Literary Agent
Jennie Gollehon @JennieGollehon
@annmrose At what point do you determine a manuscript is dead on submissions? Thanks for sharing your insight with us!For me they are never truly dead. But once we’ve exhausted all current available resources sometimes they need to take a little nap ❤️
Literary Agent
Mitra Mahmoudi De Souza @mitra_souza
@annmrose What's the most common reason you reject sample pages? Thank you.Pacing and starting in the wrong place
Literary Agent
Chinelo Chidebe @ChineloChidebe
@annmrose Good morning Ann, thanks for always doing this. How would you explain Voice to writers? Rejections with ‘I didn’t connect with the Voice’ is confusing. Would love your thoughts.Voice is like the way in which the story is told, diction, word choice, sentence structure, & content all wrapped into one.
How the “narrator” shows us the world around them.
I think passes on “voice” are usually less about character & more about writing style but that’s IMO
Literary Agent
Autumn is 15.6k in Black Diary of a Wimpy Kid 🤓 @autumnwritesya
@annmrose Can you query more than one book at a time? Or would you have to wait until all queries on the first book are closed?You can, but it can get tricky when you get an offer & have to tell agents who have the query & or full of the other project that you’ve been offered rep on a project they know nothing about & do they want to see that? If they’re diff age groups/genres it gets more complicated
Literary Agent
Judah Mahay @judahmahay
@RebeccaLMatte How much does previously been represented matter if you aren’t published. My first book didn’t sell and then my agent dropped me, no liking my second book. Should I mention be repped in the query at all?You should, because you're seeking a partner and should be upfront with them. Not being pubbed is not a red mark, & neither is seeking a new agent. It can also help show that someone liked your book and that you can work with an agent. Present the facts and let your words speak
Literary Agent
Carson Weaver @CWeaverAuthor
@RebeccaLMatte #AskAnAgent How long (or short) should a synopsis be for a YA Fantasy novel? I have seen varying guidance all over the internet 😅That's because there is no standard answer. Typically, agents require 1 or 2 page synopses. When I queried, I had one of each ready to go, that way I had whatever was required. Genre really doesn't matter there, just what each agent wants.
Literary Agent
Nancy Foster 💉🇲🇽 @drafoxter
@RebeccaLMatte Where can someone find an agent that reads Latino SFF that is familiar to our writing style conventions? Ideally tips on how to find agents that read books in Spanish/Portuguese/Indigenous language.That's honestly a great question. There's unfortunately no central database for agents. Check #mswl, Manuscript Wishlist for people looking for that. There's also this fantastic site that specifically lists Lit Agents of Color literaryagentsofcolor.com
Literary Agent
Nathan @NathansWritings
@RebeccaLMatte G’day! I have a few 😁Thoughts on agents who charge $ before publishing?
I’m pushing 140k on a fun SF, too long for a debut?
Best places to look for agents/unsolicited opportunities?
What’s your top 3 fav books?
Thanks Rebecca!
I would say that 100K is a good guideline for SFF, esp a debut. Much longer than that is a hard sell, though not impossible, simply bc it's harder to market both to pub houses and the public. Try to cut it down - I bet there's a lot that can be cut, or could split into two books
Literary Agent
Andie L. Smith @andiesmith517
@RebeccaLMatte If you did a significant round of edits with total plot restructure, can you submit a new query to an agent that rejected in the past? Same project in stakes and characters, but a complete plot edit/overhaul.That is very agent specific. I can say from my experience, I did this but only with the one agent who wanted my full and with permission. I emailed to ask in advance, and got her blessing to send it. Usually guidelines will tell you what people prefer.
Literary Agent
Ash Remington @AshRWrites
@RebeccaLMatte As a first time author, my approach to writing a query is to be earnest and honest.Is openly announcing that I’m relatively illiterate to the industry going to disqualify my work from consideration by an agent?
Just like any industry, it's always worth the time to do the research and look at existing resources -- there are TONS about queries and comps and word counts etc. Once you've done that, you're not expected to know much more. That's why we're here!
