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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Query, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 26 - 43 of 43
26. QUERY TRACKER TURNS 2 – Contests to celebrate!!!!!!!!!!


Hi all

The amazing folk at Query Tracker are celebrating their 2nd anniversary -  celebrating and giving US the presents!!!!!!!! Details below……

Help us celebrate QueryTracker’s second anniversary, and you could win a website  custom designed for you and your writing.  Yes, your own website designed specifically for you.

We are calling it the QueryTracker Carnival, and you can learn more about it here http://QueryTracker.net/carnival or on the QT blog at http://querytracker.blogspot.com/

We will be holding four different contests, each with their own prizes. Prizes range from free QT Premium Memberships to query critiques by agents and authors.

The Grand Prize (The Custom Website) will be awarded in a random drawing to take place on the last day of the festivities. To get your name in that drawing, all you have to do is enter any or all of the four contests being held.

To increase you odds, you can receive additional entries into the drawing just by helping us spread the word about the contest. Simply announce the contest on your blog or forum, let us know about it via email, and you’ll be given another entry into the drawing. You can read more about this option at
http://querytracker.blogspot.com/2009/05/querytracker-turns-two.html.

Grand Prize
———–
A custom designed writer’s website to showcase your craft.
That’s a $600 value provided by Purple Squirrel Web Design (http://PurpleSquirrelWebDesign.com).
Purple Squirrel is a web design company that focuses on writers and the writing industry.
You already know their work because they are QT Blogger Carolyn Kaufman, and Patrick McDonald, the creator of QueryTracker.

Good luck. And thank you all for two great years.

For details about the contests go to http://QueryTracker.net/carnival

0 Comments on QUERY TRACKER TURNS 2 – Contests to celebrate!!!!!!!!!! as of 5/19/2009 2:13:00 AM
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27. Generous Agents

The holidays and the end of the year are bringing out the generous nature of agents!

The 2nd Sort-of-Annual Stupendously Ultimate First Paragraph Challenge

  • Deadline: 7pm. EST, Thursday, December 11, 2008.
  • Who: Literary agent Nathan Bransford, Curtis Brown, San Francisco office
  • What: Post the first paragraph of your WIP and compete for the prize of a partial critique, query critique or a 15 minute phone call.
  • How: Skip over to Bransford’s website and post your paragraph in the comments.
  • Warning: The competition is stiff. With 10 hours left, there were 1176 comments/paragraphs.
  • Attention: This is a learning opportunity. Read through at least some of these paragraphs and see which you like and which you don’t. What grabs your attention? Check back when Bransford posts the winners and vote on the finalist. Do you agree with his choices or not? Why or why not?

For more on opening lines:

Take a Holiday Break from Queries and Submit a Chapter Instead

  • Dates: December 15 to January 15
  • Who: Firebrand Literary
  • What: Firebrand agents want to read your first chapter and will forego the usual query. This is a big task for those agents and a great opportunity for writers of all kinds. For those of you who have never got a request for a partial (probably because your query was weak), this is your golden chance. Let your writing speak for itself.
  • How: Go to the Query Holiday posting on Firebrand’s website.

For more on opening chapters:

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28. Agents: Friend or Foe

Okay, so you want an agent. Okay, so you got an agent. Now what do you do. Well, it appears to me that many authors are sitting back and hoping for the best. Well, let me tell you, hope is NOT a strategy!

This may come across as more of a rant, but it is in fact a warning for you authors/writers who think that ALL agents are created equal and that they all do a good job. Not so, my friend.

At Echelon, recently, we have had a flurry of agent submitted works, and all the agents queries have been rejected. I'll never even read those works. Why you ask? Do I hate agents? Do I have some grudge against them? Absolutely not, except for those who DON'T DO THEIR JOBS!

What is an agents job? I've never had an agent, but this seems like a no brainer for me. If I had an agent I would expect, yes expect, them to find the most suitable publishing houses for my work, to submit my work according to the guidelines (offering it the best chance of consideration), and negotiating the best possible deal for me when it is accepted! The agent does in fact work for the author, since that is how they earn their income. You are paying them, they are not paying you. Simple economics.

Now, my beef with this latest round of agents is that I am getting materials that are NOWHERE close to being acceptable for my line of books--and this is without even reading the work. The agents obviously have NOT looked at what we publish. ALL of the agent submissions have been at least TWICE our acceptable word count. And ALL of them have been for PRINT publication.

Our guidelines page is very specific. You MUST have a referral or invitation to submit for paperback and the only line we are accepting for paperback is Quake, none of these agent submissions were for Quake.

So I ask you, if these were your agents, do you think that they have your best interests in mind? Do you truly think that if your agent does this type of thing it will help your career? If one of these submissions was yours, your agent blew the chance for you to even get READ. Where is the professionalism in this?

Do you know what YOUR agent is doing on your behalf? Do you even ask to read the notices going out on your behalf? Do you know where they are going? Do you approve your agent sending your material to houses that are closed to submissions? Is this in your best interest?

My suggestion to you all, is know what is going on in your career. I'm not teling you to stalk your agent and be a prima donna, but I am telling you to take an active role in your career. If your agent is spending all their time sending your work out to publishers who aren't looking, what good is that for you? Where is your career going?

