two options, unless the person in question happens to be a doctor or a professor; unless a woman makes a point of identifying herself as a Miss or Mrs., Ms. is the proper salutation.)</p>
<p>I know:  you&#8217;ve heard 4500 times that a writer should NEVER call an agency until after she has a signed representation contract in hand or the agent has left a message asking him to call back, whichever comes first.  While it is quite true that allowing the agent to set the level of familiarity in the early stages of exchange is good strategy, most offices are set up to allow a caller to ask a quick, anonymous question, if she&#8217;s polite about it.  As long as you don&#8217;t ask to speak to the agent personally and/or use the occasion to pitch your book, you should be fine.</p>
<p>Have you noticed how many of these tips boil down to some flavor of <em>be clear, do your homework, and be courteous?</em>  That&#8217;s not entirely accidental:  as odd as it may seem in an industry that rejects so many talented people so brusquely, manners honestly do count in this business.  </p>
<p>As my grandmother was fond of saying, manners cost nothing.  But as I am prone to tell my clients and students, <em>not</em> exhibiting courtesy can cost an aspiring writer quite a lot.</p>
<p>So sit up straight, brush your teeth, and help little old ladies across the street; it will be great practice for working with an agent or editor.  </p>
<p>Think we&#8217;re at the end of the query-refining questions?  Not by a long shot.  Tune in at 6 pm for my next installment, and keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, part VI:  announcing your arrival clearly, or, insert cliché here about having only one chance to make a first impression</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11761</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11761#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Sep 2010 09:00:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[After you receive a request for pages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency screeners' pet peeves of the notorious variety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Anne's favorite posts]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Book category -- how to figure out yours]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Must Reads]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction marketing]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Querying fatigue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Strategizing a writing career]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Why generic queries don't work]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memoir querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying memoir]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Larry Ashmead]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[queries]]></category>
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Before I launch into our latest installment of Querypalooza, I&#8217;d like to ask for a moment of silence, please.  (Which shouldn&#8217;t be terribly difficult for those of you reading this in the middle of the night, should it?)  All of us here at Author! Author! would like to sent out a heartfelt RIP [...]]]></description>
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<p>Before I launch into our latest installment of Querypalooza, I&#8217;d like to ask for a moment of silence, please.  (Which shouldn&#8217;t be terribly difficult for those of you reading this in the middle of the night, should it?)  All of us here at Author! Author! would like to sent out a heartfelt RIP to <a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i1XNTpRqlm6S0y7fnLyuOmh3uAVgD9I0QJAG0">Larry Ashmead</a>, editor to such science fiction luminaries as Isaac Asimov.  Mr. Ashmead was one of the great eclectic-minded editors, known for taking chances on first books simply because &#8212; gasp! &#8212; he fell in love with them.  </p>
<p>His background was eclectic, too:  as his AP obituary notes, &#8220;He received a doctorate in geology from Yale University, but decided he preferred geology to geologists and chose to work in publishing, his 43-year career beginning at Doubleday and ending with his retirement from HarperCollins in 2003.&#8221;  This kind of leap from academia to publishing used to be charmingly common; for smart, well-read people, it seemed like a natural next step.</p>
<p>May you enjoy the extensive libraries of the afterlife, Mr. Ashmead.  Do say hello to Mark Twain for me.</p>
<p>Back to the business at hand.  In our last thrilling installment of Querypalooza, we began going through a list of questions intended to help you steer clear of the most common querying mistakes.  So far, our troubleshooting list has concentrated upon length and tone.  Tonight, however, I would like to shift our focus toward the more market-oriented aspects of the query.</p>
<p>And half of you just tensed up, didn&#8217;t you?  Not entirely surprising:  for many, if not most, aspiring writers, marketing is a dirty word.  You can&#8217;t throw a piece of bread at a circle of writers without hitting someone who will insist that <em>writing for the market</em> is  the moral opposite of <em>writing for art&#8217;s sake</em>.</p>
<p>To a professional writer, the market/art split is a false dichotomy.  There&#8217;s plenty of marvelous writing that&#8217;s done very well commercially.   And it would be surprising if most aspiring writers weren&#8217;t aware of that:  as a group, after all, we&#8217;re some of the most devoted readers of the already-published, right?</p>
<p>Besides, insisting that thinking seriously about who is going to buy your work is tantamount to selling out is self-defeating for a writer trying to land an agent.  Knowing something about how books are sold is not optional for an author working with an agent or editor; it&#8217;s a prerequisite.  (If you are brand-new to the process, you might want to set aside some time to peruse the HOW DO MANUSCRIPTS GET PUBLISHED? category on the archive list at right.)</p>
<p>If you don’t want to make a living at it, of course, you needn’t worry about marketing realities.  Writing for your own pleasure, and that of your kith and kin, is a laudable pursuit.  I would never knock it.   But if you want total strangers to buy your work, you are going to have to think about how to market it to them.</p>
<p>And that means learning to speak the language of the industry, at least enough to describe your work in terms that every agent, editor, and screener will understand.  To do that, you&#8217;re going to need to give some thought to what your book is about, who you expect to read it, and where it might sit on a shelf in a brick-and-mortar bookstore.</p>
<p>Not to frighten you, but you&#8217;re also going to have to be able to convey all of this information within a few sentences.  </p>
<p>Query letters are, after all, brief &#8212; and may not have even an entire page of Millicent&#8217;s attention to make their cases.   To crank up the broken record player again,</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>The vast majority of queries are not read in their entirety before being rejected.  Therefore, the first paragraph of your query is one of the very few situations in the writing world where you need to TELL, as well as show.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>So let&#8217;s turn our attention to the crucial information in that first paragraph.  To our muttons!</p>
<p><strong>(5) Is it clear from the first paragraph that I am querying the appropriate agent for my work?</strong><br />
Why is it so VERY important to make absolutely certain that this information is clearly presented in the <em>first</em> paragraph?<br />
If your first paragraph doesn&#8217;t tell Millicent <em>either</em> that the book in question is in fact the kind of book her boss is looking to represent <em>or</em> another very good reason to query him (having spoken to him at a conference, having heard her speak at same, because she so ably represented Book X, etc.), she is very, very likely to shove it into the rejection pile without reading any farther.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t groan over the amount of research this may entail &#8212; indiscriminate querying is not likely to match you up with the best agent for your work.  Besides, in order to personalize each query, you need to come up with only one or two reasons for picking this particular agent. </p>
<p>Remember our two examples from last time, where Flaubert accidentally mixed up one agent&#8217;s name and background with another&#8217;s?  It contained some good reasons, couched in some restrained praise.  To refresh your memory, he sent this:</p>
<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/wrong-names-query.jpg" alt="wrong names query" title="wrong names query" width="466" height="603" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-11828" /></p>
<p>When he intended to send this:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg" alt="" title="a-query-for-mme-b" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1265" /></a></p>
<p>Despite our Gustave&#8217;s momentary inattention to critical detail, he had essentially the right approach in both letters:  he devoted the opening sentences of his various queries to telling each agent why he was querying him or her, rather than simply sending the same letter to everybody.  In fact, he brought up two perfectly adequate for each:  for Ms. Marketer, he mentioned both an article she had written and a book she had successfully represented; for Mr. Bookpusher, he brought up having heard him speak at a conference &#8212; and a book Ms. Marketer had successfully represented.</p>
<p>Again:  <em>proofread before you send it out.  Every time, without exception.</em></p>