Literary Agent
Jen @jenreichow
@RebeccaLMatte I've been advised not to query during December because some agents clear out their query file without reading the queries. I know you can't speak for every agent and I'm not asking if this is your practice but would also advise writers not to query in December?I'd be surprised if people deleted queries without reading them, at least of people I know. I'd be less surprised if some move quickly and give less time, though I also don't know if that's the case. It is certainly not my practice, and I will sadly continue to be slow.
Literary Agent
Cheyne & Sarah are querying 📜🖊️ @SoulSignsSeries
@RebeccaLMatte Are there questions co-authors should prepare for once there is an agent who expresses interest? Finding information about the querying process as co-authors has been sparse.So, I'd make sure it's clear upfront that you're co-authors. After that, I'd want to know whether you plan to keep writing together, or whether it's a one off. If it's a one off, do both of you have work you want repped? Or just one of you? Do you have a contract between you?
Literary Agent
Cheyne & Sarah are querying 📜🖊️ @SoulSignsSeries
@RebeccaLMatte How much bio do agents actually want in a query, particularly if you don't have writing credentials to mention? Or is this something that varies by agent.I think it depends, but largely you don't need a life story that isn't related. I like to see how books are inspired from lives, but I look for basic life facts. Credentials are fine, specialty is fine, but don't stress about it.
Literary Agent
Kat Katsma @KatKatsma
@RebeccaLMatte Is the literary market oversaturated? Am curious what publishing will be like 5–10 years from now given the volume of MS' sliding past agent desks. Should we be looking at alternate ways to present our story? Or am I just thinking too much about this 😂Yes and no. I would say that there are really amazing books continually coming out, and way more that most people don't know of. If you want to self pub, that's an option but don't think of it as a fallback -- it has to be more of a business decision for you.
Literary Agent
Danielle Dayney @danielle_dayney
@RebeccaLMatte I have a couple! Are agents forgiving when it comes to typos in the query?And how long (typically) does it take for an agent to find a publisher after signing a client?
2nd is harder. There is no answer. Authors will tell you subs can be worse than queries. Some don’t succeed on the first book, and have to try another. Some are in limbo. Some get hurt by world things out of their control. Some get signed right away! But we feel it with you
Literary Agent
✨Vincent Higginbotham✨ @VincentHigginb2
@RebeccaLMatte Is it worth it to seek an agent if one is already traditionally published but they are seeking a genre change? If so, is one more likely or less likely to find an agent having been traditionally published without representation?Absolutely! I genuinely believe agents are a massive plus for an author. If you have receipts for existing trad pub success that’s a big plus! Not a guarantee of course, but stating the genre change and past publication for sure won’t hurt
Literary Agent
clyde wrenn @ClydeWrenn
@RebeccaLMatte My WIP is the 3rd book in a self-pub series. When it’s done, I plan on starting a new, unrelated book which I will query. My impression, though, is that the current WIP has pretty much no chance for an offer of rep, being part of a self-pub series. Thoughts? 💙It’s a tough one for sure. There are fringe cases, like Legends and Lattes, where a book is republished traditionally. Or where a future book hits big and back catalog is repubbed. But yeah, I’d say a third book is a hard sell upfront, cause the agent would need to read all 3
Literary Agent
Cimone Watson 929 @bachbunny
@RebeccaLMatte When you offer rep first, how much time do you give the writer to decide? Do you leave it up to them?I give at least 2 weeks, depending on the authors needs. Never less, but on request and good reason, definitely more. If the author doesn’t raise it themself, I will prompt with two, but I’ll always let them go first.
Literary Agent
An-Mari completed NaNoWriMo 2022 @anmaridocarmo
@RebeccaLMatte What are the chances for an international author (eg I’m from South Africa) to get an agent and be published in the US or UK?Very high!! At least in my area (SFF) there are lots of international writers publishing amazing books! That’s the nice thing about agents: we’re pretty geographically dispersed. A good English language book is a good English language book!
Literary Agent
Mari Rodriguez 🇨🇺🇺🇸 @drmarirodriguez
@RebeccaLMatte If you reject an author’s first project, does that rejection influence your assessment of the second?If the book was a close no, then it could be good influence! Otherwise I’d usually say no, unless it seems like the author has just immediately sent me a new one. Then I’d be curious why this wasn’t the first, and whether the same issues would appear.