©Karen L. Syed

7 Comments on Agents: Friend or Foe, last added: 9/20/2008
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29. Death by Query

How much attention do you, as an author, pay to this aspect of your submission process? Have you ever really thought about the importance of the query letter? Do you ever wonder if editors really read queries? I can't answer for anyone else, but I know I do.

Here are a few quick tips on what "I" think a query letter should be.

1. One page-short and simple.

2. Professional. Don't use fancy papers, fonts, or colors. It is distracting and some editors have called it juvenile.
3. Pristine. It is one page, there is no room for error, so don't rely on spell check. Own your query and ensure that it is the very best it can be before submitting it. As an editor, I won't even look at a manuscript if there are typos and technical errors in the query, it is that first impression you can't take back.

It should include:
1.
All of your contact information.
2. A quick paragraph of introduction.
3. A couple of paragraphs summarizing your story; the set up, the conflict, the climax, the resolution. A few simple remarks about each of the key points in your story.
4. A brief summary of your industry accomplishments; writing credits, contest wins, and vision for the submission.

If you aren't sure about your query letter, please feel free to post your questions here and we'll see if we can help.

Blog Book Tour August Challenge #20
©Karen L. Syed

This book is the result of the best query letter I ever received!

8 Comments on Death by Query, last added: 8/21/2008
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30. The Biggest Mistake That Freelance Writers Make

Spring 2008The web has made it too easy to build a spreadsheet and email-bomb publications with your stories. But just because you can submit your stories to one hundred magazines in a single keystroke doesn't mean that you should do that.

For my money, the biggest mistake that freelance writers make is not reading the publications they submit to.

Before you ever submit someplace, you should already love the editors and writers published on those pages--you should know exactly where and why your submission would fit in that magazine before you ever push the send button.

But don't take my word for it. Isak's inspiring writing site has a link-filled discussion of the topic, with some great thoughts about people who submit to the literary journal, Virginia Quarterly Review. Don't be in the 99 percent of thoughtless writers.

Check it out: "Ross White (who first tipped me to this) lays the matter, finally, to bed: 'I don’t see what all the fuss is about since 99% of VQR submitters have never seen the magazine. Hell, 99% of all submitters anywhere have never read the magazine.'"

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31. BC publisher seeks book queries

Douglas and McIntyre are accepting queries for literary fiction and non-fiction books. More details...

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32. Another Trip to the U.S. Post Office (Ugh! or Okay! [smile])


Today I drove to my local U.S. Post Office. 

Enough said. (But I'll go on anyway.) 

While you're standing in line at the post office (the one that wraps around that long, slender counter where the multi-colored envelopes and labels are shoved into cubbyholes [I think that's the first time I've ever typed the word cubbyhole], the counter that everyone just leans on to save their legs from buckling out of tiredness), don't you ever wonder how anything in our country gets delivered to the right place at the right time?  

When I finally made it to the ever-so-admirable position of front-of-the-line and the postal worker called "next", I walked up to the counter and laid my manila envelope (filled with 133 manuscript pages, a title page, and a cover letter) on that weigh station thingy that sits between the customer and the postal worker. 

The postal worker didn't speak to me, not even a "Hi" or "How you doing?" She glanced at the envelope and started pushing buttons. So, of course, being the kind person and taking the high road (after standing in line for nearly 25 minutes), I took the initiative. "How are you?" I said.
The postal worker continued pushing buttons. 

How many buttons do you have to push to calculate the cost of sending a middle grade manuscript halfway across the country?  It's not War and Peace, for crying out loud. It's 133 pages, a title page, and a cover letter.

Anyway, I neglected the conversation, since that obviously wasn't going anywhere, and I began to look around and absorb my surroundings (as writers do and should).   

Behind the counter and beyond the "cordial" postal worker, I noticed a giant crate, about eight feet tall, stuffed with packages and envelopes of every shape and size. And I mean stuffed. Like the crust of a stuffed-crust pizza (horrible simile; but I'm hungry, so I'll leave it).

As I periodically glanced at the crate, another postal worker (who I'm sure was just as personable as the one helping me send off my manuscript) came along and wheeled the giant container around the corner and out of sight. 

And then I thought to myself (as the postal worker helping me kept pushing buttons), how in the hell will my manuscript make it to where it's going? 

But some how, some way, and with a little luck from the Muse guiding my blood, sweat, and tears (in the form of paper) across the country, my manuscript always makes it to that agent or editor.   

But how?  Given the lines that form at post offices around the country and the giant stuffed crate I saw, how can that be? You would think that the package you're sending to your niece for her birthday or your birth certificate you're expecting for your passport would easily get lost in that heap of rubble they call mail.  

But I have to say, me going to the post office usually means I'm actually sending a manuscript to someone somewhere. So I'll go to the post office as many times as it takes with as many encounters with grumpy postal workers as the post office can throw at me, in order to send that golden manuscript that hits a homerun with that golden agent or editor. 

Just another hurdle to jump on that obstacled road to getting published.     

This topic begs the question.  Anyone have any lost manuscript stories or manuscripts that ended up in someone else's hands? Just curious.  Mine have all made it so far. But I'm wondering if this happens more than we all might think.  

Happy writing!  And happy mailing!

  

    



    

0 Comments on Another Trip to the U.S. Post Office (Ugh! or Okay! [smile]) as of 1/1/1990
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33. Oh my!

