Exploring the future through the present. One day at a time. |
“But Mary treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart.” ~ Luke 2:19 I tried writing down everything that happened at the writers conference last month. The good, the bad, the exciting and the boring. I wrote about the first two days, but stopped half-way through the third. I couldn’t go any further. Like Mary, I needed to treasure it as well as ponder. During the conference, I signed up for a fifteen minute appointment with a literary agent. I practiced my pitch in one of my elective courses just prior to my appointment, and I continued to mentally recite it as I walked through the hotel. The moment I sat down with the agent, I started my pitch. I didn’t get but a few words in when he said, “Show me what you have.” Okay. Fine by me, because I was stumbling over it, anyway. I gave him my “one sheet” which contains a back-cover blurb, the genre, word count, and my bio which includes my writing credits. He read the first page of my fantasy (and latest novel), stopped less than a page in and said, “I have a question for you. Why aren’t you published, yet? This is really good.” “Honestly,” I said, “I haven’t tried that hard. I’ve been concentrating on writing and improving my craft.” He nodded and continued to read. He spent over half of appointment reading it. I spent that time staring at his two massive football rings, and ached to ask him who he played for, and if they were Super Bowl or division championship rings. He finally had to force himself to put it down, and asked if I had anything else. “I do.” “Did you bring them?” I did, and took them out of my folder. His expression indicated that he was pleased that I did. I pulled out the first chapter of one and said, “This one is a lot shorter, so it won’t take you as long.” He skimmed through that one and asked more about the books’ genres, what genre I preferred to write and if the books were YA or adult. In the end, he not only asked me to send him the full manuscript and synopsis of my fantasy, but the other two as well. He even bragged me up a bit to an editor for Tor sitting next to him, and recommended I sign up to meet with her as well. She was full up, however, and I never got a chance to accost her during meals or elsewhere. I sent him everything about two weeks ago. I expect to get a response in the next six weeks or so. Hopefully. I don’t expect him to take me as a client, though (or at least tell myself not to). My books have received interest like this before, and ended up being passed over. Even so, that the agent literally couldn’t put my story down says -- and means -- a lot. It also shows that all my hard work has yielded good results after all. |