<p>Agents-who-blog make this kind of opening quite easy for queriers:  all you have to do is mention that you&#8217;re a fan.  Do be absolutely positive before embracing this tactic, however, that you have read enough of the blog in question to know what the agent has said she is looking for in a query or book project.  Trust me, AWBs&#8217; Millicents already see enough queries from people who make it quite plain that all they know about the blogging agent is her name.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t hesitate to mention if you attended a conference where the agent spoke:  traditionally, conference attendance is considered a sign that a writer is serious about learning how the publishing business works.  (Which is kind of funny, actually, as so many writers&#8217; conferences focus far more on craft than practical issues like manuscript preparation and submission.  You&#8217;d be amazed at how often conference organizers have asked incredulously, &#8220;You want to teach a two-hour seminar on formatting?  What on earth for?  Isn&#8217;t everybody already familiar with professional standards?&#8221;)   Even now, when so many writers are gleaning their knowledge from the Internet, many agents still tell attendees to include the conference&#8217;s name in the first line of the query, the subject line of the e-query, or both.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s worth using as an entrée even if you did not get a chance to interact with him at all.  At a large or snooty conference, it&#8217;s not always possible &#8212; and even if you do manage some face-to-face time, the agent may well be meeting so many aspiring writers in so short a time that he may not remember every individual.  So don&#8217;t be shy about reminding him that you were a face in the crowd.</p>
<p><strong>(6) Is it clear from the first paragraph what kind of book I am asking the agent to represent?</strong><br />
This may seem like a silly question, but it&#8217;s jaw-dropping how many otherwise well-written query letters don&#8217;t even specify whether the book in question is fiction or nonfiction.  Or the book category.  Or even, believe it or not, the title.</p>
<p>Quoth Millicent:  &#8220;Next!&#8221;</p>
<p>The book category, the most straightforward way to talk about your writing in professional terms, is the most often omitted element.  And that&#8217;s a shame, because in either a query or a pitch, the more terse and specific you can be about your book&#8217;s category, the more professional you will sound. </p>
<p>Why terse?  Well, mostly because book categories tend to be only one or two words long:  <em>historical romance, science fiction, urban fantasy, women&#8217;s fiction, Highland romance, YA paranormal, Western, literary fiction, memoir, and so forth.</em>  In fact, these terms are so concentrated that it&#8217;s very, very easy to annoy Millicent by adding unnecessary adjectives or explanation:  <em>literary fiction novel</em> or <em>science fiction novel</em> are technically redundant, for instance, because all novels are fiction, by definition.  By the same logic, <em>true memoir</em>, <em>real-life memoir</em>, and <em>memoir about my life</em> are all needlessly repetitive descriptions.</p>
<p>The sad thing is, the widespread tendency among both queries and pitchers is in the opposite direction of terseness &#8212; or even using the terminology that agents themselves use.  As much as writers seem to adore describing their work as, &#8220;Well, it&#8217;s sort of a romance, with a thriller plot, a horror villain, and a resolution like a cozy mystery,&#8221; agents and editors tend to hear ambiguous descriptions as either waffling, a book&#8217;s not being ready to market, or the writer&#8217;s just not being very familiar with how the industry actually works.  </p>
<p>Which means, incidentally, that within the query, you might want to avoid those ever-popular terms of waffle, <em>my writing defies categorization</em>, <em>my book is too complex to categorize</em>, <em>my book isn&#8217;t like anything else out there</em>, <em>no one has ever written a book like this before</em>, and that perennial favorite of first novelists, <em>it&#8217;s sort of autobiographical</em>. </p>
<p>Which, translated into industry-speak, come across respectively as <em>I&#8217;m not familiar with how books are sold in North America</em>, <em>I don&#8217;t know one book category from another</em>, <em>I&#8217;m not familiar with the current market in my area of interest &#8212; which means, Mr. Agent, that I haven&#8217;t been buying your clients&#8217; work lately</em>, <em>I&#8217;m not familiar with the history of the book market in my area</em>, and <em>I was afraid people would hurt me if I wrote this story as a memoir</em>.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t blame the translator, please:  the writers and the agents are just not speaking the same language.  </p>
<p>Contrary to popular opinion, picking a conceptual box for your work will not limit its market appeal; it will simply tell Millicent which shelf at Barnes &#038; Noble or category on Amazon you expect to house your book.  It honestly is that simple.  You really do not need to stress out about the choice nearly as much as most aspiring writers do.</p>
<p>So take a nice, deep breath and consider:  what books currently on the market does my book resemble?  How are these books categorized?  </p>
<p>&#8220;But Anne,&#8221; I hear the more prolific among you protest, &#8220;I write in a number of different book categories, and I&#8217;m looking for an agent to represent all of my work, not just some of it.  But won&#8217;t it be confusing if I list all of my areas of interest at the beginning of my query?&#8221;</p>
<p>In a word, yes &#8212; and generally speaking, it&#8217;s better strategy to query one book at a time, for precisely that reason.  If you like (and you should like, if you have a publication history in another book category), you may mention the other titles later in your query letter, down in the paragraph where you will be talking about your writing credentials.  It will only render you more memorable if you are the science fiction writer whose query included the immortal words, <em>Having twenty-seven years&#8217; experience as a deep-sea archeologist, I also am working on a book on underwater spelunking.</em></p>
<p>But in the first paragraph, no.  Do you really want to run the risk of confusing Millicent right off the bat about which project you are trying to sell?  Terseness is your friend here.</p>
<p><strong>(7) Does my letter sound as though I am excited about this book, or as if I have little confidence in the work?  Or does it read as though I’m apologizing for querying at all? </strong><br />
We all know that writing query letters is no one’s idea of a good time.  Well, maybe a few masochists enjoy it (if they’re <em>really</em> lucky, maybe they can give themselves a paper cut while they’re at it), but the vast majority of writers hate it, hate it, hate it.  </p>
<p>Which, unfortunately, can translate on the page into sounding apprehensive, unenthusiastic, or just plain tired.  While query fatigue is certainly understandable, it tends not to produce a positive tone for presenting your work.   </p>
<p>Insecurities, too, show up beautifully on the query page.  While the writer&#8217;s opinion of her own work is unavoidably biased, in my experience, that bias tends to be on the negative side for most.  We&#8217;ve all heard a lot about queriers who make overblown claims about their work (<em>This book will revolutionize fiction!</em>, <em>This is a sure-fire bestseller!</em>, or that perennial favorite, <em>It&#8217;s a natural for Oprah!</em>), but apologetic openings like <em>I&#8217;m so sorry to bother you,</em>, <em>Pardon me for taking up your time,</em>, and <em>This may not be the kind of book that interests you, but&#8230;</em> turn up on Millicent&#8217;s desk more often than you&#8217;d think.  </p>
<p>Much of the time, this sad-sack tone is the result of query fatigue.  I know that repeated rejection is depressing and exhausting, but it really is in your best interest to make an effort to try to sound as upbeat in your seventeenth query letter as in your first.  </p>
<p>No need to sound like a Mouseketeer on speed, of course, but try not to sound discouraged, either.  And never, ever, EVER mention how long you&#8217;ve been querying, how many agents have already rejected this project, or how hard it has been emotionally.  It&#8217;s unprofessional.  A query is not the place to express frustration with the querying process; save that for lively conversation with your aforementioned significant other, family members, and friends.  </p>
<p>While it is a nice touch to thank the agent at the end of the query for taking the time to consider your work, doing so in the first paragraph of the letter and/or repeatedly in the body can come across as a tad obsequious.  Begging tends not to be helpful in this situation. Remember, reading your query is the agent’s (or, more likely, the agent’s assistant’s) JOB, not a personal favor to you.  </p>
<p>No, no matter HOW long you&#8217;ve been shopping your book around.  Speaking of overly-effusive politeness,</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Of you have already pitched to an agent at a conference and she asked you to send materials, you do not need to query that same agent to ask permission to send them, unless she specifically said, &#8220;Okay, query me.&#8221;</em></p></blockquote>
<p>To the pros, being asked over and over again whether they REALLY meant that request is puzzling and, if it happens frequently, annoying.</p>
<p>Many conference-goers seem to be confused on this point.  Remember, in-person pitching is a <em>substitute</em> for querying, not merely an expensive extension of it.</p>
