Sweating the Exception: A Exhaustingly Bad Idea

Posted by on Nov 15, 2011

A worthy hit

Today my friend Michael Larsen, probably the menschiest literary agent on the planet, and I were talking about The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach.  That book, published by the admirable Little, Brown, was a buzz book last BEA.   A first novel acquired for scads of money & published with great enthusiasm–but both Mike and I were underwhelmed by the read relative to the ransom.  Mike pondered:  What does this mean? Is character

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Query Letters #2: That First Sentence (or, Writers, it’s Attitude Adjustment Time)

Posted by on Nov 11, 2011

Don Corleone

Query Letter Scans--It's Strictly Business

This is the Second Entry in Our Queries Series.

Literary Agents. Do. Not. Have. To. Read. Your. Query Letter.

I write this so stridently to reduce your anxiety.

Time and again I run into unpublished writers who believe, sincerely, that the literary agent’s job is to read and respond to to their unsolicited queries. This is NOT the agent’s reality.  The lit agent’s job is to effectively and collaboratively guide the careers of the clients who have hired her to represent them.  She is paid for this work, either

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Query Letters: Jody’s Seven Goals

Posted by on Nov 7, 2011

relaxing woman

Don't Sweat the Query

Query letters.  Yet again.

Holy smokes there’s a lot of query letter advice out here on the World Wide Web.   

And like everything in information-overload-land, that’s good and bad–it’s terrific for writers to have easy access to models and thoughtful counsel, but at the same time I’m a little concerned about the stressing out I see–the agony over each detail in each query; and the stridency of the dogma.  As in, “All query letters must start with x, end with y, and never, never include Popsicles.” 

Query letters are crucial, don’t get me wrong.  And yes, each book pitch does have to include some standard elements, like, well, the title of the book. 

But ultimately each letter is as individual as the book that is being pitched and the author who is writing it.  So rather than trying to fit your query into someone else’s mold, I suggest you sit back, take a deep breath, scribble out a quick rough draft, and

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Welcome Guest Posters

Posted by on Oct 20, 2011

Attention writers, self publishers, book editors, publishing people, funny people, smart people, and people people.  I’d love to reprint your guest post if it fits with my sensibility and contributes to the planet.  And thank you to

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Book Publishers Maybe NOT Terrified

Posted by on Oct 20, 2011

word "future" in dictionaryToday’s a great day for authors!  The New York Times reports that three of the Big 6 publishers:  Simon & SchusterRandom House and Hachette are each 

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The Big Year Becomes a Movie

Posted by on Oct 18, 2011

The Big Year by Mark Obmascik

Fantastic Read: THE BIG YEAR

So what’s it like when a literary agent represents a book that becomes a major movie

Ummm, well…I have a poster.  And, to be fair, although movie money for book people isn’t what movie money is for movie people, I’ve got no complaints.  But that money came and went a long time ago–Jack Black isn’t giving my kids guitar lessons, Owen Wilson hasn’t asked me out to dinner, and Steve Martin

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New York Times Says Publishers are Terrified

Posted by on Oct 17, 2011

Just started the category Publishing FACT OR FRENZY –where I’ll do my best to temper the frenzy I see with the facts I know. 

Here’s why:  today, wacko omissions from The New York Times and the mind-boggling mixup by the National Book Awards  (who got book titles confused & included the wrong book when

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