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How long should it take before you query?
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Megan
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Dec 25, 2020 02:58PM

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I'd say you're ready to query when you have a polished draft that you feel like you can't improve upon. Since you generally only get one chance to query a particular novel, you want to take your best shot.

Basically, your book is ready to query once you have gone through all the necessary steps to polish and edit it and you feel satisfied with it to the point where you don't think you can do anything more to improve it.
It took me two weeks to write the first draft of my YA contemporary (it ended at 90k+ words). I was writing daily and my average word count was 7k per day, sometimes more sometimes less. This isn't a standard. This will differ from one writer to the other, and from one book to the other. I'm working on another novel rn and it's taking me much longer to get through the first draft, for example. I had 3 rounds of beta readers and 5 rounds of editing total before I started querying it, and then even after I started the querying process, I still ended up having to make some edits to the first pages to make sure they were more "catchy" etc... and even more recently I decided to switch POV from third person to first person.
My only advice here is to not query with your first draft, no matter how polished you think your first draft is. Make sure you edit and edit and edit, and get beta readers to point out issues that you can't find yourself, and then edit again using their feedback. Don't worry about how much time it takes you Whether it's two months or a year, that doesn't matter.
Some writers find it useful to take a break from their book after writing their first draft before they start editing, so that they can go through it with "fresher" eyes and make it easier to spot plot holes and any other issues they need to fix. Others jump into the editing immediately after the first draft because they wanna stay "in the zone." There is no one way to write a book. There is only the way that works for you. And this goes for how long it will take to write a book. It'll take however long it'll take and however long you need.
The agents won't care about how long it took you to write your book and start querying. They'll care that you're querying them with the best version of your book that you can write, and I cannot emphasize this more.

I know there are things I change (or want to change) every time I go through a book. You have to make a decision at some point as to whether your changes are making your writing or story better or if they are simply tweaking.

Thank you for the advice! I really appreciate it.

Thank you for the advice! You guys are probably right. I'm just overthinking it or something.

I know there are things I..."
That's a good point. Thanks for the advice!


So when you have hit your personal best then send off the query. Be sure to query exactly like your target has requested that it be done.
A better question might be how to speed up your personal writing process.
I learned early on that pantsing a novel would not work for me. I later learned that pantsing short essays and op-eds did work better for me.
We all have a different point between pantsing and planning depending on the length of item we are writing. And we all have a different amount of planning that works best for us.