<p>This remains true, incidentally, even if many months have passed since that pitch session:  if it&#8217;s been less than a year since an agent requested pages, there is absolutely no need to query, call, or e-mail to confirm that she still wants to see them.  (If it&#8217;s been longer, do.)  </p>
<p><strong>(8) Does my book come across as genuinely marketable, or does the letter read as though I’m boasting?</strong><br />
In my many, many years of hanging out with publishing types, I have literally never met an agent who could not, if asked (and often if not), launch into a medley of annoyingly pushy, self-aggrandizing query letter openings he’s received.  As I <em>may</em> have mentioned already, </p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Every agent and screener in the biz already seen a lifetime’s supply of, “This is the greatest work ever written!”, “My book is the next bestseller!”, and “Don’t miss your opportunity to represent this book!”  Such inflated claims make a manuscript seem LESS marketable, ultimately, not more.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Trust me, they don’t want to hear it again.  Ever.  </p>
<p>So how do you make your work sound marketable without, well, just asserting that it is?  Glad you asked.</p>
<p><strong>(9) Does my query make it clear what kind of readers will buy my book &#8212; and why?</strong><br />
Few queries address this point, but to folks who speak publishing&#8217;s lingua franca, it&#8217;s simply not possible to talk about a manuscript without considering these questions.  So you&#8217;ll reap the benefits of both professional presentation and comparative rarity if your query identifies your target market clearly, demonstrating (with statistics, if you can) both how large it is and why your book will appeal to that particular demographic.  </p>
<p>Trust me, Millicent is going to respond quite a bit better to a statement like <em>MADAME BOVARY will resonate with the 20% of Americans who suffer from depression at some point in their lives</em> than <em>Every depressed woman in America will want to read this book!</em>   She sees the latter type of claim on a daily &#8212; or even hourly &#8212; basis and discounts it accordingly.   At best, such claims come across as exaggerations; at worst, they look like lies.</p>
<p>Why might she think that?  Well, logically, a claim like <em>Every depressed woman in America will want to read this book!</em> could not possibly be true.  No book appeals to everyone in a large demographic, and nobody knows that better than someone who works within the publishing industry.  Far, far better, then, to make a realistic claim that you can back up with concrete numbers. </p>
<p>I’m not talking about publishing statistics here; I&#8217;m talking about easy-to-track-down population statistics &#8212; and that comes as a big surprise to practically every aspiring writer who has ever taken my pitching class.  &#8220;Why,&#8221; they almost invariably cry, &#8220;shouldn&#8217;t I go to the trouble to find out how many books sold in my chosen category last year?  Wouldn&#8217;t that prove that my book is important enough to deserve to be published?&#8221;</p>
<p>Well, for starters, any agent or editor would already be aware of how well books in the categories they handle sell, right?   Mentioning the Amazon numbers for the latest bestseller is hardly going to impress them.  (And you&#8217;d be astonished by how many agents don&#8217;t really understand how those numbers work, anyway.)  </p>
<p>Instead, it makes far more sense to discover how many people there are who have already demonstrated interest in your book’s specific subject matter.  I feel a golden oldie coming on:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>No book ever written appeals to every conceivable reader &#8212; or can be represented effectively by any randomly-selected agent.  While your future publisher&#8217;s marketing department will undoubtedly have ideas about who your ideal reader is and why, it&#8217;s far, far easier to talk about your book professionally if you first take the time to figure out what kind of readers are in your target audience.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The term <em>target audience</em> made some of you tense up again, didn&#8217;t it?  As scary as it may be to think about, if you are going to make a living as a writer, you will be writing for a public.  In order to convince people in the publishing industry that yours is the voice that public wants and needs to hear, you will need to figure out who those people are, and why they will be drawn toward your book.  </p>
<p>Let&#8217;s start off with a nice, non-threatening definition of terms.  What is a target audience? </p>
<p>Simply put, the target audience for a book is the group of people most likely to buy it.  Not just a segment of the population, mind you, but readers who are already in the habit of buying books like yours.  That&#8217;s why it is also known as a target market:  it is the demographic (or the demographics) toward which your publisher will be gearing advertising.   </p>
<p>So I ask you:  who out there needs to read your book and why? </p>
<p>If that question leaves you a bit flummoxed, you&#8217;re certainly not alone &#8212; most fiction writers and nearly all memoirists initially have a difficult time answering that question about their own work.  First-time memoirists are notorious in their first panic to answer huffily, &#8220;Well, obviously, the book&#8217;s about <em>me</em>.&#8221;</p>
<p>Yes, that is obvious, now that you mention it.  But what else is the memoir about?   Even the most introspective memoir is about something other than its author.</p>
<p>Fiction writers, too, tend to stumble over the answer.  &#8220;Well, people will read it for the <em>writing</em>, obviously,&#8221; novelists mutter.  &#8220;Isn&#8217;t that enough?  It&#8217;s sort of based on something that really happened, if that helps.&#8221;</p>
<p>Of course, lovely writing is going to be one of a good novel&#8217;s attractions, but every book category has well-written books in it.  Well-crafted sentences are <em>expected</em> in professional writing.  But unless you are planning to market your book as literary fiction &#8212; i.e., a novel where the beauty or experimental nature of the writing and exquisitely-examined character development are the book&#8217;s primary selling points &#8212; nice writing, which of course a plus, is not much of a descriptor.  (Besides, literary fiction is a relatively tiny portion of the fiction market, usually coming in around 3-4%.  Why so small?  It assumes a college-educated readership.)</p>
<p>What makes it a poor descriptor?  It does not answer the central questions of a query letter:  what is your book <em>about</em>, and who needs to read it?</p>
<p>Or, to put in the terms Millicent might:  what are the potential readers for this book already reading?  Why are they reading it?  What about this book is likely to appeal to those same readers?</p>
<p>But let&#8217;s not get ahead of ourselves.  Your book is about <em>something</em> other than its protagonist, right?  That something has probably been written about before &#8212; so why not find out how those books were marketed, to glean inspiration about how to market yours?   (As Pablo Picasso was reportedly fond of saying, &#8220;Bad artists copy.  Good artists steal.&#8221;)</p>
<p>Or you can approach it even more straightforwardly:  pick an element of your story that might make your ideal reader pick up your book.  It&#8217;s set on a farm; the protagonist&#8217;s sister has multiple sclerosis; the characters keep going to a drive-in movie theatre.  Any running theme is legitimate subject matter for marketing purposes.</p>
<p>Then ask yourself:  who might be interested in this subject?  How many small family farms are there in the US?  Just how many people have multiple sclerosis?  Who is likely to remember drive-in theatres fondly?</p>
<p>Getting the picture?   Might not people who are already interested in that topic &#8212; and, ideally, are already demonstrating that interest by buying books about it &#8212; be reasonably regarded as potential readers for your book?   What books do these readers already buy?  Who are their favorite living authors, and what traits do your books share with theirs?  </p>
<p>While we&#8217;re at it, who represents these readers&#8217; favorite authors, and would those agents be interested in your book?</p>
<p>Is tracking down all of this information bound to be a lot of work?  Yes, possibly, but as the Internet has made performing such research quite a bit easier than it was at any previous point in human history, you&#8217;re probably not going to garner any sympathy from Millicent.  (Word to the wise:  just because information is posted online doesn&#8217;t mean it is true; it&#8217;s worth your while to double-check with credible sources.  Why, just last month, a Wikipedia spokesperson told an interviewer that the site is not intended to be anyone&#8217;s only source of information; it&#8217;s designed to give an overview of a subject.)  But just as performing background research on who agents are and what they represent will enable you to target your queries more effectively than indiscriminate mass mailings to everyone who has ever sold a book in your book category, doing a bit of digging on your target audience before you send out your queries will save you time in the long run.</p>
<p>Still at a loss about how to begin about gathering this data, or even what information you should be gathering?  As it happens, I&#8217;ve written about these issues at some length &#8212; and have carefully hidden the relevant posts under the obscure monikers IDENTIFYING YOUR TARGET MARKET and YOUR BOOK’S SELLING POINTS in the category list at right.  Those posts should give you quite a bit of material for brainstorming. </p>