Was welcomed to our new submission period by an inbox full of 50 new subs. That brings my current total up to 76 initial subs and 5 full manuscripts.

We're out of office tomorrow, but will be back online and going strong as of Wednesday.

Which means I will be spending the entire day tomorrow reading queries and such. Great chance to make a dent in that number.

And if I ever see another box in my life, I just might hurl.

Stay literate;)

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34. Always Take the High Road!

Sending out query letters, whether via snail mail or email, to literary agents can be anything but fun. Why? Because rejection is inevitable. The bottom line is this... after you've written your masterpiece and poured your heart and soul and sweat onto the keyboard, if you can't handle being rejected, your life as a writer is basically over. You can't afford to waste energy on moping and pouting and spewing your hundred reasons why this agent should be asking to see your manuscript to your significant other. You just can't waste it.  


There are a few things you should know before you start the query process: 

1. Some agents will get back to you within a few days.
2. Some agents will take weeks to respond.
3. Some agents will take months to respond.
4. Some agents will never respond (especially when not interested).

That being said, query rejections are nothing. Wait until a literary agent asks to see a partial or full manuscript, and after a week or two of you not sleeping and agonizing over the submission when you should be writing and thinking about your next story, the agent responds with, "I'm sorry, but this is going to be a pass for me." Query rejection? Please!

If an agent passes on your partial or full manuscript, you have a few choices:

1. Write an email or send a letter to Agent explaining why your manuscript is better than novels A, B, and C.
2. Write another email or send another letter to Agent explaining why your manuscript is better than novels D, E, and F.
3. Write an email or send a letter asking the agent to read the full manuscript because the second half of your story is much better than the first.
4. Write an email or letter thanking the agent for considering the manuscript and reading it and wish the agent luck in the future.
5. Write nothing at all. Accept the rejection humbly. And move on to the next agent.

My choice is #4. But whatever you do, do not participate in #1, 2, or 3. Always take the high road when corresponding with literary agents. Many times, rejection comes down to personal taste for agents, a problem you can eliminate by doing a little research before firing off that query letter. If you don't take the high road and respond with dignity, you could endanger your career and future as a writer. Face it. Rejection is part of being a writer. We all have to stare it in the eye at some point. 

More on Literary Agents:

Literary agents are just normal people. Busy normal people. On top of  having strangers coming at them trying to sell them on a story of some kind, they have to reply to emails, return phone calls, have long lunches with editors, speak at conferences, and meet with their own authors and illustrators. They will usually get back to you... when they have time. You just have to wait and be PATIENT!  

Placing your manuscript in the right hands at the right time is not half the battle... it's most of it.      








  

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35. Querying Pet Peeves

This is a short list of things that irk agents most when reading a query--

1. Saying no other titles are comparable to yours because it is too unique.

Well, the thing is your story may be unique to you. All stories are unique in some way or the other, but what this statement really tells me is that you don't know your market, or there is no market for your book. Do the research, find something you can compare to your work.

2. Saying you're the next Dan Brown, Harry Potter.

There are many writers whose books can be compared to Potter or Brown or James Patterson, etc. in some way. Try to find other authors to include in your comparable titles, authors with great track records, but not so much hype.

3. Too much personal info.

You wouldn't go to a job interview and tell that person how much your dog, or your parents, or whomever, loved your ability to brew coffee (or file papers, etc.). So, don't tell me how much everyone loved your story.

On the other hand, if a published author or a known editor has read it and made positive comments, by all means give me a BRIEF run down.

4. Too little essential information.

You can tell me as much about the story as you want, but I need the genre and word count.

In the same vein, you can regale me with your publishing experience, but please include something about the story your pitching me.

5. Addressing your query.

Do not 'Dear Sir or Madam.' Do not "To Whom it May Concern.' This tells me up front that you have done absolutely no research about who we are, what we want, and what we need.

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36. Hi-ho, Hi-ho, It's back to work I go.

Well, I had almost 100 new queries waiting in my inbox this morning. You'd think I'd been gone for months:)

Sent 35 rejections today, more than a dozen thank yous to various editors, and submissions, submissions, submissions.

My nugget of knowledge for the day is know your word count! Anything more than 150,000 is a hard sell to me. Any adult work less than 80,000 is an almost immediate no.

Young adult and childrens' works gets a little trickier. Middle-grade is liked somewhere between 35,000-50,000, but can run less or more.

Tomorrow I think I shall post some of my biggest querying pet peeves (which means don't use these items unless ya really wanna receive an on-the-spot no).

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37. Crazy Question

For you children's librarians out there (or those with a remarkable knowledge) I've a crazy question. You know those books where you flip pages and change the image before you? For example, the image is of a face and you can flip to change the eyes, nose and mouth, thereby creating a wide variety of different combinations? Right. What are those books actually called? Is there a term for them? Because, to be frank, I haven't a clue.

10 Comments on Crazy Question, last added: 6/8/2007
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38. Query from Me to Thee!

I've noticed that most other blogs have a lot of images on them. I've resisted the urge to drop graphics into my blog posts, partially because it's a hassle and partially because I'm a word gal and I like to paint pictures with language.

But I'm wondering if it might be good to have some images here and there. After all the original National Police Gazette was illustrated. People like pictures, no?

So, I ask you--would you like the CPG better if it had pictures in it? I'm not going to promise I'll follow your advice exactly but I'll consider it seriously!

