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Marlowe and Christie Writers

299 members • Free

1 contribution to Marlowe and Christie Writers
Agent query/pitch advice
Hi all! I was lucky enough to attend an Agent led event last night, discussing queries, pitches and the editing process. Here's a couple of (hopefully helpful) things that came out of the discussion: 1. Make your query letters as short and professional as you can. You might want to fill it with loads of lovely detail, but they find it refreshing and attractive when one is brief. 2. Lead with your "comp" books. Don't start by getting into the plot or characters, show that you know the market and have an idea of where your book sits by comparing it to successful, well regarded (recent if you can) books in that area. Then tease the plot in two or three sentences, then end on a question or note of suspense. 3. Don't bother trying to "hide" your genre. People are tempted to claim a different genre because they're worried their novel isn't currently marketable. The agent will know immediately when they start reading the sub, so why bother hiding it? 4. (In the UK) Avoid querying in March or October. The London and Frankfurt book fairs pull a lot of agents away from reading at those times. 5. Agents give EVERYTHING a read... But bear in mind they have existing clients and an inbox of up to 20 subs a day. They also then let some of us pitch to them and get live feedback (which was heartening and super useful), so do keep an eye out for similar events. Even if it's not stated, there might be a similar learning opportunity offered.
1 like • Feb 26
Helpful. I've been advised to be careful with comps. Don't go for a famous writer but be scrupulous in making sure your book would be sitting on the same shelf as the one you finally choose. Not easy!
1 like • Feb 26
@James Blair True. But sometimes I wonder about the nature of writing and what agents are for. I don't know much about the publishing business. What I want to do is write the best novel I can which has both depth and reader appeal. But I simply come a cropper when I have to do all the things agents want. I can do a synopsis - but I've heard different advice on that. I can write a pitch and a reasonable query letter based on some success with short stories. But I would have thought it's an agent's job to read the first bit of a novel and for them to decide if it interests them, and if it does, what the market might be.
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Ralph Levinson
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3points to level up
@ralph-levinson-5276
Retired academic. Looking for publisher of my debut novel, shortlisted for Goldfinch prize. Also winner Bridport prize and Moment Karma award.

Active 16h ago
Joined Jan 5, 2026
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