1)
Do your research. Only submit a query or a manuscript to an appropriate
publisher. That means you familiarize yourself with their current published
works—reading some, if at all possible—and make sure you know what sorts of
things they publish. If they only publish ebooks, don’t insist on a paperback.
If they publish mainly erotic romance, they’re probably not going to take your
edgy tale of non-consent. If you’re not sure, of course you can ask—but your
questions will come off a lot better if you clearly know who they are. A
publisher can tell when you’ve just gotten a list off the Internet somewhere
and cut and pasted the same submission letter to each one. And that’s not
really more efficient for you, because it’s going to lead to more confusion and
rejections.
2)
Submit what they ask you to submit. If they want a query letter first, send a
query letter first. If they want two sample chapters, send two sample
chapters—not one, not the whole book. You are not a special snowflake. Follow
the directions.
3)
Submit how they ask you to submit. Some publishers don’t want attachments. Some
only want attachments. If they want Times New Roman, 12 point, then use that.
If they want it hand-written with pictures of clowns on odd-numbered pages,
then do that if you want to be published by them. If you don’t find yourself
willing (or able) to comply with their query or submission process, you’re not
going to want them to handle your book. (If they don’t say at all, then you
can’t go wrong with Times New Roman, 12 point, ragged margins, double-spaced,
in a Word .doc or a .pdf. Don’t do the clowns thing unless asked.)
4)
Please, oh please, check your cover letter for typos, and also tone. It’s nice
to sound human, but not so casual you seem inattentive. Be positive and confident, but arrogance
rarely goes over well. Don’t apologize. If you don’t have a degree in writing
or you’ve never published before or you secretly worry that the manuscript
everyone in your critique group loves is actually crap, keep all that to yourself.
Explain the qualifications and publication history you do have, if any; but don’t
point out any lacks if you don’t. Ultimately, it’s your book that’s going to be
judged—not what sort of life you led in order to write it. Remember too that
publishers are more interested in authors who have more than one book in them.
They’re easier to promote, and all their books sell better. If you have more
than one finished manuscript, or you have published in other places, or at
least have ideas for future books, mention that.
5)
Don’t submit a rough draft. Yes, you’ll get edited—although increasingly I see
fiction editors giving a manuscript a copy edit, and not a content edit. Even
if you’re lucky enough to be assigned the sort of editor who will work
intensively with you, you should always submit your best effort. Someone should
have read it in addition to you (and not someone romantically involved with
you) and provided feedback, which you should have at least considered, if not
taken on board. It goes without saying that you used a spellcheck, and also
read it carefully for typos and errors with homonyms. This is your tryout. A
publisher wants to see your very best writing.
6)
(I was going to cheat and add this to one of the other five, but that would
only be confusing.) Allow at least two months to hear back. If you don’t hear
back after four months, it is perfectly fine to send a polite follow-up query.
***
I’ve
worked as an editor for about ten years, three years in-house with a New York
publisher, and the rest freelance. I’ve worked with three of the “Big Six
Five” and numerous smaller presses. I’ve worked as a content editor,
development editor, production editor, copy editor, and proofreader. I’m also a
published author, with about 40 books (non-fiction) to my passport name, and to
my pen name (erotica) one single-author anthology, a few single short stories,
and short stories in anthologies with Cleis Press, Sizzler, and the Erotic
Literary Salon. In 2010 I launched 1001 Nights Press, a small erotica publisher
that I’d describe as “cautiously open” to new writers (cautious because of time
commitments, not because you aren’t a fantastic writer).
http://1001nightspress.com
Very useful information. I would imagine the same rules of thumb apply to submitting to agents as well. It just seems like common sense, after all.
ReplyDeleteNowadays, I send links to downloadable pdfs, rather than actual attachments. Many emails with attachments are filtered out automatically.
And there's the rub, right? If your email didn't through because of the attachment, yet didn't bounce, you'd never know it. I had that happen with the overseas office of one of my publishers once. For about two years, I could email them, they could email me, but if I ever included an attachment, it wouldn't go through, AND wouldn't bounce. That took some time to unravel!
ReplyDelete