<p>Do I hear some disgruntled muttering out there?  “I’m not a marketer; I’m a writer,” I hear some of you say. “How the heck should I know who is going to buy my book?  And anyway, shouldn’t a well-written book be its own justification to anyone but a money-grubbing philistine?”   </p>
<p>Well, yes, in a perfect world &#8212; or one without a competitive market.  But neither is, alas, the world in which we currently live.  </p>
<p>As nice as it would be if readers flocked to buy our books simply because we had invested a whole lot of time in writing them, no potential book buyer is interested in EVERY book on the market, right?  There are enough beautifully-written books out there that most readers expect to be offered something else as well:  an exciting plot, for instance, or information about an interesting phenomenon.</p>
<p>To pitch or query your book successfully, you&#8217;re going to need to be able to make it look to the philistines like a good investment.</p>
<p>And before anybody out there gets huffy about how the industry really ought to publish gorgeously-written books for art’s sake alone, rather than books that are likely to appeal to a particular demographic, think about what the pure art route would mean from the editor’s perspective:  if she can realistically bring only 4 books to press in the next year (not an unusually low per-editor number, by the way), how many of them can be serious marketing risks, without placing herself in danger of losing her job?  Especially in this economy, when the major publishers have been trimming their editorial staffs.</p>
<p>As with choosing a book category, it pays to be specific.  For one thing, it will make your query stand out from the crowd.  And PLEASE, for your own sake, avoid the oh-so-common trap of the dismissive too-broad answer, especially the ever-popular <em>women everywhere will be interested in this book; every American will want to buy this; it&#8217;s a natural for Oprah.</em>  Even in the extremely unlikely event that any of these statements is literally true in your book&#8217;s case, agents and editors hear such statements so often that by this point in human history, they simply tune them out.</p>
<p>Make sure your target market is defined believably &#8212; but don&#8217;t be afraid to use your imagination.  Is your ideal reader a college-educated woman in her thirties or forties? Is it a girl aged 10-13 who doesn’t quite fit in with her classmates?  Is it an office worker who likes easy-to-follow plots to peruse while he’s running on the treadmill?  Is it a working grandmother who fears she will never be able to afford to retire?  Is it a commuter who reads on the bus for a couple of hours a day, seeking an escape from a dull, dead-end job? </p>
<p>While these may sound like narrow definitions, each actually represents an immense group of people, and a group that buys a heck of a lot of books.  Give some thought to who they are, and what they will get out of your book.</p>
<p>Or, to put a smilier face upon it, how will this reader’s life be improved by reading this particular book, as opposed to any other?  Why will the book speak to her?</p>
<p>Again, be as specific as you can.  As with book category, if you explain in nebulous terms who you expect to read your book, you will simply not be speaking the language of agents and editors.  </p>
<p>Try to think of learning to speak this language as less of an annoying hurdle than as another step toward assembling a serious writer’s bag of marketing tools, a collection that will, I hope, serve you well throughout the rest of your writing life.  Learning to figure out a book’s ideal readership, how to identify a selling point, coming to describe a book in the manner the industry best understands &#8212; these are all skills that transcend the agent-finding stage of a writer’s career.  </p>
<p>More thoughts on marketing your work follow at 10 am. In the meantime, keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, part V:  before you pop that missive in the mail…</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11804</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11804#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Sep 2010 01:00:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency screeners' pet peeves of the notorious variety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Book categories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Conference lore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dealing with fear of rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dealing with rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[E-mailing queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frankenstein manuscripts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frankenstein queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Industry etiquette]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Is it OK to query several agents at once?]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Keeping the faith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Post-pitch etiquette]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Proofreading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queries that are too long]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query + sample pages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query packets and things that go in them]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying fatigue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying multiple agents at once]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection and how to cope with it]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection:  when they don't tell you at all]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rejection: when they don't tell you why]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[e-maiing queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-mailed queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[multiple queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query fatigue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letters 101]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query packets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[querying complacency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[simultaneous queries]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[writers' confrences]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[writing query letters]]></category>

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We&#8217;ve just been zipping through the diagnosis and treatment of the ailments from which your garden-variety query letter tends to suffer, haven&#8217;t we?  There&#8217;s a good reason for that:  many, many aspiring writers stateside are using this long weekend to prepare their next barrages of query letters, and I wanted my readers to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Anne-Mini-and-the-mail-slot-819x1024.jpg" alt="Anne Mini and the mail slot" title="Anne Mini and the mail slot" width="512" height="640" class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-11806" /></p>
<p>We&#8217;ve just been zipping through the diagnosis and treatment of the ailments from which your garden-variety query letter tends to suffer, haven&#8217;t we?  There&#8217;s a good reason for that:  many, many aspiring writers stateside are using this long weekend to prepare their next barrages of query letters, and I wanted my readers to have freshly updated advice on hand for the beginning of the autumn foray.  </p>
<p>It&#8217;s not only the queriers who are feeling autumn in the air these days; it&#8217;s prime polishing time for submitters, too.  Labor Day marks the dividing line between the summer writers&#8217; conference season and the fall conference season, so pitchers who received requests for materials over the summer are starting to feel antsy about sending out those submissions.  Another week&#8217;s worth &#8212; or month&#8217;s worth &#8212; of proofreading won&#8217;t harm their books&#8217; chances, actually, but still, most savvy manuscript-owers feel that they should send out summer-requested materials by the time school starts.</p>
<p>The cumulative result, naturally, is that when Millicent, her fellow agency screeners, and their boss agents come dragging into the office on Tuesday, they will be greeted by a month&#8217;s backlog of queries and submissions.  Inboxes both literal and virtual will be stuffed to overflowing.  </p>
<p>So it&#8217;s probably not the world&#8217;s worst idea to hold off for a couple of weeks or so before you mail yours off, if only to wait until Millie&#8217;s in a better mood.  At minimum, do not even dream of e-mailing a query until at least Thursday, when the into-the-agency flood will have subsided a little.  (You already knew not to e-mail queries on weekends in general, right?  Monday morning always greets Millicents and their agents with overloaded inboxes.)</p>
<p>All of which is to say:  just because we&#8217;re devoting this weekend to all things query-related does not mean that you absolutely have to send something off by the end of the weekend, or even the end of the week.    I&#8217;d much, much rather see my readers spend an extra week or two on drafting a really good query letter than to have any of you kicking yourselves a month from now, wishing you&#8217;d queried differently.</p>
<p>Especially if the difference between popping it in the mail on this Tuesday a.m. and next means being able to have someone whose literary (and grammatical) opinion you trust read your query draft.  Even if a writer’s been at it a while, it can be pretty hard to see the flaws in one’s own query letters &#8212; and for some reason I have never been able to fathom, even aspiring writers professional enough to be routinely soliciting feedback on their manuscripts often guard their queries jealously from any human eyes other than Millicent&#8217;s.  </p>
