Poets & Writers

I LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM YOU

YOU CAN READ as many articles about the process of searching for and securing an agent as you can find, absorb all the helpful advice of agents as well as authors who have blazed the trail ahead of you, then turn back to your own search for representation and still feel anxious, unprepared. This is understandable, of course, considering this critical step in the writer’s journey requires drafting a unique e-mail that introduces you and your work to a professional who can help you realize your dreams of becoming a published author—and you get only one shot at making a good first impression. No pressure, right?

The typical query letter includes five essential elements: an opening that establishes your connection to the agent and why you’ve chosen that particular person to query, including the name of anyone who has referred you; a project description that gives the agent a compelling reason to read the book; some context for your book, commonly known as comps, or comparables, that help an agent place an unknown book (yours) within the context of well-known books or authors; a bio; and a coda, which includes details such as word count and, of course, a hearty thank-you.

But no two query letters are exactly the same. Just as you wouldn’t want to read a book that is unoriginal, an agent won’t be compelled to read a query—and almost certainly not an entire manuscript—if it doesn’t stand out. The project description alone should be at least as compelling as the book you’re trying to publish, and very often the language a writer uses in the query letter shows up in some form or another in the pitch letter your agent will send to editors with your submission. So it would be a mistake to take a cookie-cutter approach to this personal document. To illustrate this point, I spoke with two authors about their initial communications with their respective agents, then asked each agent to comment on what it was about those e-mails that got their hooks into them. What

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Poets & Writers

Poets & Writers5 min read
Hey, Jealousy
I AM HERE to tell you about the time I rage-puked with envy over another author’s success. When my first novel came out in summer 2011, I knew very few other writers, so the ones I met that year became not only my instant friends, but also—it was ine
Poets & Writers5 min read
Picking What to Submit
WINNING a writing contest can lead to amazing things beyond a fancy line on your CV, including prize money, publication, and promotion. Contests can also connect you with judges and other writers who respect your work. But as with many aspects of the
Poets & Writers6 min read
Thinning the Line
웅녀, 가위눌림, 태몽. THESE are a few of the words written in Hangul in my novel The Stone Home, published by William Morrow in April. They appear midsentence, a sprig of Korean characters in a landscape of English. Though my book has been completed for some

Related