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#76 |
aka Anne Lyle
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What Neil said. I already covered this in post #54 of this thread, but here's the breakdown:
1. Approx 90% (many say more) of the slush pile is either barely literate, or just plain wrong for that agent (e.g. romance novels sent to a TV script agent or vice versa). 2. Of the remaining 10%, 9 in 10 are competently written but just don't float that particular agent's boat - the writing doesn't suck, but it doesn't sing either. Maybe the writer has promise, but they need to work harder on their craft - and most agents don't have the time or interest. So no, it's not a lottery by any means. Agents don't pick manuscripts out of the slushpile at random like lottery balls, they select on quality of writing and commercial promise plus subjective criteria (personal taste). Write to a publishable standard, and sooner or later you're likely to find an agent who loves your work (unless it's very weird!!). Previous success in other markets counts for very little. Short stories maybe, self-publishing, not so much. Many many first novels are picked up by agents and editors from writers who have never sold a story in their lives. Novels and short stories are very different beasts, and an agent seriously isn't going to ignore a good submission package just because you have no track record. Telling yourself you have no chance because it's a lottery is a self-fulfilling prophecy and frankly defeatist. If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen ![]() Last edited by Redfox; 08-13-2010 at 08:40 AM. |
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#77 |
Sci-Fi Author
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MTM, Alan Turing was a bloody genius. His incredible mental skills improved his chances of cracking the code in the same way that buying more tickets would improve your chances of winning the lottery. And it's also the same thing when trying to get picked up by a big house. The greater your skill, the more you improve your chances that your submission won't be tossed in the recycle bin after a mere glance.
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#78 | |
Wizard
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Quote:
I thought the biggest breakthrough with the naval enigma code was when a code book was captured from a stricken German sub. ![]() Last edited by Sparrow; 08-13-2010 at 09:41 AM. |
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#79 |
neilmarr
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You sum up beautifully, Redfox. And, I believe, accurately.
It's not so much a lottery as poker. You learn by your mistakes (not by immediately stacking your cards or playing rashly in desperation and/or frustration), you quietly develop, you weigh up the playing field according to reaction, you learn to play the hand that's dealt as effectively as you can -- some have artful skill, others practice and training, others work by the gut, others, we must all admit, have luck the luck of the Irish. I strongly believe that perseverance is king with a willingness to learn from rejection ... and you don't attempt to play poker at a bridge club. Some think that self-publishing is a different game and maybe the easier option, and the attraction of independence mustn't be underestimated. But it ain't so very different. The same principles apply as you try to gain the attention of readers. And that's sometimes an even tougher job than gaining that of an agent of publisher. Many thanks for your astute insights, follks. I've learned a lot in this thread. Best wishes. Neil |
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#80 |
Addict
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And your opinions as an editor and publisher are much appreciated too, Mr Marr
![]() We could do with an agent contributing to this conversation as well ... get all sides! |
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#81 |
Addict
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Well it's all swings and roundabouts, isn't it?
Max (the fella from the original post) tells me that another major London agency has asked to read the rest of his book ... |
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#82 |
Addict
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I hear you all, but I still think there is luck involved, the kind of luck I simply don't have. I want to tell a story, I want to tell it well and for people to like it - and for the first time in 20 years of trying to do that I know I've cracked it with this one. Fashion and time are also against me, the bubble for fantasy must be about to burst, I'd rather do the same amount of marketing a publishing house would expect me to do for more of the profits...
I'm going viral and I'll take it from there. Cheers MTM Oh yeh and PS, I'm rubbish at poker Oh and PPS, they did get a code book but I'm not sure it was the full monty was it? My knowledge is sketchy but I thought they broke the code and the captured stuff just cut the decoding times by giving them the settings... could be talking bollocks though... I usually do ;-) |
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#83 | |
Banned
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: South of the Border
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Quote:
The industry (laughable as that identifier may be) is a special collection of special people who just happen to be located in London, New York and Paris. It's a club, a rich and powerful elite that you have to pass a initiation to be accepted into. No paddling or the toasting of crumpets upon ones arse, but it boils down to the same thing. You're going to have to bend over and take one for the team, old boy, if you want to be in the club. And then you'll get your special secret decoder ring, your own key to the bathroom, and some vaseline for the chafing. Or you know, the author can start to redress the inequity in the system. He or she may realise that - HOLY F**K MONKEYS! I'M THE TALENT HERE. THEY'RE THE ONES WHO NEED ME! ![]() *Brought to you by someone who has his popcorn ready for when the whole mess collapses in on itself.* Last edited by Alexander Turcic; 11-19-2010 at 01:55 PM. |
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#84 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I wouldn't lose heart Nick. I remember reading about how a new author (some yrs back before I was born) tried some 27 publishers for his 1st book before being accepted. The name of the book and author? To think That I saw It on Mulberry Street by Dr. Seuss. Each book or story will find it's own home in time. I also understand that before he made his 1st sale Stephen King had racked up quite a collection of rejections. There isn't a published author anywhere who hasn't been rejected I don't think.
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