<p>Whose peepers, as those of you who have been visiting this blog for a good long time are already aware, are not generally charitably-oriented.  And that&#8217;s as much of a problem for writers accustomed to the querying process as for those new to it:  since most experienced queriers will tweak their basic query letters to personalize them for each (don&#8217;t worry; I&#8217;ll be getting to that), there tends to be a lot of cutting, pasting, and general rewriting going on between mailings and/or strikings of the SEND button.</p>
<p>And what is an extremely likely outcome when any piece of writing is constantly being revised over time?  Shout it out, those of you who were hanging around this blog earlier in the summer:  it can turn into a Frankenstein manuscript, an unholy mish-mash of half-completed revisions.</p>
<p>The single most common type of Frankenstein query, as we saw last time, is the mismatched salutation and address.  Nothing screams out <em>I&#8217;m doing a mass mailing of queries, and you, sir, are palpably on the bottom of my wish list!</em> like a letter that runs thus:</p>
<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/wrong-names-query.jpg" alt="wrong names query" title="wrong names query" width="466" height="603" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-11828" /></p>
<p>See the problem?  In the stress of sending out multiple queries &#8212; a smart strategy in its own right, by the way; with sometimes months-long turn-around times at some agencies and no-reply policies at others, waiting to hear back from Agent A before querying Agent B is a sure-fire strategy for wasting years of your life &#8212; Mssr. Flaubert copied the address of one agent onto a letter personalized for another.</p>
<p>What he intended to send (and probably didn&#8217;t ever notice he <em>didn&#8217;t</em> send) was this:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg" alt="" title="a-query-for-mme-b" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1265" /></a></p>
<p>Our Gustave fell victim to query fatigue, in short.  Quite understandable, of course, but how do you think Ms. Marketer is likely to respond not only to being addressed by the wrong name and with the honorific for the wrong sex, but being congratulated for her speech at a conference she never attended?</p>
<p>That&#8217;s right, campers:  &#8220;Next!&#8221;</p>
<p>So please, <strong>proofread <em>every single query</em> every single time </strong>.  Yes, even e-queries.  Many a Millicent has been left shaking her head regretfully over a dropped word or misspelling in an otherwise admirable query.  </p>
<p>Better yet, have a first reader you trust go over it.  This is an excellent contribution to your writing career for any significant others, family members, or friends whom you, in your great wisdom, have deemed too fond of you to be trusted to provide critical feedback on your manuscript.  (Trust me, &#8220;But my mom loved it!&#8221; is not an argument that flies well in the publishing industry.)</p>
<p>Whatever you do, don&#8217;t fall into the oh-so-common trap of getting complacent about your basic query.  Just because a letter has garnered chapter requests in the past does not mean that it couldn&#8217;t use a bit of punching up.  Even if you are a querying veteran, at least cast your eye over this list of garden-variety query turn-offs.  </p>
<p>That&#8217;s right, campers:  it&#8217;s another of my famous faux pas check-lists.</p>
<p>Why should a writer who has been querying a while take the time to go through a do-not list?  Well, for most aspiring writers, it takes quite a bit of rejection to open their eyes to the possibility that their query letters themselves might be problematic.  Okay, out comes the broken record:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Unfortunately, writers all too often automatically assume that it’s the <strong>idea</strong> of the book being rejected, rather than a style-hampered querying letter or a limp synopsis. </em> </p></blockquote>
<p>But how is this possible, without a level of mental telepathy on the screener’s part that would positively stun the Amazing Kreskin? </p>
<p>Are the rejecting agents seeing past the initial letter to the manuscript itself, decreeing from afar that the writing is not worth reading &#8212; and thus that the writer should not be writing?  Do they have some sort of direct cosmic link to the Muses that allows them to glance at the first three lines of a query and say, “Nope, this one was last in line when the talent was handed out.  Sorry,” before they toss it into the rejection pile?</p>
<p>No, of course not.  Only editors have that kind of direct telephonic connection to the demi-gods.</p>
<p>Yet this particular fear leaps like a lion onto many fledgling writers, dragging them off the path to future efforts:  it is the first cousin that dangerous, self-hating myth that afflicts too many writers, leading to despair, the notion that if one is <em>really</em> talented, the first draft, the first query, and the first book will automatically traject one to stardom. </p>
<p>It never –- well, almost never &#8212; turns out like that.  Out comes the broken record player again:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Being a professional writer is <strong>work</strong>, and what gets the vast majority of queries rejected is a lack of adherence to professional standards.  Which can, my friends, be learned.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>As, indeed, we’ve seen over the course of Querypalooza.  But what if you already have a query letter that meets all the technical criteria, and it’s still not getting the responses you want?  </p>
<p>Pull up your chairs close, boys and girls:  it’s time for the master class on querying.  Today, we’re going to concentrate on fine-tuning the delicate art of query diagnosis.  </p>
<p>Why?  I feel another broken record coming on:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>The querying market is even tighter than it was the last time I visited this issue.  It&#8217;s as competitive now as it has ever been in my lifetime.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>And I&#8217;m not nearly so young as I look.  (Nor is my hair always as wild as it appears in the photo at the top of this post, but that&#8217;s another story.)</p>
<p>Seriously, it&#8217;s a jungle out there, to coin a phrase.  But before you begin to feel for your submission’s pulse, please (wait for it):</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Re-read <strong>everything</strong> in your query packet IN HARD COPY and OUT LOUD:  your query letter, synopsis, author bio, and ANY pages the agency&#8217;s website or agency guide listing has asked queriers to include in a querying packet.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Better still, read them over AND have someone you trust read it over as well, checking for logical holes and grammatical problems. For any attached pages, the best choice for this is another writer, ideally one who has successfully traversed the perils of the agent-finding ravine.  Let’s slap another broken record on the turntable:  </p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>As much as you may love your mother, your spouse, and your best friend, they are, generally speaking not the best judges of your writing.</em> </p></blockquote>
<p>Look to these fine folks for support, encouragement, and the occasional spot-check for salutation-matching, not for technical feedback on your writing. Find someone whose LITERARY opinion you trust &#8212; such as, say, a great writer you met at a conference, or the person in your writing group who keeps being asked to send sample chapters &#8212; and blandish her into giving your query packet materials a solid reading. </p>
<p>(Lest you think I am casting unwarranted aspersions upon your mother, your spouse, or your best friend, let me add that my own fabulous mother spent her twenties editing the work of Philip K. Dick and others; fifty years later, she is one of the best line editors I have ever seen, in my professional opinion, but as she is my mother, I would never dream of using her as my only, or indeed even my primary feedback source.  Naturally, that doesn’t stop her from line editing while she reads my work, as I do for hers &#8212; years of professional editing causes a particular type of myopia that prevents one from ever reading again without brandishing a vicious pen that attacks margins with the intensity a charging rhinoceros &#8212; but I respect my work enough to want first reader feedback from someone who was NOT there when I took my first toddling steps.) </p>
<p>As excellent as this advice is, I sense that some of you are already merrily making plans to disregard it.  If you are planning to be the only pre-Millicent peruser of your query packet&#8230;</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Make sure that you read all of the constituent parts of your submissions in hard copy, not just on a computer screen.  Proofreading is far easier –- and more likely to be accurate &#8212; in hard copy.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>I&#8217;m quite serious about treating this a final flight-check:  don’t leave rooting out the proofreading and logic problems until the last minute.  As Gustave knows to his sorrow, it&#8217;s just too easy to skip them when you&#8217;re in a hurry.</p>
<p>Once you have cleared out any grammatical or spelling problems and made sure your submission pieces say what you thought they were saying (you’d be surprised how many don’t), sit down with yourself and/or that trusted first reader and ask yourself the following questions.   </p>