1 Comments on Query from Me to Thee!, last added: 2/26/2007
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39. Query Frustrations

There is soon to be a headline, "Literary Agent Goes Query Crazy," and it's going to be how bad queries put me in the mental hospital. And the worst part is, I know a lot of people who query me read my blog. But I feel stupid saying the same things (how to write a query letter) over and over again... (Is this what you want?) Am I (already) crazy for expecting someone who reads my blog and says - I read your blog! - to then follow some of the rules that I lay out there? Any of them?

Maybe I'm talking about it the wrong way...

One last try.

Things you NEED to know and keep in mind when writing a query letter:

1) We are not friends. I don't know you. This is a business letter.
Seriously. I can count my real friends on my right hand and if I haven't called you up in the past month to tell you some wacked out crazy story, or, if I haven't been an hour late meeting you for dinner (to which you kindly waited), or if I don't make you listen to me bitch about the same guy over and over again... You can probably guess we're not friends. Don't confuse friendly for friends. Different. Please treat me like someone who you want to do business with. I'll try my best to respond in kind.

2) It's a pitch letter. A query, as I define it, is a request from an author to an agent/editor that one) pitches the material and then 2) requests permission to send it. That's it. So what is a pitch then? A pitch is a SALES VEHICLE. You are selling me something. Love movies about sales, you come away with: If you aren't selling them, they are selling you. If you aren't closing them, they are closing you. If you aren't selling them on the reasons why they should read your manuscript, they are closing you on reasons why they shouldn't. And -- worst of all, you aren't even there to counter. It's a letter, so it has to be sharp and hit its mark, hard, and then get the hell out of dodge.

You sell people on the following things: 1) an amazing idea, 2) the fulfillment of a need (my needs, not yours -- I personally don't care if writing books has been your lifelong dream until your my client. At the query stage, your closing yourself by saying that, not me), 3) your expertise and platform.

There should be a bloody book on this -- Sales & Marketing for Authors.

Since there isn't (and no, I don't count books on how to write a query letter... that's about crafting a query letter, I'm talking about sales), go google and read up on:

Sales Tips
How to Write Effective Direct Sales Letters
Car Dealership Sales Techniques

JustSell.com has a great list on what a sales person should constantly be doing, I took these off of it (and then expanded upon them):

positively expectant -- Don't reject yourself.
listening -- Pay attention when an agent/editor asks for submissions a certain way
qualifying the opportunity (for both parties) -- Talk about the project.
discovering hot buttons (what’s in it for them)
addressing objections -- anticipate what my objections will be, address them in the query (esp for NF)

---

And I know you all hate this. I know it. Because, it's not your job (you know how I feel about that statement) -- but it's also not your job to be your own advocate, it's also not your job to promote yourself or come up with great marketing ideas.

But guess what, with the 80k books coming out every year, you're expected to do more than write the book these days. Fact of life. This is YOUR career, you'd promote your book like crazy -- right?

Well, this is the first step. This is your first non-author-related-author-job.
And if you insist on saying, This isn't my job -- a good book should get attention because it's a good book and not just because I wrote a query letter -- that's your decision.
But there are other authors out there who have written good books, too and they are doing their homework and writing the best query letters out there. They are making it their job.

Do you want to compete with them? Or do you want to hold out for "a good book should get attention?"

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40. Author Feature: Rita Williams-Garcia

Rita Williams-Garcia on Rita Williams-Garcia: "If you asked teenage Rita about an important life event, she would have said, 'beating my brother at chess.'

"Russell taught me how to play so he could have someone to beat. Russell was Bobby Fischer and I was Boris Spassky. According to Russell's rules, Americans went first and Russians last. I got used to being on the black side of the board and waiting for 'Fischer' to open while I waited my turn and usual beatings, preceded by taunts and insults to Sputnik. Russell checked out a different chess book every other day so I didn't think I'd ever win a game.

"Well, one night while we were playing I realized I had gained the advantage in our game and was poised to knock down his king. This was too great to be a good sport. I didn't know how to close the deal, but I felt a funky chicken victory wobble coming on.

"I was silly enough to mention my great milestone on one of my first college dates. Looking back, I understand why the guy didn't ask me out again. I still think about that game, but for other reasons. I've even included it in a true story titled, 'About Russell.'"

Note: "About Russell" appears in Dirty Laundry, Stories About Family Secrets edited by Lisa Rowe Fraustino (Viking, 1998).

How did writing first call to you? Did you answer or, at first, run away?

I had a head start. I entertained myself with stories in my wooden playpen and chose writing stories in kindergarten over coloring. To the humiliation and frustration of my siblings, I quit many a dodge-ball or kickball game to think up a story.

At twelve, I found the Writer's Market and the Writer's Handbook at the library and learned to write query letters and prepare manuscripts. I wrote stories, sketches, and ideas every day. I loved receiving envelopes addressed to me from publishers. True, the envelopes contained rejections, but I didn't care initially. I was a writer!

Could you tell us about your path to publication, any sprints or stumbles along the way?

I made my first sale to Highlights Magazine when I was fourteen. My next sale was a short story to Essence Magazine as a junior in college. They never published it, but they sent the check in time to pay for my summer dorm bill.

