From Dystel & Goderich Literary Management, Lauren Abramo, 7/10/2007
In
lieu of thinking up my own topic—that audible sigh of relief you’re hearing is
coming from my desk—I thought I’d take a crack at some of your
questions this week. Thanks for so many interesting and thoughtful ones! If
we haven’t gotten to yours yet, check back because we’ll continue to cover as
many as possible.
xoxochristine
said...
What
is the difference between chick lit, women's fiction and literary fiction that
is from a woman's perspective? For example, would Barbara Kingsolver's The
Poisonwood Bible be considered woman's fiction? And what about Susan Minot's
Evening?
--To be honest, there isn’t a ton of difference. And it comes down not so much
to what is written as to how it is written. Let’s say this: if you have doubts
about where something falls in these categories, just call it women’s fiction.
It’s such an insanely broad category that just about anything written from a
female perspective or about female characters will fall in. Barbara Kingsolver
and Susan Minot are generally considered to be more “literary” than commercial,
although their books sell well enough to be both.
May
said...
What
would you do if you got a query letter that asks you to email the writer if
it's a request? Or should I be focusing only on agents who accept e-queries?
--If
we want the material, we’ll request it. Just make a note at the end of your
letter that because you’re writing from overseas, SASE’s are cost-prohibitive.
And, of course, e-query when it’s an option.
Eliza
said...
How does an emerging fiction writer create a market for her work? What
should we do to create a sales base even before we've been picked up?
--We
talk a lot about market and platform, but that’s quite a bit more important
with nonfiction than it is with fiction. If you happen to have access to a
mailing list of thousands, or if you have a dedicated readership somewhere, by
all means let us know. But it really will come down to how we (and ultimately
book buyers) feel about the work. Honest.
Anonymous
said...
What
are questions for your agent, and what are questions for your editor? I don't
want to step on my agent's toes by circumventing her, but at the same time, I
don't want to make her work harder for her 15% than I have to. If, for example,
I want to know whether a book will be released as a hardback or a trade
paperback, to whom do I direct that question?
--Knowing
what to ask, when, and to whom can be tough—especially for a first time author.
As a general rule, if it’s a business question, it should go through your
agent, and if it’s an editorial one, your editor is probably your best bet.
When in doubt, especially if it relates in some way to the publisher’s
contractual obligations to you, you can ask your agent. And if someone needs to
be the bad guy, you should definitely let your agent take care of that. Don’t
be afraid to get in touch when you have questions—that’s why you got an agent
in the first place!
Anonymous
said...
In
response to Jane
Dystel's just previous post: why do so many agents seem to
object to authors querying multiple agents? I queried 10 agents all of whom
represent work in my genre. I researched them all and tried to personalize
every query. I got six form rejections, one request for a partial which
immediately turned itno a request for a full (which I am still waiting to hear
about)and 3 non-responses. Are we authors supposed to put all our eggs in one
basket?
--Here’s
some clarification on that point from our response in the comments to that
post: It isn't that we turn things down just because a few other agents
have seen it. But if names are switched, other agents are listed on the same
e-mail, or you make mention of how many people have turned you down (why do
people do that??), then it becomes apparent that you're applying to any and
every agent just because they're agents. We'll take more time with someone who
has chosen us because we might actually be the right fit.
David
said...
Why is this latest post displayed in Times while the preceding ones are
displayed in Arial?
(It's a question!)
And Anonymous said...
Not a question but a request: do you mind having all the fonts in your
posts the same size? That will make the articles easier to read. Thanks.
--Sadly,
Blogger hates us. We’ll keep trying to make posts show up in the same font and
same size, but every once in awhile, things go all wonky.
Anonymous
said...
How long, on average, do you take to read a full? Reading comments about
your agency, I have heard that some agents have responded within a week, but
what is the longest you have ever taken to read a full?
And
Anonymous said...
Let's say one of your agents is considering a full manuscript. How often
do you prefer for the writer to contact the agent to check the status
(obviously not after a week, but...)? Does the writer receive any notification
if months go by, but the full is still under consideration?
--It
can really vary depending on how backed up we are. We say six-to-eight weeks
for our response time, but it is often a much shorter wait. If you haven’t
heard from us by the end of eight weeks, something has gone wrong, and you
should definitely get in touch. If you have offers from other agents or an
editor, please do get in touch right away to check in with us and let us know
that we don’t have much time. Otherwise, please do wait for two months to go by
before you check in—we want to read your work and give it serious consideration
and that takes time. Remember that we don’t sit around at our desks reading all
day—we’re on the phone and on email with editors and our existing clients, so
it’s in the evening and on weekends that we’re reading the material we’ve
requested.
