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Query Letters
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M.C.
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May 21, 2014 08:08PM

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That sounds like a great idea.
I would think that any kind of feedback/help would be welcome. :)
I would think that any kind of feedback/help would be welcome. :)

I'm not trying to be snarky, just want to know which part of the query we should post, seeing as all agents ask for a query but not all ask for the synopsis. I think it's a great idea.
@Claire a paragraph in your query should be dedicated to summarizing the book. Sometimes the agent requests a separate synopsis too, but there's always a 1-2 paragraph summary of the book in every query

Here's a summary post if you're interested in participating, with links to some other blog entries that hopefully answer all questions:
http://www.saboviec.com/calling-all-c...
We need entries! We want it to be a community event rather than a contest. :)
Question: Will it be allowed to critique even if we don't 'participate' by sending our 500 words?

http://absolutewrite.com/forums/forum...
I'm asking because I don't plan on ever sending query letters so it would be a waste of time and space (only 35 after all) if I'd do it. However, sometimes, (yes sometimes, not always) I have bright ideas/opinion that might help someone, yet I don't want to commit either because I may just have a critic-block-syndrome attack too. :P


@Claire - I totally understand your confusion. Let me get two points clarified first.
1. Writing query letters is painful and to be honest there are so many opinions out there on how to draft the perfect query letter that I'm surprised the internet hasn't blown up yet.
2. Let's not get caught up in the terminology. I've come across sites that will call that section of your letter where you are supposed to explain what your book is about as a synopsis, a summary, a hook, a blurb, etc, etc, etc.
So let me explain a bit more what I meant. A query letter has roughly 3 to 4 parts, notice that I said roughly. That is because, depending on who you're querying to (agent's guidelines), what you're querying about (book/genre), and your credentials (any relevant information about book or previous publishing) you will draft your query letter differently.
Let's call these parts:
1. Opening lines: greeting, introduction, personalization about agent, etc.
2. Synopsis/Summary/Blurb/Overview/Hook/That headache inducing part where you're supposed to talk about your book and leave the agent wanting to call you back immediately to request your full manuscript and offer representation.
3. Credentials
4. Thank you
I think that for the purpose of this thread we should focus on the part that will most likely remain the same through out all letters that we send, and let's be honest, it is the most important part of the letter. If an agent isn't blown away by the idea of your book, then your letter will be tossed to the slush pile.
Also, a query letter shouldn't be longer than 350 words (every single part included). This is average. So let's try to limit our submissions to 250 to 300 words max.
Any other questions, comments, or concerns? And do correct me if you noticed I said something completely wrong. I'm not perfect.

I think each query should have their own thread too because it could get quite a huge mix up if everyone write their query in the same thread and it would soon become a huge monster once people start giving their thoughts on them. I can already see that... read the post, check query... which page? 1-2-3??? scroll up and down etc. nah... Each query should be at the start of a new one to maximize the view.
What d'you think Bisky?
What d'you think Bisky?


@Bisky - would you have to set this up for us to start posting?