By the end of college I had a draft of Blue Tights (Dutton, 1998). I hoped to sell it quickly but it was nearly ten years before I had a contract. The timing was all wrong for this story. Joyce made poor choices based on her poor self-image. In the early eighties we weren't ready to have a black female character who wasn't a traditional role model. Black characters were still sparse in teen literature so editors were skittish about this character with low self-esteem issues. "Couldn't she fight racism or have some higher goal?" What was wrong with liking herself as a goal? Unwilling to compromise or revise, I put the manuscript away.

My job as a promotional writer had been cut when my company was bought, so I took the administrative position I was offered to help out at home. I was now married and had my first daughter. That only pushed me to dust off the old manuscript and try again. This time I made revisions I could live with, yet maintain the character's integrity. I did my research and looked for publishers who sought "realistic" teen fiction. They call it "edgy," these days.

Rosemary Brosnan at Lodestar/Dutton [now HarperCollins] believed in the story and responded to my query letter--which she really liked! All of those Writer’s Handbook articles paid off. Sure, we had a lot of work ahead of us--only I didn't know that. There was much to do. I had to narrow the point of view, toss out a chapter or two, and examine my story choices. The plowing, was brutal but I'm glad I did the work. I was finally a writer, soon to be published author!

Could you briefly tell us about your earliest novels--Blue Tights (Dutton/Lodestar, 1987) and Fast Talk on a Slow Track (Penguin/Lodestar, 1991)? What did each of them teach you about writing? About yourself?

Blue Tights was my initiation into the world of publishing for children. I didn't know what YA meant. I had a picture of my reader, and she was a fourteen-year-old black girl. No one else mattered. Rosemary explained that teachers and librarians were instrumental in putting books in kids' hands. I nodded, but I wasn't really receiving. I think the biggest shock was meeting my audience, which was black, white, Asian, Ukrainian, Hispanic, and so on. Females and males of all ages.

Fast Talk was my first foray into writing a male character. I flipped esteem around, giving Denzel too much ego and very little likeability factor. The last thing I wanted to do with this character was blame conditions for his failure at the Princeton summer orientation program. I wanted to give him all of the power, all of the choices, and, yes, all of the blame.

With Fast Talk I learned a hard lesson, which was to breathe and walk away from the work. The symmetries that I aimed for in the ending were too on-the-nose. I'm slow by nature. It took forever for me to be born. I've learned to not fight my nature, to read better and to be honest. I still admire Fast Talk.

Though both of your earlier novels were critically acclaimed, arguably Like Sisters on the Home Front (Penguin/Lodestar, 1995) was your breakout book, the one that secured your place as a YA star. Ten years later, what does the novel mean to you? How did it feel to receive a 1996 Coretta Scott King Honor Award for this book?

I didn't know how Like Sisters would be perceived, but I knew it was needed. This was the story I was born to tell.

Embarrassing but true, although my work phone rang off the hook that Monday after ALA and I heard the congratulatory messages, I was in my work head and thought, that's nice.

Then Rosemary called. She was excited, bracing me for the news. When she told me Like Sisters was named as an honor book I was more excited for her than I was for myself. I used to tell her, "Don't go nominating me for any Corettas. I just want to write my stories."

Clearly, I didn’t know how the process worked. My paperback deal from Viking editor Sharyn November was the first real money I received as a writer. I soon received offers from other publishers. I was very flattered to have met with editor Andrea Davis Pinkney, who was spearheading Jump at the Sun for Hyperion. It was an amazing time.

My ex-husband and I had visited Atlanta where we met Coretta Scott King and Betty Shabazz (widow of Malcolm X). During her speech, Dr. Shabazz even remarked that she and Coretta had become Like Sisters—unrelated to my novel, but oh, how that resonated with me. I felt like Gayle, overwhelmed by The Telling.

My favorite of your novels is Every Time A Rainbow Dies (HarperCollins/Amistad, 2001). What was your initial inspiration for writing this book?

It is rare that violent crimes against black women receive media coverage. When the Tawana Brawley incident broke about fifteen years ago, I was interested in the continued victimization she endured as a young woman and as an African American. Even though her account proved problematic, I remained interested in public attitudes toward sexual assault victims.

I intended to write a story about our failure to help an African American girl and the reluctant friendship she forms with a young man. I was cleaning up Fast Talk and writing a draft of Like Sisters when I began notes for Rainbow. I didn't get to Rainbow until about 1997. It just wasn't working. I worried that I had lost the drive for the story.

I went for walks in Crown Heights, the Brooklyn neighborhood where the story would take place. The more I saw and heard the neighborhood, the more I realized my characters were not African American but Caribbean. Ah! The girl was an enigma to me, but the boy, Thulani, was clear. I knew his back story instantly. I understood his afflictions and his responses.

The focus of the story changed as my characters became real. I had to abandon revictimization as a focus. Most women or girls don't report rape and most women of color don't receive any form of justice. I could work that angle, but that wasn't where my heart was. I did know what Thulani and Ysa were to each other and that this was stronger than formula.

I think this is why I admire Chris Lynch's Inexcusable (Atheneum, 2005)(excerpt)(author interview from BookPage), because it gives us more insight beyond the realm of a traditional story centered around rape.

I also thought about how young people relate to each other and felt sorry for them. So much indiscriminant sexual behavior. What is the point in indulging in what you can't feel? In Rainbow, I sought to create body and soul healing in two people with walls around them. I wanted the reader to appreciate the difficulty in getting to the point of being ready.