Anonymous
said...
What would happen if you had a really catchy title for a non-fiction book
(as catchy as "He's Just Not That Into You") but found that an obsure
blog in another country had the same title? Would you still use it? Could you
still use it?
--Titles
can’t be copyrighted, so you’re in the clear. You don’t want to go with
something too familiar only because of any potential confusion, but that’s the
only thing to consider.
Anonymous
also said...
Also, have any D&G agents ever had to choose a project between a
client and a potential client?
Meaning
if the projects are competitive? It depends how close they are and in what
category (it matters less if two novels have some common ideas than if two
prescriptive nonfiction books do), but if we receive a query we think is
promising that sounds too much like something one of our clients is already
working on, we’ll usually pass it on to a colleague.
Anonymous
said...
If you're rejected by an agent at DGLM, can you query another DGLM agent
with the same project or is it not allowed?
--You
shouldn’t. Most of us have been working together for long enough that we know
each other’s taste very well, so we pass material among each other regularly.
Ultimately, it doesn’t pay off to submit twice.
And
while we’re on that subject—please don’t query each agent at the agency
simultaneously either. As it says on the submissions page on our website,
if we notice that a query has come to multiple agents here, we’re not going to
read it.
Anonymous
said...
Two
questions:
1) When dealing with editors for a clients manuscript, is the time it takes
them to get back to you any indication to the MS's quality?
In other words, does a manuscript that they know they wouldn't want get a quick
no, to clear their desk, and one they might want get kept for 3 months (even if
they pass)?
2) Does the agent's personality have more pull than we all realized -- I heard
at a writer's conference recently that editor's pay close attention to what
their favorite agents send them and have a tendency to be very critical of an
abrasive agents's submissions.
--A
lot of writers do seem to think that response time has a lot to do with
manuscript quality or interest, both for agents and editors, but it’s usually
not an indicator of much at all. There are too many variables, and there’s no
reason to believe that the letter passing on a project is written the same day
that decision is made. In fact, though, it’s much easier to pass on something
you know you don’t want to handle quickly and move on to the next thing. It’s
those in-between projects that require mulling over that tend to sit on our
(and editors’) desks for a while.
Re:
the agent’s personality—it’s a business, and everyone in it deals with people
they don’t necessarily like. But of course, it’s a business full of human
beings and some are more sensitive than others. Most editors and agents are
professional enough to consider the work and not the person submitting it.
Ultimately, it’s the quality of the projects an agent handles that will make
editors take notice when they receive a submission, not whether the agent is
everyone’s best friend.
Mary Witzl
said...
I
love memoirs, particularly when they are about ordinary (or rather
non-celebrity, for lack of a better term) people who have led extraordinary
lives, or when they include interesting travel or cross-cultural experiences.
Am I in a minority here? And how extraordinary does a memoir have to be to be
marketable, in your opinion?
--Certainly
not. Memoirs will always be a popular publishing category and one that has
experienced a real explosion in recent years. That said, there’s actually so
much out there that it is an extremely crowded category, so new memoirs must,
indeed, feature either an extraordinary story or extraordinary writing for it
to have a chance in this marketplace.
Ryan
Field said...
I've
been receiving a great deal of hints from editors lately regarding fiction with
"crossover potential". Is this a trend that will last, or is it just
another marketing tool that will come and go?
Your
guess is as good as ours! It’s really hard to predict future trends much as we
try, but for now genre crossing is working really well in certain markets—for
example, paranormal stories can easily be shelved in romance, fantasy, or mystery
these days. Of course, it’s important to have an idea of where exactly your
book would fit in a bookstore and to know that however appropriate something
may be for multiple categories, it’s only going to be shelved in one in the
majority of stores.
Anonymous
said...
I'm
interested in hearing an agent's take on working with an intentionally
non-prolific author. I know for many writers, the hope is to write book after
book after book and hopefully publish all of them. I look at Harper Lee and the
value and reach of To Kill a Mockingbird and think I might feel finished as a
book writer and choose to focus my future creativity towards other art forms.
As an agent, when you hear this are you inclined to seek other clients instead,
or are you intrigued? Do you find my approach to be unusual or surprisingly
common among the "literary" writers you encounter?
