Naomi Davis

Literary Agent

BookEnds Literary Agency

Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

Jesse Greyson @thejessegreyson

Okay so riddle me this: The overwhelming advice to me of late has been get an agent. Having already done my research I know there are about 14 agencies in Australia, and 5 or less of those handle/are accepting SF/F.

Should I look for an o/s agent?

#askagent
Replying to @thejessegreyson

When I look at projects from different countries, whether there is a minor spelling difference or not doesn't matter to me. If you've written a wonderful book, that won't hold it back. An agent will work with you on adjusting those things if they feel it's necessary. #askagent

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

Jeanne Moore @jmhonolulu

#askagent Agents - Any advice on writing the dreaded synopsis? In your opinion, what are the elements of a good synopsis? What do you look for?
Replying to @jmhonolulu

publishingcrawl.com/2012/04/17/how…

This is the tool I often recommend both for a synopsis and for outlining! I look for all key turning points to be identified, as sometimes I love the writing & want to see if the story goes a promising direction before requesting the full. #askagent

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

Packy - Head Llama @nerfedllamas

The feedback I am getting on my query letter and sample writing so far has been distinctly of the non-critical β€œthis is not for me, thanks for submitting” variety. What do you recommend for getting better critical feedback on a query? #AskAgent
Replying to @nerfedllamas

Agents read so many queries/week that most of us cannot offer feedback on a query. I always give feedback on full manuscripts, but w/ 300+ queries/month, clients to look after, & industry relationships to build (and so very much more) it's just not possible on a query. #askagent

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

Ken Poirier @theking4mayor

#askagent For unpublished authors seeking representation, is a book series a turn on or turn off? #amquerying
Replying to @theking4mayor

Depends on the genre and book, honestly.
In SFF I prefer books that conclude enough to stand alone but can be pitched as the first in a series. #askagent

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

rachroses @rachroses

@NaomisLitPix How important is pacing and how do you improve it?
Replying to @rachroses

Pacing is 100% a top factor in making a story work. Look at each chapter: does it advance both internal and external plots in every chapter/interaction? How about the opening and closing of each chapter: How does the chapter change the character or her goal? #askagent

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

Marine von Koenig @marinavk

@NaomisLitPix What is the most common reason for you not to reject a MS but to request revise & resub? Thank you
Replying to @marinavk

If I LOVE premise but something wrong in the execution of it, or if I see the author has mad worldbuilding skills but struggles with voice immersion, etc. If there's one HUGE strength and one HUGE weakness, I'll often ask to see if the author is capable of resolving. #askagent

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

Nancy @OfficialNancyA

@NaomisLitPix Are loglines a must, when querying an agent? 😐
Replying to @OfficialNancyA

Loglines are helpful, particularly for showing us the hook of the story. But I don't reject if there isn't a clear logline in the query. #askagent

Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips
Naomi Davis
@NaomisLitPix
Literary Agent
Eternally optimistic Literary Agent at @Bookendslit Genderqueer πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ ND; I laugh & love relentlessly. Repped by the phenomenal @4triciaskinner
208 MSWL
214 AskAgent
183 Tips

Matthew Poirier @mattpoirier531

Dear Agents: How do you need when to market something as either Adult or YA? The age of the protagonist? Writing style? The content? What about dark, uncomfortable themes that are important to enter into a YA discourse?
#writingtip #querytip #500queries #literaryagent #publishing
Replying to @mattpoirier531

#askagent YA vs A often comes down to voice&character approach when age is in the gray area. Most YA stops at 18 but a particularly youthful voice, or a story about trying to learn how to use your own voice in opposition of your parents, could read YA even up to age 20.