it’s difficult to know when to move on.
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it’s difficult to know when to move on.
Thanks for those resources!! Fab!Apparently Publishers Marketplace is the bee-all-and-end-all of the US market, but it costs, and I already pay for Querytracker (which I love because the paid version offers stats which helps me who to query and who might respond - I can manage my expectations). For me, the pension only goes so far.
I follow here on YouTube to find agents and, by watching, find something to make a connection with in that personalisation line Pete bangs on aboutThis is primarily US agents, but here is where I do the same thing for the UK market.
No author website yet, or social media. I want to concentrate on the writing.
Thanks for those resources!! Fab!
Ah, maybe I pay for Query tracker... ??
But once you feel sure they are 'the one' for you – and perhaps they are: Good luck – don't be too heart-broken if it's a 'Not right for me at this time' from them. Or, worse, just silence....follow a target agent
Thanks RachelF) resolve the cliffhanger in the synopsis but hold the actual drama over for the follow up book
G) have the unanswered cliffhanger in the synopsis with to be continued in the sequel
Self-publishing the first of a trilogy but trying to trad publish the sequels doesn't make sense to me. But I could be wrong.
My own sequel is hinted at in the ending of my synopsis, but only vaguely, and the first book does resolve. Huddle South didn't have a problem with that. Obviously I've no idea what agents think because who does?
The ideal is to have a trilogy where the individual volumes can stand alone too rather than it feeling like one story split into three. The best series do this - leave the reader wanting more but don't leave them unsatisfied. The time lag for publishing sequels is likely a year or more and attention spans are unfortunately short.
Yes, that's a brilliant way to resolve the first and hook for the next.you find out what has happened to him, just not the why,
a) Your covering letter is a Sell not a Tell. You don't have to say anything about the ending other than this can be a standalone or the first of a trilogy, and that you have a working synopsis/ you have plotted/drafted the rest of the trilogy and will be happy to discuss these with (agent) [let them feel involved in the process].Ok, so, forgive me, but I have a submission strategy question-
Some of you might have seen that I put my synopsis through the Lab last week. This afternoon I ‘huddled’ my cover letter, with a view to making a fresh round of submissions soon, which is the reason for putting it in this thread.
One point that came up in feedback on the synopsis, was the ending, which does leave things on somewhat of a cliffhanger - my protagonist sees (right at the end) what happened to her brother Scott, who went missing 30 years ago (it’s a time slip mystery).
The feedback was the cliffhanger might be a no no for agents, which I completely get and agree with. However, my intention is that this will be a trilogy and in this book, I answer the ‘what happened’ to Scott, in the next I answer the ‘why’ (to keep him safe) and find him and in the final book, the bigger mystery that connects Scott and his sister to the past is wrapped up.
So my question is - with regards to agents and cliffhangers - am I better off
A) explaining this in my covering letter? (although I fear it will make it quite lengthy)
B) cracking on and writing the next book before submitting, if not the last one too, so I have evidence of the complete plot/arc?
C) self publishing the first book (it should have decent local interest, fingers crossed) whilst cracking on and writing the second then third and if I have some local success, submitting the second book to agents?(I’m not even sure this is a done thing??)
D) rewrite the ending so it’s not a cliffhanger, but I think this is going to add too much, go over my ideal word count for genre and leave it at a point that won’t seem natural to start the next book, if that makes sense
E) some other strategy I haven’t considered?
Anybody else in this same boat???
self publishing the first book