<p><strong>(1) Is my query letter longer than a single page in standard correspondence format?</strong><br />
I covered this earlier in this series, speaking of broken records, but it bears repeating:  <em>even e-mailed queries longer than a page are seldom read in their entirety</em>. I know it’s hard to cram everything you want to say to promote your work into a single page, but it’s just not worth it to go longer.  </p>
<p>And please, for your own sake, don’t take the common escape route of shrinking the margins or the typeface; trust me, any screener, agent, editor, or contest judge with even a few weeks&#8217; worth of experience can tell.  (For a quick, visual-aid-assisted run-down on why their being able to tell that is bad news for the querier who does it, please see <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=11781">my last post</a>.)</p>
<p>Remember, if you are sending a paper query or any pages at all (even if the agency&#8217;s guidelines ask you to imbed them in an e-mail),</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>You must indent your paragraphs in a mailed query letter &#8212; or, indeed, in any writing sample of any length intended for agent-dwelling eyes.  No exceptions; business format is not acceptable in this context.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>For those of you unclear on the difference between correspondence format and business format (or, to put it another way, those who are coming upon this checklist in my archives, rather than reading it as today&#8217;s post), please see <a href="http://www.annemini.com/?p=11721">my earlier post on the subject</a>.</p>
<p><strong>(2) If my query letter just refuses to be shorter than a page, am I trying to achieve too much in it?  Specifically, is my query trying to do more than get the agent to ask to see the manuscript? </strong><br />
Is it perhaps trying to convince the agent (or the screener) that this is a terrific book, or maybe including the plot, rather than the premise?  Is it reviewing the book, rather than describing it?  Is it begging for attention, rather than presenting the book professionally?  Is it trying to suit the tastes of <em>every</em> agent to whom you might conceivably send it, rather than the <em>one</em> to whom it is currently addressed?  </p>
<p>All of these are extremely common ways in which query letters over-reach.  Like pitches, queries often turn into litanies of summary, rather than convincing, professional presentations of a book&#8217;s category, premise, and selling points.  As I have advised before,</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Don&#8217;t try to cram a half an hour&#8217;s worth of conversation about your book into a scant page.  Just present the information necessary to interest an agent in your manuscript, then STOP.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>(3) If my query letter is too long, am I spending too many lines of text describing the plot?</strong><br />
The attempt to force the query to serve the purpose of the synopsis or book proposal is, of course, the most common letter-extender of them all.  All too often, the plot or argument description overflows its allotted single paragraph so dramatically that other necessary features of the query letter &#8212; why the querier has selected THIS agent and no other, the intended readership, the book category &#8212; get tossed overboard in a desperate attempt to keep the whole to a single page.</p>
<p>The simplest fix for this, in most instances, is to reduce the length of the descriptive paragraph.  </p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Remember, your job in the query is not to summarize the book (that’s what the synopsis is for), but to pique enough interest to generate a request for pages.  Keep it brief.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>How brief?  Well, let&#8217;s just say that if you can’t say the first two paragraphs of your query letter &#8212; the ones where you say why you are approaching that particular agent, the book category, and the premise &#8212; in under 20 seconds of normal speech, you might want to take a gander at the ELEVATOR SPEECH category at right.  </p>
<p><strong>(4) Is my query letter polite?  Does it make me sound like a professional writer it might be a hoot to get to know?</strong><br />
You’d be amazed at how often writers use the query letter as a forum for blaming the agent addressed for prevailing conditions in the publishing industry, up to and including how difficult it is to land an agent.   But (feel free to sing along; you should all know the words by now)</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/broken-record-150x150.jpg" alt="broken-record" title="broken-record" width="75" height="75" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-2446" /> <em>Millicent and her ilk did not create the ambient conditions for writers; treating them as though they did merely betrays a lack of familiarity with how the industry actually works.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>And even if they <em>had</em> plotted in dark, smoke-filled rooms about how best to make writers’ lives more difficult, pointing it out either explicitly or implicitly would not be the best way to win friends and influence people. In my experience, lecturing a virtual stranger on how mean agents are is not the best tack to take when trying to make a new friend who happens to be an agent, any more than cracking out your best set of lawyer jokes would be at a bar association meeting.</p>
<p>I’ve seen some real lulus turn up in query letters.  My personal favorite began <em>Since you agents have set yourself up as the guardians of the gates of the publishing world, I suppose I need to appeal to you first…  </em></p>
<p>A close second:  <em>I know that challenging books seldom get published these days, but I’m hoping you’ll be smart enough to see that mine…</em></p>
<p>And third:  <em>Before you dismiss this query without reading it, just let me point out…</em></p>
<p>Remember, even if you met an agent at a conference (or via a recommendation from a client) and got along with him as though you’d known each other since nursery school, <strong>a query is a business letter</strong>.  Be cordial, but do not presume that it is okay to be overly familiar.  </p>
<p>Demonstrate that you are a professional writer who understands that the buying and selling of books is a serious business.  After hours staring at query letters filled with typos and blame, professional presentation comes as a positive relief to Millicent.</p>
<p>The checklist shall continue in my late-night (2 am Pacific) Querypalooza post.  Keep plowing forward, everyone, and keep up the good work!</p>
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		<title>Querypalooza, part IV:  good morning, sunshine!  Let’s take a peek at some good and bad query letters</title>
		<link>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11781</link>
		<comments>http://www.annemini.com/?p=11781#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 05 Sep 2010 17:00:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[*Query letters for beginners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agency screeners' pet peeves of the notorious variety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dealing with fear of rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dealing with rejection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dear Agent letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[E-mailing queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How to write a query letter from scratch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Keeping the faith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queries that are too long]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query + sample pages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letter troubleshooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying fatigue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying faux pas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querying or submitting to US agencies from outside the US]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Querypalooza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Realistic expectations for writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-mailed queries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-querying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[font]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[font choice]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[how to format a query letter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[query letters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Query letters 101]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SASE]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
So far in these Querypalooza posts &#8212; fun to be covering this material so quickly, isn&#8217;t it? &#8212; I have been talking about how to present your book project so that it sounds like a professional pitch, rather than a carnival hawker introducing the Greatest (fill in the blank here) in the World.  Peeks [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/sun-on-Oregon-water-1024x768.jpg" alt="sun on Oregon water" title="sun on Oregon water" width="512" height="384" class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-11784" /></p>
<p>So far in these Querypalooza posts &#8212; fun to be covering this material so quickly, isn&#8217;t it? &#8212; I have been talking about how to present your book project so that it sounds like a professional pitch, rather than a carnival hawker introducing the Greatest (fill in the blank here) in the World.  Peeks only 10 cents!  </p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been sticking to content, but this time, I&#8217;d like to focus on purely cosmetic issues.  </p>
