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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: pitches, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. My Attitude

I apologize if my attitude of late has seemed surly, frustrated or even angry at times. I recently received a very kind email from a reader who was concerned that Agentfail had started to get me down and that I was spending too much time trying to respond and calm the detractors. She shared a personal experience of her own and really implored me not to waste my time on those who would never listen, namely the trolls and even those authors who had valid complaints, but expressed them in such a harsh and bitter way.

My concern has never been those who, let’s say, I felt were far over the top. The poster, for example, who repeatedly calls for names and seems to ignore my answer or those who have sunk to simply repeating themselves over and over again. I couldn't care less about those in the same way I couldn't care less about the ridiculously angry and, frankly, crazy emails I get (and share with you in reply to my rejection letters). Who I do care about, however, are those authors who were frightened off by Agentfail and are frightened off by the attitudes of some of these authors. My posts trying to explain why agents do certain things and those that might be in response to Agentfail are for those authors. I also care about those who have real complaints and Agentfail stories (which I did address in another post). In the end, by seemingly responding to the detractors I’m hoping that what I’m doing is teaching others, those who are willing to listen.

I think it’s human nature that we find it easier to listen to the negative and not embrace the positive. I’m very happy I did Agentfail and have no regrets about doing so. It created a wonderful and a horrible discourse within the publishing community in general. In the end, as with everything, people will take away from it what they want to hear. I have learned a lot from the blog, I have changed policies based on this blog, and I have definitely rethought the way I do things and continue to rethink the way I do things. I think Agentfail reached a lot of people and a lot of agents who are doing the same.

So, if I’ve been surly it has nothing to do or little to do with Agentfail. The truth is that sometimes I’m just a surly person, and whether you want it or not, by reading this blog on a daily basis you are going to, at times, see all my personalities shine through. You’ll see fun Jessica, snarky Jessica, surly Jessica, but hopefully, more often than not, you’ll see business Jessica.

Jessica

41 Comments on My Attitude, last added: 5/13/2009
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2. Claire Zulkey Taught Us How To Pitch Magazine Articles

Sometimes we all feel like we are floating in space, and that no editor will ever pay attention to us again. Times like that, you have to buck up and re-think your pitching strategy. 

But don't take my word for it...

Listen to Claire Zulkey, a prolific writer and freelancing guru, as told us how to publish stories without spamming editors with a shotgun-style mass mailing:

"Of course it helps to write good things but a whole stack of great pieces isn't necessarily going to get you into the New Yorker.  My advice is to keep plugging away at submitting--WITHOUT seeming like you're going about a shotgun approach. 

"If, say, you really like author John Doe and see that he publishes a lot on McSweeney's, Google him and see where else he has published.  Perhaps he's also published at X literary journal and Y humor writing website."

Read her whole interview here. If you scroll down the archived posts on the right hand side of this blog, you'll see a stack of more practical interviews with writers--nearly two years of content, my friends. In the interests of saving that content from oblivion, I'm pointing backwards to some of my favorite peices.

 

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3. What If Pitching A Story Was Less Like An Esoteric Cult Ritual and More Like Reality Television?

Have you ever pitched a story or novel to an editor, face-to-face?

It's a rare opportunity that few amateur writers ever get. Media Bistro has turned the whole ritual into a web video reality television show, giving us an uncomfortable, staged, but ultimately instructive peek into the mind of an editor at Blender Magazine.

Even though the video creates the illusion that personal connections to the editor don't matter, the advice will serve you well as you write (or speak) your next pitch.

Once you polish your literary gem, you might want to submit to a brand new literary journal run by some of the most creative minds in non-fiction and fiction. The Normal School is now accepting "Creative Nonfiction. Story. Poem. Critique. Experiential Recipes." The excellent Emerging Writers Network has the submissions guidelines and some notes about the staff. 

I gotta tell you, I love Wes Anderson and his films, but I wasn't terribly moved by The Darjeeling Limited nor the short web video now paired with the film. Our buddy Steve Bryant has a snappy review and some ideas about what the web short means for us web writers:

"You can't really construe the decision as a victory for "online video" (whatever that means), since any merit to the piece is somewhat overshadowed by the fact that Natalie Portman appears nude in it."

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