![]() ![]() If emailed, it should be in the body of the email so it’s the first thing I see and doesn’t take time for me to open. Something that introduces you and your work in a courteous and professional manner, and makes me turn to the work with interest, not dread. Keep it relevant (and think of author blurbs and what works for you) and don’t oversell yourself, that is what your writing is there to do. A good letter always makes me smile.įinally, I’d like to know a bit about you - not where you were born and what degree you have, but anything to do with your writing experience, for example writing courses taken, any competition successes, anything previously published. This is the pitch, and to get one down in a paragraph is a great skill and rare, but any attempt is useful. I’d like to have an idea of the plot in no more than a paragraph - ‘a man walks into the bar and his life changes’ - and if at all possible I’d like an idea of who you might compare your work too, or even what, sometimes films are as useful as other titles. I’d like to know if it’s literary fiction, or young adult, if it’s a crime novel or a memoir. I’d like to know about your book, in a pithy and practical way. All agents are proud of their authors and it’s an easy way to flatter an agent by telling them they have great taste. You have researched my list and you know and admire some of my authors, and it’s a very good thing to let me know that. If you’ve done the research (and research is crucial), then you should know the agent you want to write to and you should also know why. The letter should be addressed to me, not ‘Dear Sir’, not even ‘Dear Madam’. It needs to be professional, but not stiff engaging, but not too whimsical personal, but not a CV. I would also like to know that the book they are submitting is something that will fit what I’m looking for, and will intrigue me enough to turn to the actual pages with enthusiasm. The letter is the first thing I read, and so I’d like it to reassure me that the person writing to me knows who I am, knows why they’re writing to me and knows something about the process of finding an agent. If you’ve done the research (and research is crucial), then you should know the agent you want to write to. Working that out per submission is a little depressing, but here are my tips on making the most of that limited time to catch my attention. For me, I probably have an hour a week to look through the submissions I receive. This means the time that can be given to reading submissions is never as much as any agent would want. Every agent wants to find something that makes them stop in their tracks - makes them want to talk about this book, this voice, this author to everyone and anyone - but in reality the majority of any agent’s time is spent working with the authors they already represent because that has to be their priority. ![]() An agent receives around 50 submissions a week, at least. ![]()
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