Paul Whybrow
Full Member
After spending five months at the beginning of 2015 researching the likes, dislikes, blogs, tweets and Youtube videos of literary agents, and querying 160 of them, I haven't made a submission since.
Instead, I've written two more novels in my series of psychological thrillers featuring a Cornish detective. Most agents replied within six months, with the quickest taking only two hours! I already had a hide like a rhinoceros, so took the rejections philosophically.
I learnt a lot from the process, for, like editing, creating a blurb and a synopsis or self-publishing on Smashwords and Amazon, you have to do it to appreciate the problems and refine your technique.
I'm about to return to the fray, querying with my second first novel—the original first being double the acceptable length for a debut. I'm more confident about what to do and what not to do.
To my astonishment, two form letter rejections came in during the last week. I queried both agencies 16 months ago! It's polite for them to eventually reply, though I now have an image of them buried under piles of manuscripts, their hard drives clogged with queries as they labour to say 'No' to legions of hopeful writers.
Can any of you beat this record?
Instead, I've written two more novels in my series of psychological thrillers featuring a Cornish detective. Most agents replied within six months, with the quickest taking only two hours! I already had a hide like a rhinoceros, so took the rejections philosophically.
I learnt a lot from the process, for, like editing, creating a blurb and a synopsis or self-publishing on Smashwords and Amazon, you have to do it to appreciate the problems and refine your technique.
I'm about to return to the fray, querying with my second first novel—the original first being double the acceptable length for a debut. I'm more confident about what to do and what not to do.
To my astonishment, two form letter rejections came in during the last week. I queried both agencies 16 months ago! It's polite for them to eventually reply, though I now have an image of them buried under piles of manuscripts, their hard drives clogged with queries as they labour to say 'No' to legions of hopeful writers.
Can any of you beat this record?