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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!ames!agate!rsoft!mindlink!a710
- From: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca (Crawford Kilian)
- Subject: Fiction Advice 15: Queries
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1992 04:33:26 GMT
- Message-ID: <17185@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Sender: news@deep.rsoft.bc.ca (Usenet)
- Lines: 93
-
- Writing A Query Letter About Your Novel
-
- The query can be a quick way to tell whether your novel might be of interest
- to a particular publisher--without having to wait until some editor finds
- your manuscript deep within her slush pile. The query should give the editor
- an idea of your story (and a sense of the way you're handling it) that's
- clear enough to help her decide if it's worth considering. If the idea sounds
- good, you know the complete manuscript (or sample chapters) will enjoy a
- prompt and careful reading. If the idea doesn't sound right for her, she may
- tell you why, and perhaps suggest either a new approach or another publisher.
-
- Some queries are very short, and others are long indeed--novel outlines
- masquerading as letters. Consider the following suggestions as guidelines,
- not ironclad laws:
-
- 1. Supply a short, pungent description of what the book is about: a desperate
- attempt to escape a narcotics bust, an unexpected journey that leads to
- romance and danger in 1930s China, an aging gunfighter's attempt to prove
- himself again in the Mexican Revolution.
-
- 2. If not obvious from your plot outline, identify the audience your book is
- aimed at: hardcore space-opera fans, teenage girls, Regency-romance readers.
-
- 3. Be able to tell the editor what makes this novel different from others in
- the genre: a twist in the plot, a new angle on the hero, an unusual setting.
-
- 4. Your credentials may be helpful, if only as a dedicated and knowledgeable
- reader in the genre, or as an observant resident of the city you've set your
- novel in. These are not trivial qualifications: If you don't know and love
- the genre you're writing in, it will show. And if you don't know the history
- and folklore of your setting, the story will lack depth.
-
- 5. Display in your query some of the excitement and energy you want to bring
- to your story--show how and why this story matters to you, and it'll matter
- to your editor.
-
- The Letter Itself:
-
- Ideally, your query letter ought to run to a page or a little more, organized
- something like this:
-
- First paragraph: Tell us what kind of novel you've written, or are now
- writing. How long is it, when and where is it set? Describe the hero and
- heroine, and perhaps one or two other major characters. What's their
- predicament? How are they proposing to get out of it? And why should we
- care--that is, what's at stake?
-
- Second paragraph: Describe what happens in the middle of the novel--how your
- characters interact, what conflicts arise among them.
-
- Third paragraph: The resolution of the novel--the climax and its outcome, and
- tying up loose ends.
-
- Fourth paragraph: Why this story interests you, what your qualifications are
- for writing it, and some questions for the editor: If this story interests
- you, would you like the whole ms., or an outline and sample chapters? Do you
- have any specific ms. requirements I should be aware of?
-
- Obviously this pattern will vary depending on the nature of the query: If
- you've included an outline and sample chapters, the plot summary will be very
- brief or nonexistent, and the query will focus on your background and your
- questions for the editor. If the book is completed, the plot summary will be
- easier to supply than if you have only a rough idea of where the book is
- going.
-
- The query letter is a blurb for your novel, and like any blurb it needs to
- pique the reader's interest and make the reader wonder: "How is *that* going
- to turn out?" The quality of writing in the query had better be first-rate,
- especially if you haven't included an elegantly written chapter or two. If
- your query is clumsy or riddled with English errors, the editor will be less
- than eager to see more of your prose.
-
- Because the query requires little time to read and respond to, it can help
- you quickly identify potential markets and definite non-markets. But it can't
- pre-sell your novel; at best, it can only create a cautiously welcoming
- attitude in an editor who knows how tough it is to sell a first novel during
- a recession.
-
- Will your query reveal such a knockout story idea that the publisher will
- steal it--turn you down, pass on your idea to one of their hack writers, and
- publish it for their own profit? This may be the single most common anxiety
- of novices, but the sad truth is that your idea probably isn't *worth*
- stealing. In fact, the editor may wearily see it as the umpteenth standard
- variation on some ancient plot, one she's seen a dozen times just this week.
- This is not to say your idea should be positively weird; most story ideas in
- genre fiction are indeed variations on ancient plots. The trick is to make
- the variations appear to be fresh, surprising, and full of potential
- storytelling power. A query is a direct approach to an editor. But you may
- well be aware that many, many publishing houses no longer even consider
- queries or submissions that do not come through an agent. In my next posting
- I'll consider what that implies in the selling of your novel.
-
-
-