Some
authors have only one book in them, and I think we’d all agree that writing one
fantastic novel is better than writing one fantastic one and then writing
terrible failures just to keep going. Of course, the odds are stacked against
you, so writing only one novel is putting all your eggs in one basket. The
reality is that agents and editors would prefer to work with authors who are
going to write multiple phenomenal books, but if a book is amazing we won’t
turn it down because the author has no current plans to write another.
Anonymous
said...
Tell
us the truth (as you always do) please:
What differences do age and looks make for a novelist?
The work
is what matters first and foremost. Are a disproportionate number of big buzz
debut novels written by attractive 20-somethings? Sure. But in the end it’s so
much more about the work than it is about the author’s promotability where
fiction is concerned.
Anonymous
said...
Sometimes
I think the US
publishing industry doesn't care as much about West Coast lifestyles or
Midwestern ones. Over 75% of fiction I see takes place on the East Coast,
mostly in New York. Am I
imagining this, or is it real? And if the latter, is there anything we can all
do to improve the situation and make the industry more
realistic/representative?
I
don’t think it’s quite as dire as that figure would suggest, but since so much
of the US
publishing industry is based in New York,
there is going to be an unintentional bias sometimes. And, if fact, it’s all
about supply and demand. Those New York
books are being bought by a large audience or they wouldn’t continue to be
published. If Wichita, KS,
suddenly became a bestselling destination, you’d be surprised at how many books
would suddenly be set there. Plenty of people who work in publishing are not
actually from the East Coast and we are all conscious that we need to find
books for the broadest possible readership.
Anonymous
said...
I'm
one of your authors and would like to know if you think it's possible to plan a
career in publishing (as an author, that is!). I've just had my seventh book
published and as the years pass, it seems like it's getting harder to map out
any kind of career path. Do you think it's possible?
Sure.
It does depend on the author and the category—and certainly paths aren’t always
going to go as planned, since a big success, a book that just doesn’t perform,
or significant life change can alter that path—but part of what we good agents
and editors do is to help build authors’ careers. It’s important to have goals
in mind and to think about the big picture, as well as to be open to changes
and opportunities.
JDuncan said...
I'm
curious about how you all are as agents in relation to your clients. Are you
all the hands on type of agent that gets into the editing process, helping with
book ideas, etc. or are you a more hands off sort that likes to just deal with
the business end of things and leave all the writing stuff to the writer? If
you have different approaches, does this have any effect on how you interact
amongst each other when dealing with client issues?
You can read more about it on the About
Us page of our website, but here’s the gist of our philosophy: “Being
involved in every stage of putting together a non-fiction book proposal, offering
substantial editing on fiction manuscripts, and coming up with book ideas for
authors looking for their next project is as much a part of our work as
selling, negotiating contracts, and collecting monies for our clients. We
follow a book from its inception through its sale to a publisher, its
publication, and beyond. Our commitment to our writers does not, by any means,
end when we have collected our commission. This is one of the many things that
makes us unique in a very competitive business.”
Rose Green
said...
I
see a lot of internet commentary on what a writer should NEVER do (usually
along the lines of bad formatting, sending bribes and/or threats along with the
query, not knowing how to use the English language--or possibly any written
language--etc). I'm more interested in that top 5 percent who all get full
requests. Some make it and some don't. Are there any systematic characteristics
you see that clearly cut off a ms from the running, once you've read the whole
thing?
Ah,
see, that’s because it’s easier to tell people what not to do then to
tell them what they should actually do. But if we actually read an entire
manuscript and turn it down, chances are that we either really liked it but
don’t believe we can sell it (because the market is especially crowded, or it
has some fatal flaw that can’t be fixed with some editing) or because that
elusive spark just isn’t there.
Kanani
said...
Actually,
I much prefer to hear all of you spout out. You're funny, you can be wise, you
can be direct, and you do it all very nicely. So this? We have to ask you? As
in what Miss Snark did so well?
So you've driven me to ask the basics.
Boxers or briefs?
Hipsters, bikinis or thongs?
Clooney or Jolie?
Thank
you—finally someone’s asking the critical stuff! Boxer-briefs. Anything but
thongs. And we’re a bit divided on the Clooney/Jolie issue (quick insight into
the dynamics of the DGLM workplace: we fight about nothing more than trivial
things related to celebrities—the Jake Gyllenhaal: Hot or Ugly debate rears its
head far more often than we should probably admit) but if Jim
gets his wish, Angelina’ll be co-hosting The View any day now!
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