<p>No, I&#8217;m not advising you to apply rouge and lip gloss to your query letter.  (No, not even if it is introducing a book proposal on make-up tips; remember, flashy gimmicks don&#8217;t work).  I&#8217;m talking about how your query looks, rather than what it says.</p>
<p>I hear some of you grumbling already, don&#8217;t I?  &#8220;But Anne!&#8221; a few voices protest out there in the ether.  &#8220;Books are made up of words arranged in sentences.  I can understand why I need to make my manuscript appear professional by adhering to the rules of standard format, conveniently gathered for my benefit under the HOW TO FORMAT A MANUSCRIPT category on the archive list conveniently located on the lower right-hand side of this page, but a query letter rises or falls purely on its content, doesn&#8217;t it?  As long as I do not scrawl it in crayon on tissue paper, why should I worry about what it looks like?&#8221;</p>
<p>Why, indeed?  Rather than tell you, I&#8217;m going to show you.</p>
<p>Actually, before I demonstrate just how a poorly presented query looks wrong, let&#8217;s take a gander at what a really good query letter looks like.  Not so you can copy it verbatim &#8212; rote reproductions abound in rejection piles, lest we forget &#8212; but so you may see what the theory looks like in practice.  </p>
<p>And please, those of you who only e-query:  don&#8217;t assume that none of what I&#8217;m about to say about traditional paper queries is applicable to you.  Even agents who accept only e-mailed queries were weaned on mailed ones; the paper version is still the industry standard, dictating what does and does not look professional to folks in the biz.  Even if there is no paper whatsoever involved in your querying process, you should still be aware of how query letters should appear on a page.</p>
<p>So you could see the principles we&#8217;ve been discussing in action, I’ve decided to construct a query for a book  whose story you might know:  MADAME BOVARY.  (If you&#8217;re having trouble reading it at its current size, try holding down the COMMAND key and pushing the + key a couple of times.)</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg" alt="" title="a-query-for-mme-b" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1265" /></a></p>
<p>After the last few posts, I hope it&#8217;s clear to you why this is an awfully good query letter:  in addition to containing all of the required elements, it presents the book well, in businesslike terms, without coming across as too pushy or arrogant.  Even more pleasing to Millicent&#8217;s eye, it makes the book sound genuinely interesting AND describes it in terms that imply a certain familiarity with how the publishing industry works.  </p>
<p>Well done, Gustave!  (The date on the letter is when the first installment of MADAME BOVARY was published, incidentally; I couldn&#8217;t resist.)</p>
<p>For the sake of comparison, let’s take a gander at what the query might have looked like had Mssr. Flaubert <em>not</em> done his homework.  </p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/bad-flaubert-query.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/bad-flaubert-query.jpg" alt="" title="bad-flaubert-query" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1266" /></a></p>
<p>You see what&#8217;s wrong with this second letter, right?  Obviously, the contractions are far too casual for a professional missive.</p>
<p>No, but seriously, I hope that you spotted the unsupported boasting, the bullying, disrespectful tone, and the fact that this query doesn&#8217;t really describe the book.  Also, to Millicent&#8217;s eye, its being addressed to <em>Dear Agent</em> and undated would indicate that ol&#8217; Gustave is simply plastering the entire agent community with queries, regardless of individual agents&#8217; representation preferences.  </p>
<p>That alone would almost certainly lead her to reject MADAME BOVARY out of hand, without reading the body of the letter at all.  And those ten pages the agency&#8217;s website or listing in a standard agents&#8217; guide said to send?  Returned unread to our pal Gus.</p>
<p>The Dear Agent letter has a first cousin that also tends to engender automatic rejection.  It&#8217;s a gaffe to which even very experienced queriers routinely fall prey.  See if you can spot it:</p>
<p><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/bad-flaubert-query-letter-2-791x1024.jpg" alt="bad-flaubert-query-letter-2" title="bad-flaubert-query-letter-2" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-6422" /></p>
<p>If you reared back in horror, exclaiming, &#8220;Oh, no!  Our Gustave has sent the query to agent Clarissa Richardson, but left the salutation from what was probably his last query to agent Tom Jones!&#8221; congratulations:  you win a gold star with walnut clusters.  Since the advent of the home computer, aspiring writers have been falling into this trap constantly.</p>
<p>The cure?  Pull out your hymnals, long-time readers, and sing along:  <strong>read EVERY SYLLABLE of <em>each</em> query letter IN HARD COPY and OUT LOUD.  </strong></p>
<p>Yes, even if you are e-querying or pasting a letter into a form on an agency&#8217;s website.  Do not hit SEND until you have made absolutely sure that the salutation matches the recipient.</p>
<p>Did you catch the two other major problems with both version of this letter?  Go ahead; go back and look again.</p>
<p>First, how exactly is the agent to contact Gustave to request him to send the manuscript?  She can&#8217;t, of course, because Mssr. Flaubert has made the mistake of leaving out that information, as an astonishingly high percentage of queriers do.</p>
<p>Why?  I suspect it&#8217;s because they assume that if they include a SASE (that&#8217;s Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope, for those of you new to the trade, and it should be included with every mailed query and submission unless the agency&#8217;s website specifically says otherwise), the agent already has their contact information.  </p>
<p>A similar logic tends to prevail with e-mailed queries:  all the agent needs to do is hit REPLY, right?</p>
<p>Not necessarily:  e-mailed queries get forwarded from agent to assistant and back again all the time, and SASEs have been known to go astray.   I speak from personal experience here:  I once received a kind rejection for someone else&#8217;s book stuffed into my SASE.  I returned the manuscript with a polite note informing the agency of the mistake, along with the suggestion that perhaps they had lost MY submission.  </p>
<p>True story.  To add a happy ending:  the agency assistant who wrote the extremely apologetic response to my having handled it professionally grew up to be my current agent, now a senior agent at the same agency.  </p>
<p>The moral: <strong>don&#8217;t depend on the SASE or return button alone.  Include your contact information either in the body of the letter or in its header.</strong></p>
<p>This is especially important if you happen to be querying a US-based agent from outside the US.  English-speaking foreign writers often presume, wrongly, that US agents have a strong preference for working with the locals, that not being able to fly a few thousand miles for frequent face-to-face meetings would be a deal-breaker, or that an expatriate would be better off using her mom&#8217;s home address in Indiana so as to appear to be living in North America.  As a result, they tend not to mention in their (almost invariably e-) queries that they and their manuscripts are not currently stateside.</p>
<p>However, the US is a mighty big country; distance is not a deal-breaker, typically.  NYC-based agents have been representing clients without meeting them in person since the early 20th century.  Some agencies might deduct the cost of international phone calls from the advance, just as they might choose to charge the writer for photocopying, but in the era of e-mail and Skype, that&#8217;s increasingly rare.</p>
<p>Go ahead and include your contact information, wherever you are.  Being far-flung might even be a selling point, if the agent happens to like to travel.  (Oh, you don&#8217;t think the agent of your dreams would like to crash for a few days on your couch in London?)</p>
<p>But I digress.  Back to the diagnosis already in progress.</p>
<p>Gustave&#8217;s second problem is a bit more subtle, not so much a major gaffe as a small signal to Millicent that the manuscript to which the letter refers might not be professionally polished.  Any guesses?</p>
<p>If you said that it was in business format rather than correspondence format, congratulations:  you&#8217;ve been paying attention.  In a mailed submission, it would look less literate than precisely the same letter properly formatted.   (It would be fine in an e-mailed submission, where indented paragraphs are harder to format.)</p>
<p>Any other diagnoses?  No?  Okay, let me infect the good query with the same virus, to help make the problem a bit more visible to the naked eye:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/helvetica-mme-b.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/helvetica-mme-b.jpg" alt="" title="helvetica-mme-b" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1267" /></a></p>
<p>See it now?  This otherwise estimable letter is written in Helvetica, not Times, Times New Roman, or Courier, the preferred typefaces for manuscripts.</p>
<p>Was that huge huff of indignation that just billowed toward space an indication that favoring one font over another in queries strikes some of you as a tad unfair?   Especially since very few agencies openly express font preferences for queries (although a few do; check their websites and/or agency book listings).  </p>