What was the timeline from spark to publication, and what were the major events along the way?

Oh, gee. I've been derailed so many times. The writing didn't really take off until about '98 and then I had it right by '99. There was so much going on in my life. The divorce and the death of my mother-in-law, plus my mother's grand stroke made it hard to stay focused.

At one time I said the writing was horrible, but it was actually quite good. Things had to calm down before I could read my work.

What were the challenges (literary, research, psychological, and logistical) in bringing it to life?

I was nervous about writing outside of my culture and didn't want to exoticize my characters. I immersed myself in the sounds and expressions of Kreyol (Haitian Creole) and Jamaican Patois to give my characters distinct voices. Although I didn't use a lot of the expressions, knowing them gave me a feel for my people. Expressions reveal humor and perspective. Thulani's sister-in-law, Shakira, was one of my successes. She wrote herself.

I learned a lot about birds and bird keeping, but for all of my reading and standing on rooftops with bird keepers, I used just enough material.

That's a discipline within itself, learning when to pull back on research. Research material adds to the authenticity, but does it heighten the story?

When I was a teen, I read Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead, devouring every inch of the architectural detail. I thought that was so cool that Rand knew all of that stuff. This made sense. I was into knowing as much stuff as I could. These days I ask myself, "So Rita, do you need this?

Crown Heights was the perfect location for Rainbow. I stretched location to enhance Thulani's ability to see all the named streets from the top of his brownstone. I chose a brownstone to overlook Eastern Parkway and the West Indian Day Parade. There was that beautiful Grand Army Plaza Library. The Botanical Gardens. A great cultural mix, depending upon what side of the Parkway you stood. Caribbean, African, Orthodox Jewish, African American, Asian, Islamic. People were giving up Brownstones owned by families for generations. Every element of the story was in Crown Heights. This was the place!

If you look closely at any of my characters, you'll see a consistent thread of psychological behavior. I always have to know why--and sometimes I don't until I'm far into the writing. Some characters' behavior is more on the surface, while others' behavior is deep-seeded to mimic true behavior.

I run the risk of having that character misunderstood, but I think some murkiness in teen literature is okay. Kids are better readers than we give them credit. Thulani and Ysa can be easily misunderstood, but their behaviors make incredible sense.

Given his emotional experience, could Thulani behave like a classic hero for Ysa? He could be heroic, but only on his own terms. A male teacher I met at a seminar expressed frustration at how Ysa treated Thulani when all he wanted was to help her. "I know," I said, "but all she wants is to hit someone, and as long as Thulani offers himself up, she'll take a swing."

Everytime A Rainbow Dies is about a boy who falls in love with a rape victim, and your latest title, No Laughter Here (HarperCollins/Amistad, 2004), deals with female circumcision. You handle such sensitive themes with grace and truth, yet many authors would shrink from such a challenge and responsibility. What leads you to the hard places? How do you find your way out?

I promise you, I don’t have a wheel with hot button topics that I spin and where she stops Rita writes. Seeing a story in a unique way is the bribe that works for me.

Once I have story and character, the surrounding issue must bend to the character's needs. Gayle in Like Sisters is a teen mother who has had an abortion, but the story follows her and not the abortion. With No Laughter Here, it was the sound of girls giggling that immediately suggested the reverse to me: girls not laughing and why.

The longer I entertain an idea, the greater the likelihood a novel will follow. It's like being in the wooden playpen telling myself a story.

I had to do No Laughter Here because I could. I knew I could do it in a way that no one else would. I loved those little girls more than I was uncomfortable with the subject.

Little girls made me brave. I worked with this premise; if you can see the face of a little girl, you can be brave.

I'm really speaking to adults who immediately say, "I can't handle this topic."

For me, it's simple; over a million girls undergo the ritual annually. Some with great pride and acceptance while many with terror and trauma.

I'll go anywhere that children go. It's that simple.

I'd love to write a sister book to No Laughter Here from Victoria's point of view, but I don't know that the market can bear it. I'm sure I will do it, even if I have to self-publish. Victoria and Mrs. Ojike have not yet left me.

Don't let my publisher see this, but No Laughter Here isn't a classroom set book. Yes, classes use it, but I see it as a personal book, one that finds her reader. The letters I receive from readers, mainly 12-14, all appreciate being enlightened and trusted with this story.

Where do our activists come from? Look at the faces of these young girls.

Though best known for your YA fiction, you're also the author of a picture book, Catching the Wild Waiyuuzee (Simon & Schuster, 2000), which really shows off your wonderful sense of humor. How did writing this picture book compare to crafting fiction for teen readers? What muscles were up to the job? Which ones perhaps needed more development?

Unlike my novels, I didn't incubate, outline, make a map, get inside the characters. None of that. My first draft came out in one thirty minute splurt. I pitched it to Rosemary but she and a few other editors felt the story wasn't strong enough.

Renowned Clarion editor Frances Foster suggested that I have more fun with the words and I did! I played with alliteration, onomatopoeia, and made-up dialect to give it an African-Caribbean sound. I learned to make a picture book dummy when I took a course with editor Olga Litowinsky (Writing and Publishing Books for Children in the 1990s (Walker, 1992)). The hardest thing was placing the right scene on the center spread. I added text to trick it into place!

