When agents ask for sample chapters, which chapters should you include? If your strongest chapters fall in the middle, is it OK if I send those? The answer is different for fiction and nonfiction. Read more
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Blog: Guide to Literary Agents (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Agents, What's New, Dealing with Editors, sample chapters, Online Editor, Brian Klems' Questions & Quandaries Blog, questions and quandaries, Get Published and Sell Your Work, Query Letters, Add a tag

Blog: Guide to Literary Agents (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Brian Klems' Questions & Quandaries Blog, questions and quandaries, Freelance Article Writing, Write An Article, Writing Advice, What's New, Dealing with Editors, Add a tag
Q: I want to quit my day job and freelance full time, but I’m nervous that I won’t be able to make enough money to pay my bills. Can I really make … Read more
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Blog: Writer's Digest Questions and Quandaries (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Dealing with Editors, Legal Questions, Ethics, Publishing, Add a tag
Q: When submitting an already published article—which carried one-time rights—what
information do I owe the new editor?—Jack C.
A: You need to tell the new editor the name of the publication and the issue date
in which your article first appeared. Also, make it clear that you sold them
only first serial rights, and so you’re now free to peddle it again. And never try
to sell your article a second time until it’s already run in the publication that
owns its first serial rights—this can lead you down a long, embarrassing path. Better
safe than sorry.
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Pick up your copy of the Beginning
Writer's Answer Book. For more details about the book, click
here.
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Follow the WD Editors on Twitter: @writersdigest @BrianKlems @JaneFriedman @robertleebrewer @JessicaStrawser @ChuckSambuchino
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Blog: Writer's Digest Questions and Quandaries (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Formatting, Dealing with Editors, Add a tag
Q: I have an article being published in a magazine and the editor e-mailed me asking
for a short bio. This is my first time being published. How long is "short" and what
should I include? —Robert K.
A: Congratulations on your first publication! Typically a short bio consists of one
to two sentences (preferably one) that will go at the end of your article. Include
your name, website or blog (if you have one), what you do for a living, anything of
value about your writing career (any books you've published or awards you've won)
or why you're qualified to write that article. Notice that at the end of every Questions
& Quandaries column I have a bio that reads: Brian A. Klems is the online community
editor of WD. Short, simple and explains my qualifications.
OK, that was a cheap example because I work for the magazine, which made it easy.
Let's say that instead of writing an article for WD, I submitted one to Parents magazine
about raising two girls. They've accepted my awesome article (why wouldn't they?)
and asked for a bio. Because the bio with my WD title doesn't necessarily qualify
me to write a piece about parenting, I'd rewrite it to include what does qualify me: Brian
A. Klems is a writer, editor and father of two. You can follow his parenting musings
and advice on his website, TheLifeOfDad.com.
Some people choose to be cutesy in their bio and that's OK, so long as the article
it accompanies is humorous or cutesy too. Otherwise, stick to the formula above. You'll
make a lot of editors happy that way.
-
Pick up your copy of the Beginning
Writer's Answer Book. For more details about the book, click
here.
-
Follow the WD Editors on Twitter: @writersdigest @BrianKlems @JaneFriedman @robertleebrewer @JessicaStrawser @ChuckSambuchino
- Become a fan at our Facebook page
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Blog: Writer's Digest Questions and Quandaries (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Formatting, Dealing with Editors, Publishing, Add a tag
Q: Many times publishers indicate they want “published clips” along with a query
letter. What exactly are they? —Diane H.
A: Published clips are any articles or stories that have been printed in magazines
or newspapers. So, if you wrote “How to Train Your Husband-To-Be” and it was printed
in the latest issue of Crazy Brides magazine, you have a published clip.
As for how to send it, it depends on the publisher’s guidelines. If the publisher
wants your query via snail mail, make photocopies of the printed work and paperclip
it to your query. If the publisher prefers e-mail queries (like Writer's Digest),
scan your articles and attach them in an e-mail. Better yet, if your article is posted
on the magazine or newspaper’s website, just link to it in your e-mail query.
-
Pick up your copy of the Beginning
Writer's Answer Book. For more details about the book, click
here.
-
Follow the WD Editors on Twitter: @writersdigest @BrianKlems @JaneFriedman @robertleebrewer @JessicaStrawser @ChuckSambuchino
- Become a fan at our Facebook page
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Blog: Writer's Digest Questions and Quandaries (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Publishing, Query Letters, Dealing with Editors, Add a tag
Q: I'm currently finishing the first book in what I plan to be a trilogy and am
getting ready to query agents. When I pitch the book, should I mention that this is
the first book of a series or not? Do agents want to know it's a series? What's the
best way to handle it?—Anonymous
A: Agents (and publishers, for that matter) are big fans of book series. If the first
book is strong and flies off bookstore shelves, it's a safe bet that its follow-ups
will too. Most who run the publishing industry would practically sell the naming rights
to their first-born child to land a Harry Potter or a Twilight. Heck, I'd have sold
the naming-rights to both my daughters for a chance to write them.
Luckily for them, I've yet to land that golden ticket.
The key to selling a trilogy is selling the first book first. Without that sale, books
two and three (or more, if it's a longer series) are DOA. So focus your query letter
on book one. Pitch it as if it weren't in a trilogy—don't mention future books, plots,
etc. Stick to the strengths of book one and, if you find you can't without mentioning
the others, then book one has major flaws.
Now this doesn't mean you should keep your trilogy a secret, says Guide to Literary
Agents editor Chuck Sambuchino. Just save it for a future conversation.
"If you propose your first book and they like it, they'll contact you," Sambuchino
says. "One of the first questions they will ask, I promise you, will be, 'What else
are you working on or writing?' And that’s when you say, 'Well, I'm halfway through
the second book in that series and I've got some outlines for other projects.'"
By following this method, you'll avoid irritating agents who dislike queries about
more than one book while doing no harm to ones that don't care either way.
Brian A. Klems is the online community editor of Writer’s Digest magazine.
Want more?
-
Pick up your copy of the Beginning
Writer's Answer Book. For a digital
download of the book, click
here.
-
Follow the WD Editors on Twitter: @writersdigest @BrianKlems @JaneFriedman @robertleebrewer @alicepope @kmnickell @JessicaStrawser @ChuckSambuchino
- Become a fan at our Facebook page