<p>To set your minds at ease, I&#8217;ve never seen font choice alone be a rejection trigger.  (Although font size often is; stick to 12 point.)  However, I can tell you from very, very long experience working with aspiring writers that queries in the standard typefaces do seem to be treated with a touch more respect.</p>
<p>I know; odd.  But worth knowing, don&#8217;t you think? </p>
<p>While we&#8217;re on the subject of cosmetic problems, let&#8217;s take a look at another common yet purely structural way that well-written query letters can send off an unprofessional vibe:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/page-1-b-query.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/page-1-b-query.jpg" alt="" title="page-1-b-query" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1268" /></a></p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/page-2-bovary-q.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/page-2-bovary-q.jpg" alt="" title="page-2-bovary-q" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1269" /></a></p>
<p>Not all that subtle, this:  a query letter needs to be a SINGLE page.  This restriction is taken so seriously that very, very few Millicents would even start to read this letter.  </p>
<p>Why are agencies so rigid about length when dealing with people who are, after all, writers?  Long-time readers, chant it with me now:  TIME.  Can you imagine how lengthy the average query letter would be if agencies <em>didn&#8217;t</em> limit how long writers could ramble on about their books?</p>
<p>Stop smiling.  It would be awful, at least for Millicent.</p>
<p>Fortunately, the one-page limit seems to be the most widely-known of querying rules, if one of the most often fudged in e-queries.  &#8220;What&#8217;s Millicent going to do?&#8221; the fudger mutters. &#8220;Print it out in order to catch me at my little ruse?  She doesn&#8217;t have that kind of time.&#8221;  </p>
<p>Which is rather unfair to screeners, since e-queries can, since they omit the date and address salutation at the top of the message, be several lines longer and still fit within the one-page ideal.  I just mention.</p>
<p>The one-page limit is so widely known, in fact, that aspiring writers frequently tempt Millicent&#8217;s wrath through conjuring tricks that force all of the information the writer wishes to provide onto a single page.  Popular choices include minimizing the margins:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/no-margins-query.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/no-margins-query.jpg" alt="" title="no-margins-query" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1270" /></a></p>
<p>or shrinking the font size:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/tiny-query.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/tiny-query.jpg" alt="" title="tiny-query" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1271" /></a></p>
<p>or, most effective at all, using the scale function under Page Setup in Word to shrink the entire document:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/shrunk-query.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/shrunk-query.jpg" alt="" title="shrunk-query" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1272" /></a></p>
<p>Let me burst this bubble before any of you even try to blow it up to its full extent:  this sort of document-altering magic will not help an over-long query sneak past Millicent&#8217;s scrutiny, for the exceedingly simple reason that she will not be fooled by it.  </p>
<p>Not even for a nanosecond.  The only message such a query letter sends is <em>this writer cannot follow directions.</em></p>
<p>An experienced contest judge would not be fooled, either, incidentally, should you be thinking of using any of these tricks to crush a too-lengthy chapter down to the maximum acceptable page length.  Ditto for pages requested for submissions to agencies or publishing houses:  if you shrink it, they will know.</p>
<p>Why am I so certain that Millie will catch strategic shrinkage?  For precisely the same reason that deviations from standard format in manuscripts are so obvious to professional readers:  the fact that they read correctly-formatted pages ALL THE TIME.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t believe the tricks above wouldn&#8217;t be instantaneously spottable?  Okay, glance at them, then take another peek at our first example of the day:</p>
<p><a href='http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg'><img src="http://www.annemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/a-query-for-mme-b.jpg" alt="" title="a-query-for-mme-b" width="466" height="603" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1265" /></a></p>
<p>Viewed side-by-side, the differences are pretty obvious, aren&#8217;t they?  Even in the extremely unlikely event that Millicent isn&#8217;t really sure that the query in front of her contains some trickery, all she has to do is move her fingertips a few inches to the right or the left of it, open the next query letter, and perform an enlightening little compare-and-contrast exercise.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t tempt her to do it.  </p>
<p>The benefits of eschewing formatting skullduggery is not the only thing I would like you to learn from today&#8217;s examples.  What I would also like you to take away:  with one egregious exception, these examples were all more or less the same query letter in terms of content, all pitching the same book.  Yet only one of these is at all likely to engender a request to read the actual MANUSCRIPT.</p>
<p>In other words, <em>even a great book will be rejected at the querying stage if it is queried or pitched poorly.</em>  Yes, many agents would snap up Mssr. Flaubert in a heartbeat after reading his wonderful prose &#8212; but with a query letter like the second, or with some of the sneaky formatting tricks exhibited here, the probability of any agent’s asking to read it is close to zero.</p>
<p>The moral, should you care to know it:  <strong>how a writer presents his work &#8212; in the query every bit as much as on the manuscript page &#8212; matters.  And even a book as genuinely gorgeous as MADAME BOVARY would not see the inside of a Borders today unless Flaubert kept sending out query letters, rather than curling up in a ball after the first rejection.  </strong></p>
<p>Deep down, pretty much every writer believes that if she were <em>really</em> talented, her work would get picked up without her having to market it at all.  It&#8217;s an incredibly common writerly fantasy:  there’s a knock on your door, and when you open it, there’s the perfect agent standing there, contract in hand.  </p>
<p>“I heard that your work is wonderful,” the agent says.  “Here, sign this, so I may sell the manuscript I have not yet read to that editor who is waiting at the car parked at your curb.&#8221;</p>
<p>Or perhaps in your preferred version, you go to a conference and pitch your work for the first time.  The agent of your dreams, naturally, falls over backwards in his chair; after sal volitale has been administered to revive him from his faint, he cries, “That’s it!  The book I’ve been looking for my whole professional life!”  </p>
<p>Or, still more common, you send your first query letter to an agent, and you receive a phone call two days later, asking to see the entire manuscript.  Three days after you overnight it to New York, the agent calls to say that she stayed up all night reading it, and is dying to represent you.  Could you fly to New York immediately, so she could introduce you to the people who are going to pay a million dollars for your rights?</p>
<p>I have nothing against a good fantasy (especially of the SF/Fantasy genre), but while you are trying to find an agent, please do not be swayed by daydreams.  Don’t send out only one query at a time; it’s truly a waste of your efforts.  Try to keep 7 or 8 out at any given time.</p>
<p>This advice often comes as a shock to writers.  “What do you mean, 7 or 8 at a time?  I’ve been rejected ten times, and I thought that meant I should lock myself away and revise the book completely before I sent it out again!”</p>
<p>Feel free to lock yourself up and revise to your heart’s content, but if you have a completed manuscript in your desk drawer, you should try to keep a constant flow of query letters heading out your door.  As they say in the biz, the only manuscript that can never be sold is the one that is never submitted.  </p>
<p>There are two reasons keeping a constant flow is a good idea, professionally speaking.  First, it’s never a good idea to allow a query letter to molder on your desktop:  after awhile, that form letter can start to seem very personally damning, and a single rejection from a single agent can start to feel like an entire industry’s indictment of your work.</p>
<p>I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again:  one of the most self-destructive of conference-circuit rumors is the notion that if a book is good, it will automatically be picked up by the first agent that sees it.  Or the fifth, for that matter.</p>
<p>This is simply untrue.  It is not uncommon for wonderful books to go through dozens of queries, and even many rounds of query-revision-query-revision before being picked up.  There are hundreds of reasons that agents and their screeners reject manuscripts, the most common being that they do not like to represent a particular kind of book.  </p>
<p>So how precisely is such a rejection a reflection on the quality of the writing? </p>
<p>Keep on sending out those queries a hundred times, if necessary.  Because until you can blandish the right agent into reading your book, you’re just not going to know for sure whether it is marketable or not.</p>
<p>More querying tips follow at 6 pm Pacific.  Keep up the good work!</p>
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