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An
Excerpt from
How
to Find A Literary Agent Who Can Sell Your Book for Top
Dollar
By
Jill Nagle, Founder and Principal
GetPublished, guerilla guidance for your writing
adventure
Congratulations—you have a manuscript, a book
proposal or the wherewithal to create one. You are on
your way to getting published! One way to drastically
increase the chances that the top-paying, most reputable
publishers will get a look at your work is to engage a
literary representative or agent.
Unfortunately, this is not an easy prospect. Even more
difficult is finding exactly the right agent for
you.
Here are three steps to get you moving in the right
direction.
Step
1: Get your work into tip-top shape.
For nonfiction writers, tip-top shape
requires having your book proposal and query
letter polished to perfection before you contact
your agent. You do not have to write your entire
nonfiction book before approaching an agent—in
fact in most cases it works better if you
don’t.
You will, however, need 20-30 pages of
sample chapter material for most nonfiction
(self-help, how-to, memoir, biography, etc.),
usually the first chapter plus one or two other
chapters.
For a memoir, where the quality of the
writing weighs more heavily, plan on at least 60
pages of material.
Fiction writers, on the other hand,
usually do
need to have their novel written, as well as a
synopsis of the work, which is a brief
description of the plot and characters, plus an
analysis of how the work compares with others in
its genre.
Step
2: Profile a hit list of agents.
This means you are to research agents,
and create a list of those appropriate for your
work, with as much information about each agent
as you can gather. You will use this information
to prioritize which agents to contact and what
to reference in the letter.
Start with the Internet and expand
outward. Sources as obvious as guides to
literary agents and as obscure as comments made
during an author’s reading all count as
research in creating your collection of agent
profiles.
Personal
references are your best source. Who do you
know? From as many of these sources as possible,
create a list of anywhere from 12 to 40 agents
who represent work like yours, then begin
building a data file for each including all your
findings.
Step
3: Create a personalized letter for each agent.
If you’re approaching more than a
handful of agents, you may want to use the same
basic query letter for each of them. However,
you don’t want to make it look as though
you’re doing a mass mailing. Therefore, each
letter should be personalized for the individual
agent.
Begin each letter with something from the
profile you created that relates personally to
the particular agent. The more immediate and
relevant, the better. The sentence (or two) you
create should spark instant recognition in each
agent. This will make your letter stand out from
the dozens she may read that day that come out
of the blue. So you might have:
Dear
Jane Adams:
“Only
the obsessed should write novels,” your
warning in the October issue of Write This!, sits above my desk as I put the final compulsive
touches on The
Night Before the Dawn.
or,
Dear
Adam Janeway:
Your
comment at the Maui Writer’s conference this
past summer still has me laughing. The part
about not showing an agent your fangs on a first
date made me go get mine filed down.
If you have a referral from one of the agent’s
current clients, make that name the very first
thing they read:
Dear
Jane Adams:
Alice
Walker speaks very highly of your work and
suggested I query you about my self-help book, What
to Do When You Find your Mother’s Garden.
In the second paragraph, summarize your credentials,
and in the third, give a brief summary of the
project, (or the reverse, depending on which is
most impressive) and make sure to mention
somewhere that you’re also querying other
agents if indeed you are.
Even though a query letter is a short,
to-the-point missive, spend some serious time on
it.
Expect
to go through at least 10 drafts of your query
letter over at least a few weeks before you send
it out, and show it to at least three people (or
one with stellar qualifications)—you've got
exactly one shot, and you want to make it your
absolute best.
Stick with standard professional letter
formatting; eschew fancy fonts,
unusually-colored paper or anything resembling a
gimmick. Keep your letter to a page or less if
possible; a page and a half maximum.
What
Now?
If you have read this far, you’ve now
circumvented the mistakes that get at least 20%
of all publishing attempts rejected. You’re
now on your way to upping your acceptance odds
even further.
Your next step is to get even more
selective about who you want to represent you.
That’s right—finding an agent isn’t just
about who accepts you—it’s about who you
accept to represent your work.
This is because having the wrong agent
can do more harm than having no agent at all.
To learn more about how to avoid putting
your dreams on hold by tying up your life’s
work with the wrong agent, get a copy of
How
to Find A Literary Agent Who Can Sell Your Book
for Top Dollar
at
http://www.GetPublished.com/agentguide
Jill
Nagle is a published author and the founder and
principal of GetPublished: guerilla guidance for
your writing adventure, which provides coaching,
consulting, editing and other services for
aspiring and ready-for-next step authors.
Find us here: http://www.GetPublished.com.
1700
Shattuck Avenue, Suite 1
Berkeley, CA, 94709
866 776 1698 (voice)
510 291 8360 (fax)
Jill@GetPublished.com
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