Writing on Wednesday: Rejection #28 and Literary Agent vs. Small Press

An agent I queried in February requested the full manuscript of my novel a few weeks ago. She sent me this email this past weekend:

Thank you for sending me CHERRY BOMB, which I read with interest.

I am sorry not to offer to represent you. I like the intergenerational story and the way you weave the story and characters together with art. I’m not enthusiastic enough about it, however, to offer to represent you. 

The market is very difficult these days, and you deserve an unequivocally enthusiastic agent as your advocate.

I may well be wrong, and you should certainly get other agents’ opinions.

Best of luck with your writing.

agentI know I’m supposed to be happy to receive such a personal note (and I’ve received many of them, as I wrote about two months ago) but that doesn’t diminish the fact that I still don’t have an agent to represent Cherry Bomb.

If you think you’re tired of reading these rejection letters that I share here on my blog, imagine how I feel about them. This was my 28th rejection letter since January. And yes, there are more than 28 more agents out there who still have the manuscript, although for most of them no reply means no representation.

Once again I’m on the verge of throwing in the towel and submitting the book to a small press. This would, of course, be the end of my hopes for (1) an agent, (2) an advance, and (3) a publishing deal with one of the big houses. I just read an interesting article by literary agent, Janet Reid, about this very topic. The comments are point on to my situation.

bella-agent-at-coffee-bar

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Back in January I told myself I would give this round of queries until June and then consider a small press. June sure did get here quickly…. Thanks for reading, and please stay tuned to see what happens next! (And of course, I welcome your advice!)

9 thoughts on “Writing on Wednesday: Rejection #28 and Literary Agent vs. Small Press”

  1. A small press is better than no press! If you believe in the book, believe it is the best you can make it and it is simply “the market” that is getting it rejected, I think a small press is a good way to go. I have a YA fantasy that got a lot of “I like this but I don’t think I can sell it” responses from agents, and I placed it easily with a small press. And once you have one novel published, that dream of a big-house deal comes a lot closer.

  2. I wonder how much of this is influenced by the same trend that is controlling the marketing/social media world at the moment. It’s no longer possible to consider “everyone” your audience, so all the gurus are saying “Find your niche and focus on it.” Or, as some say, “The riches are in the niches.” Everything now urges specificity and small-scale success as the only stepping stone to something larger. Or as what remains possible in an increasingly over-crowded content-producing world.

    1. I agree, Melinda. I queried an indie press yesterday afternoon…. and so the new journey begins. Thanks for reading and commenting.

  3. Susan, did you see Janet Reid’s latest post on how to screen small presses? Might be useful.

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