Eventually, I came to my senses and cut the excess. It didn't work. It was just stuff. After I went as far as I could with it, I put it away and concentrated on my novel. Then I met Simon and Schuster editor Kevin Lewis who said, "I am the Wild Waiyuuzee!" and offered me a contract.

You're also a well-published author of short fiction, and your stories appear in numerous anthologies. Do any of the short stories have ties to your books? Of them, which would you first recommend to a prospective Rita fan and why?

So far none of my short stories are related to my novels. I use this form to experiment with form or subject, even though I tend to raid my personal experiences to come up with short stories. "Clay" (Second Sights: Stories for a New Millennium (Philomel, 1999)) was an experiment that came from my mother stirring cornbread. One of my favorites, "Crazy as a Daisy" (Stay True: Strong Stories for Strong Girls edited by Marilyn Singer (Scholastic, 1998)) is about a girl who dances wild because she never learned to partner dance. To this day, I can't dance with a partner to save my life. It just throws me off. It is easier if I lead, but how many guys put up with that? "Food From the Outside" (When I Was Your Age, Vol. 2 edited by Amy Ehrlich (Candlewick, 1999)) is the very true story of my sister, brother and my desperation to keep our mother from entering her home cooking into the International Food Fair hosted by our school. Mommy could burn, and I do mean burn, with the best of them. We lost Miss Essie to cancer a few years ago, but we never stop talking about her culinary hits and misses. My favorite short story is "Chalkman" (Twelve Shots edited by Harry Mazer (Delacorte, 1997)(author interview), about kids who reenact a shooting at a playground. Kids want to play, even under the most difficult circumstances.

How has your writing changed and grown since you began publishing in the late 1980s? How have you changed as an author?

Let me count the ways! I had such a hard time getting in that I viewed all of publishing with great suspicion. I'm learning more about the world of children's publishing and enjoying the book offerings, especially in the teen market. During the '80s, that market wasn't there. Now it's plentiful and diverse. We could use more diversity, so if you have a great story, don't hold back.

These days I don't write as dense as I did. Look at a page of Blue Tights or Fast Talk. Dense. When I was a child and a young woman, volume was important. I wrote a lot all the time. I now cut as much as I can to free the text and scenes. Back then I wrote as "writerishly" as I could. Yuck! My thoughts about where the author stands in relation to the work haven't changed. Even in third or omniscient I let the character direct. Semi-omniscient viewpoint was always comfortable to me, but if my notes are in first person, the novel will be in first person. If it doesn't work, I change my approach. In the beginning I didn't question. I just plowed.

I've become too aware of the outside world these days when I write; editor, social attitudes, sales, bills. My editor gives me room, but I tend to worry about editorial concerns that I shouldn't think about during the writing process. I need to let it go. I envy the Blue Tights writer. She had not a clue! She just wrote.

I like to venture out into the world more. I've learned to get on a plane--which I was always reluctant to do. I encourage my readers to get off the block, so I leave Jamaica, Queens every once in a while and write about Brooklyn. Okay, so that's only a subway ride away. One thing that will never change; I'm slow. Events do affect me and throw me off track. My incubation and research period is always long so I'll never have one book quickly follow another. I'm a turtle.

What are the challenges of your writing life?

I've finally quit my job of 25 years to live a writer's life, a dream come true. I thought I'd churn them out, but I'm as slow as ever. I do rewrite more.

In the past year, my youngest daughter came down with an unexpected and undiagnosed illness. I lived in her hospital room for two months, so all writing and thoughts of writing ceased. My editor was completely supportive through that tough time. My students were understanding and worked around me. Several months later, my daughter is back on track. She graduated high school, attended the prom and is starting college this fall.

I'm now back to work on Jumped, my sixth novel. I've always had characters who likeability issues, and this novel is no exception. My main characters are a witness, a bully and a victim. There are no heroes in this story and no personal victories. This has been very hard to finish, which

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41. Putting the Interview Cart Before the Query Horse

I do mostly corporate work, but I am trying to break into magazines. My questions are do I approach my sources before I do my query letter or do I wait until my query is accepted before approaching potential sources? I have a magazine in mind, but I feel that I should speak to the sources first. I think it would make my query stronger; however, I don’t have the assignment yet. Any clarification you could provide would be greatly appreciated.


This can go either way. Obviously, the stronger your initiall query and the better researched it is, the more likely you are to catch an editor's eye. So certainly, it doesn't hurt to do some pre-query research. When you set up these pre-interviews, however, you do need to make it clear that this isn't yet an assigned piece, and you need to respect that your sources might not want to give you their time until it is. Most often, they do anyway, but sometimes, they don't. C'est la vie.

When I'm scheduling pre-query interviews, I usually just say something like, "This is for a potential article for Magazine X. Right now, I'm just looking for some initial information, so I don't expect this to take up too much of your time. Should the story get the green light, I will, of course, cite you as a source and circle back to set up a longer, more in-depth interview." This assures people that they won't be stuck on the phone with you for an hour, and that you'll be happy to give them the publicity when the article is approved. When I do opt for a pre-query interview, it's also almost always with an expert I've used in the past - a Ph.D, M.D, etc, who knows that I am indeed reliable, and that should this fall through, that I'll try to make it up to him or her in the future. I dunno, it just makes me feel better about taking up his/her time on something that might not fly.

