j_cheney: (Default)
J. Kathleen Cheney ([personal profile] j_cheney) wrote2006-08-06 04:52 pm

Ouch!

Well, curious to see what the outside people might say about yesterday's question, I posted the same thing over at the literary agent community (people on LJ who are looking for agents).

Got a resounding...you idiot!

They all say you should never send anything to a publisher until you have exhausted every single agent out there. There might be a slight pro-agent bias since they're admittedly all looking for agents themselves....

*Heavy sigh*
Where exactly is that How to Get Published book that has all the right answers in it? I've misplaced it....

[identity profile] jimhines.livejournal.com 2006-08-07 12:32 am (UTC)(link)
Gosh. I sure hope I get to join a club where I get all the right answers someday.

I'll be sure to let some of my novelist friends with DAW and Baen and such know that they did it all wrong. I'm sure they'll be happy to hear it.

Like I said, I'd go the agent route myself if I was starting over, but anyone who tells you there's one and only one right way to do this is someone who doesn't know a heck of a lot about publishing.

[identity profile] keesa-renee.livejournal.com 2006-08-07 04:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, keeping in mind that I've never tried to sell a novel, much less sold one, I don't think you've ruined your chances of ever selling the book by submitting it to publishers who are willing to look at unagented material. If they like the book, they like the book, and if they don't, they don't.

But, again, what do I know?

Ideally, the ones to ask would be, not agents, not people looking for agents, and not people like me who know nothing about it, but publishers themselves. You aren't going to meet any of those at your con, are you?