Do you have an agent?
Posted by njlindquist on May 11, 2007
I was at a bookstore the other day, doing a bit of a Q and A about my newest book, Glitter of Diamonds, with a group of readers and aspiring authors, when, as the other people asked me about writing and books in general, the lady seated next to me asked me for the name of my agent. I tried to give her some general advice (I do teach workshops for aspiring writers), but she wasn’t interested. She wanted a name, and she wanted it now. Of course, her pushiness made me even more determined not to give her any names.
The problem is that, while asking an author for the name of his/her agent may not be quite as personal as asking if someone uses a wig or toupee, it’s in the same range.
Why, you may ask?
1. Getting an agent is as hard as, if not harder than, getting a publisher.
Agents have actually become the first line for publishing. In other words, because many publishing house now won’t look at unagented manuscripts, the agents are the ones being flooded by queries and proposals from new authors.
Often, you have to have at least one book published or been offered a contract before an agent will look at you. Of course, agents will take a look at anyone an editor or client refers to them.
If you ask for the name of my agent, I assume you plan to contact the agent and perhaps indicate that I gave you his/her name. If I start giving out my agent’s name to just anyone, without a clue about whether or not that person can write well, what is my agent going to say to me? Hmm. I may be looking for a new agent myself soon.
The bottom line is that I would never give out an agent’s name to anyone - not even a close friend - without first asking the agent if he/she would be interested.
2. One agent does not equal any other agent
In real estate, one agent is just the same as any other agent, right? Or maybe not. Some agents do specialize in certain areas, or with a specific clientele.
Well, agents who specialize in books normally have very specific preferences. One agent may specialize in nonfiction while another specializes in fiction; one may only do literary fiction and poetry while another prefers cozy mysteries and romance. So it won’t do for you to just have the agent’s name. You need to know what genres that agent works with.
Part of the reason for specializing is the need for an agent to have great contacts in those areas. What a writer actually depends on an agent for is to know what publishers and editors are currently looking for. Since there are a lot of publishing houses and a lot of editors, no agent can know them all. By focusing on a specific kind of writing, they limit the number of people they need to keep in touch with, and they can stay current.
But, perhaps even more important, everyone has specific preferences in their own reading. And an agent is first and foremost a sales person. Most of them do better when they’re selling something they really like and can put their heart into.
So you may be a very good writer, but that doesn’t mean you’d be a perfect fit for every agent out there. You’ll do much better if you have an agent who can get excited about what you’re writing and already has contacts with editors in that genre.
3. Agents are people, too
Signing up with an agent is more than simply signing a business contract. You’re committing to let this person represent you and your precious manuscript. You need to feel comfortable with each other. You need to agree upfront about details such as how much the agent will tell you about rejections, whether or not the agent will want you to write detailed proposals, if he or she will help you with career planning, etc. etc.
Every agent is different. And it’s quite likely that, like most of us, no agent is perfect. Some are new and just learning the ropes. They may not have the contacts, but they may have all kinds of enthusiasm. Others may know all the editors but seem tired and matter-of-fact about your book. Some agents decide to switch or add genres and therefore might be using your book as a test piece for their new area.
May 12, 2007 at 1:14 pm
I have asked the few authors I know who their agents are, just as a matter of course of learning about the process of getting an agent. I found out that one of them has had four agents, I got a lot of tips from that story. The other one just “lucked out” with her one and only agent. Again, a different perspective. If you got a creepy vibe from one lady, why not tell that one lady “you mustn’t say I referred you to him/her, because I haven’t read your mss,” and follow that up with an email to your agent saying someone pestered you for the name. Why make so many unflattering assumptions about someone who I assume was a fan of yours (came to your reading/signing) and may write on a similar topic or in a similar style, thereby making her much more likely to be interesting to your agent? I mean, if she was completely creepy, okay. But what if you could have made a friend and you blew it? I don’t get the negative attitude about agents. It is your business, sure. But agents are presumably in the business of finding new authors. If an author wouldn’t give me the name of his/her agent, I’d assume it was a crappy agent of whom the writer was ashamed. Or that the writer didn’t have an agent at all & was lying.
May 14, 2007 at 3:42 am
Sorry, I didn’t mean to disparage the lady who asked for the name of my agent. I was simply trying to use that situation as a jumping of point to let people know why authors might be reluctant to tell people the name of their agents.
I actually sympathized very much with the lady. I certainly didn’t mean to imply that she was creepy in any way. I’m sure she was a very nice person. But she was so focused on what she thought was the solution to her problem that she didn’t hear anything I said.
I’ve been there, where you are aching to get into the door and get your work published. But the way to do it isn’t by asking a complete stranger for the name of his or her agent.
I was willing to give her advice about getting published. She only wanted a name.