If you're not comfortable with pre-interviews, you can (and should) still provide the editor with a list of potential experts/sources. After you've spelled out the idea and why it would work for him/her, you should merely include a sentence that says, "Potential experts for this piece include, X, Y, and Z." True, they might not all pan out, but some will, and perhaps more importantly, you're demonstrating to your editor that a) you know how to sniff out the right resources for the article and that b) the proposed topic is indeed newsworthy/worth exploring.

How often do you guys do pre-query interviews? Any other tips for the person who asked?

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42. What If The Agent Asks For A Full?

STATUS: It’s Monday. Mondays are always crazy and sometimes I’m not sure how that happens. It started off simply enough. I had three tasks to accomplish by evening and now it’s 6 p.m. and I’m only halfway through task 2. Some interesting fires happened today. In fun news, I’m guest blogging on another site tomorrow—a completely original entry so you might want to pop over to Romancing The Blog tomorrow for a peek. Also, Rachel Vater is doing a query workshop over on her blog so if you are in the query process, you might want to pop over there to check it out.

What’s playing on the iPod right now? YOU’RE THE ONLY WOMAN by David Pack

I was a little crazy this year, and I agreed to judge something like 6 or 7 contests. For the most part, contest judging is a lot of fun and if it’s allowed, I often offer a critique or some feedback with the judging sheet. But 6 or 7 contests is probably about 2 or 3 too many because of the time involved.

I’ll be learning to say “NO” a little more often for next year. Big smile here.

So obviously I recently judged a contest and this time, I really liked the winning entry—liked it enough to ask for the full manuscript once the winner was announced. I’ve actually only done this one or twice in the history of my contest judging so it’s rather a big thing (or perhaps it’s only big in my mind…)

Today the contest winner had to send me an email ‘fessing up. It probably took her a week just to get the wording right (and I thought she did a very nice job with it) but ultimately, she had to tell me that she had submitted chapters to the contest for a manuscript she had not finished.

Oops. That’s like querying for a project that only partially exists. It’s all well and good until the agent asks for the full. We have excitement, momentum, we want to read it right now and alas, we must curb our enthusiasm until the manuscript is complete.

A little tip: You never want to put the brakes on an agent’s excitement.

But don’t worry. I’m not going to punish this writer for her lapse or anything. Maybe she had every intention of finishing it and life got in the way. That certainly happens! When the manuscript is ready, she can send it. But there is danger in that. Perhaps the market shifts between now and then and what I was looking for today has changed by the time I see the manuscript. So much is dependent on timing as I’m often tell you blog readers.

So a word of caution to contest submitters. Have the full ready because the request just might happen and you don’t want to be SOL but able to send it ASAP instead.

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43. The Doctor is In

<p>Friday + Dr. S O'D = Writers Therapy</p>

<p>I occasionally give workshops and seminars in my Brooklyn Heights office on topics of interest to writers. If you would like to be notified about upcoming events, email me at Dr.Sue at mindspring dot com.</p>

<p>Dear Dr. Sue,</p>

<p>I know this isn't a real therapist's question, but I still need a sensitive soul's advice who understands human nature. How do I tell one of my closest friends that his agent - to put it bluntly - sucks? I've been in the business longer than he has, I've seen more stuff go down, and I'm watching this terrific writer be ignored and mishandled. My friend worked really hard and really long to get to this point and is so thrilled to just be in the game he can't see that his agent is keeping him in the dark about really important things, not watching over him, not taking his interests to heart - but doing the fastest, most expedient job on every front. </p>

<p>Signed,<br />Don't Want to Butt in, but...</p>

<p>Dear Don't,</p>

<p>Of course you want to rescue your friend from agent purgatory. As a more experienced writer, you owe it to him to share your accumulated wisdom and experience. As you suggest, though, you will need to approach the subject with delicacy and tact.</p>

<p>Signing with an agent is a huge mark of legitimacy for a beginning writer.&nbsp; An agent is often the first professional to endorse our work, usually after months or even years of querying unsuccessfully. It would be easy for your friend to hear your suggestion that his agent is inferior in some important ways, or that the agent may be too focused on the work of more "important” clients, as a negation of the insider status he has worked so hard to achieve.</p>

<p>As a close friend, I assume you have read his work, and you wouldn't be going to this trouble if you didn't think it merited better treatment. You need to communicate this as often and emphatically as honesty permits. Try interjecting comments such as, "a writer of your caliber deserves…” and "considering your book's potential….” It will also help if you can share the names of agents you believe would be a better match for him, and even offer to help him contact them.</p>

<p>If he argues with you, or goes on the defensive, I would suggest dropping the subject. Even if your assessment is 100% correct--and even if he agrees with it on some level--he may not be ready to contemplate returning to an agentless state and beginning the query process all over again. You will have planted a seed, and in a few months, when there is still no movement on his manuscript, he may recall your words and ask for your help. Leave the door open.</p>

<p>And this is definitely an appropriate question for a column concerned with the psychological well-being of writers! </p><br /><p>Susan O'Doherty, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist with a New York City-based practice. A fiction writer <a href="http://www.verbsap.com/06marfic/odoherty.html">herself</a>, she specializes in issues affecting writers. Send your questions to her at Dr.Sue at mindspring dot com.</p>

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