Sunday 14 January 2007

IS IT WASTED TIME?

An amusing thought for the writer tearing out the remainder of his or her hair: once you've completed your work you will not be able to contact a publisher except through an agent. An agent capable of gaining you a deal will receive between 3 and 500 submissions a week, most of them utter rubbish. That agent will rarely see each submission. You may hate that but you might hate it even more if you became a client and your agent had no time to sell your work because they were too busy reading submissions. So, who will see your work? Well, your guess is as good as mine. I might not like to think this but you might like to consider it -- that person may also be the one making the teas. Try sending stuff off under different names and addresses. Each rejection will be standard. Better still, if you're really pissed off with them, send them a bit of Dickens, Greene, Rowling. Try not to make it too easy for them to spot. These writers will also be rejected. So, the point of this entry is: are we wasting our time trying to sell when we ought to be writing new material? Oddly enough, I don't believe we're totally wasting our precious moments on earth. I've found some of my best ideas have come when I've been most under pressure. It's worth remembering that if an agent could make themselves as much money as JK Rowling by writing they would be doing so - not dealing with our humble stuff on a daily basis.

1 comment:

The Asker said...

In Hollywood, as in large corporations throughout big cities ... successful employment is often contingent on a "who you know" basis. I wonder sometimes how much of that seeps into the publishing world too.

Ever considered self-publication? It's no longer frowned upon as it was many years back.