I’ve
been in this boat before, so I know the routine. You send off your query letter
and- depending on the agent – a proposal and then you have to wait for a
response. Sometimes it is a couple of hours, a couple of days, or a couple of
weeks to hear back. Others never reply. I think the record for longest wait was
about eight months, which by that time I had forgotten that I had even
contacted them. Then there are a few agents who have rejected me twice. As if
getting one rejection from said agent wasn’t enough, they decided to send that
rejection to me again.
I’ve
certainly made my share of mistakes in the querying process. I’ve mistaken a
man for a woman; misspelled a last name; got the date wrong; forgot to attach
the proposal; used the wrong words; misread the guidelines…Been there, done
that. I’d like to think I’ve learned from my mistakes, but no one is perfect.
Inevitably I will embarrass myself. I’m sure if I am ever land a literary
agent, I’ll continue to do silly things. It’s just the way I am. After all,
nobody’s perfect.
Well,
I’m curious to see what will happen. In the meantime I’ve written a number of
short stories that need to be sent off too, and have many others in the works.
Until
next time.
(BTW- Its my 250th post! Whoopee!)
Several things to remember, as you accumulate a stack of canned rejection letters (we can have a bonfire and burn them together; I now have 8).
ReplyDeleteTheir rejection does not mean your novel is "bad," poorly written, etc. It means:
a) they aren't sure they can sell / market it right now
b) the agent is not looking for that right now
c) there is a glut in the market right now for that era
d) it's too different from what's already out there
Publishers are not big on taking chances.
Agents do not accept what they cannot sell, even if they like it.
Finally, rejection doesn't have to be the end of the story. If no one wants it, you've run it through editors and such, tightened it, had beta readers tell you what to fix, etc... there are Other Options now, particularly since you'll have to do a ton of marketing with a publishing house anyway. *sigh*