Paul Colt's Blog - Posts Tagged "writing"

Publish or Perish at the Gate

You’ve completed your first book. Congratulations! You knew you could do it and you did. You’re proud of yourself and you’re proud of the book. You should be. Now comes the next gate: Publishing. As I reflect on everything it took to get through this gate, it occurs to me that you can’t do it justice in one post. Let’s start with the basics.

A good place to start is a current copy of Guide to Literary Agents, published by Writer’s Digest Books, Cincinnati Ohio. My 2005 edition (ouch!) profiles 600 literary agencies. It tells you what genre they consider, what their submission guidelines are and what you might expect in terms schedule etc. It also gives you good advice about properly preparing your query. These are all important guides to the process you need to follow whether you choose to query an agency or a publisher.

Which brings us to the next set of questions. Who are you going to query? Are you going focus on agencies or publishers, print, digital or audio? Do you plan to skip all that and self-publish? Answers to those questions have big implications for this gate and a couple more down the road. Let’s focus on the query process for the moment. It is similar whether you are soliciting an agent or a publisher.

Rule 1: Follow the submission guidelines! You can find them in the literary agents guide or a publisher’s website. They are all different. If you don’t follow them, your query is dead on arrival. They require things like a query letter, including author bio, target audience and marketing plan. That’s right, a marketing plan- more on that later. Remember the letter is a sales pitch. You are selling yourself and your book. Most require a synopsis of specified length and one or more sample chapters. Some want digital submission, others want snail mail paper with a SASE (self-addressed stamped envelope). The envelope is so they can easily return your submission with their rejection. That’s right, rejection. Get comfortable with the concept. Your work will be rejected. It can take six to nine months or more to get the bad news and they don’t often give you a reason for rejection. That part of the process is what makes self-publishing so seductive. We’ll get to that one next week.

Next week: Agents and publishers.

https://www.amazon.com/author/paulcolt

Ride easy,
Paul
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Published on September 14, 2014 06:08 Tags: historical-fiction, new-authors, romance, western-fiction, writing, young-adult