#1 09-22-2010 10:00:11
- kaysee
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- Registered: 02-12-2008
- Posts: 217
To those lucky ones who have agents...
Does it make any difference where the agent is located? Do you ever actually meet with them or is all the contact through email and phone? I realize that the huge bulk of U.S. agents are in NYC, but I was wondering if there was any advantage to seeking representation closer to home.
Also, does it make any difference if the agent is from your home country? Are there any boundaries to publishing? Is a U.S. publisher any better or worse than a Canadian publisher?
Thanks, all!!
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#2 05-29-2011 07:09:35
- slh0906
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
I had an agent for about a year. He was based in Colorado. We did business by email and phone, and I doubt if many agents and authors meet often if at all. I don't think there's any advantage to having an agent close to where you live. You'd rather they be close to where they are selling your book so they can use their contacts, which is NYC if you aspire to reach a mainstream publishing house. However, if you are researching smaller, independent publishers, they are all over the place.
If you live outside the U.S. and you want your book published in, say, Canada, best to look for an agent in Canada. If you want it published here, you'd be silly to have an agent in Canada.
Hope this helps. Good luck in your search.
Sue
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#3 05-29-2011 11:02:39
- s_thatcher
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
I know I'm dreaming when I say this, but: I want my agent living and breathing in NYC, or L.A. I would have to meet them in person before I signed anything. And they would have to fork over the big bucks for the big lunch; and again at the big dinner, along with big Broadway tickets. ![]()
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#4 05-29-2011 12:34:42
- rita aguilar
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
As far as I can tell, there's no advantage to having an agent, especially for your first novel. I'd submit directly to publishers (and yes, many houses, both large and small, accept unagented publications) as much as possible. Once you're offered a contract, it'll be easy to track down an agent to help you negotiate it, if you so desire.
Also, as a cautionary note on NYC, I overheard this comment from an editor at a conference this weekend:
New York is killing itself. New York is chewing its leg off in the night just to get away.
In other words, the future of publishing may no longer be in New York, so whether or not your agent is there may not matter a few years down the road anyway.
(Of course, I've got no corroboration for this claim yet, but I thought it an interesting declaration & something to keep an eye on.)
Last edited by rita aguilar (05-29-2011 12:35:10)
'Dive deep and never come up!' should be the motto for all who hunger to create in words. -- Henry Miller
my novels ~ Eolyn and High Maga
my blog ~ Heroines of Fantasy
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#5 05-29-2011 12:57:17
- Susan Stec
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- From: Michigan
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
To agent or not to agent? Basically I agree with Rita. I saw no need to find one with the first book. I submitted directly to publishers as well. But I did recently query an agent for another one of my books, and they responded by asking for the full manuscript, but because I always put my Amazon page and blog address in my queries, they also enquired about The Grateful Undead series. Wanted to know if I had an agent and if the contract I signed has exclusive rights to the other two books in the series. I emailed them back with the information - so now I wait.
Susan
Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation ~~ Oscar Wilde
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/s/Susan-S … llproducts http://www.amazon.com/Susan-Stec/e/B004H6YF7M
http://thegratefulundead.blogspot.com/
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#6 05-29-2011 14:40:55
- s_thatcher
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
rita aguilar wrote:
As far as I can tell, there's no advantage to having an agent, especially for your first novel. I'd submit directly to publishers (and yes, many houses, both large and small, accept unagented publications) as much as possible. Once you're offered a contract, it'll be easy to track down an agent to help you negotiate it, if you so desire.
My plan exactly. Maybe agents will become the new Blacksmiths? ![]()
Last edited by s_thatcher (05-29-2011 14:41:44)
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#7 05-29-2011 14:45:06
- s_thatcher
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
Susan Stec wrote:
To agent or not to agent? Basically I agree with Rita. I saw no need to find one with the first book. I submitted directly to publishers as well. But I did recently query an agent for another one of my books, and they responded by asking for the full manuscript, but because I always put my Amazon page and blog address in my queries, they also enquired about The Grateful Undead series. Wanted to know if I had an agent and if the contract I signed has exclusive rights to the other two books in the series. I emailed them back with the information - so now I wait.
Susan
You're now in the position to interview THEM. I'd ask for their client list and ask what they've sold lately, what they're stats are... What they can and will do for me. ![]()
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#8 05-29-2011 18:54:39
- vern
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
s_thatcher wrote:
Susan Stec wrote:
To agent or not to agent? Basically I agree with Rita. I saw no need to find one with the first book. I submitted directly to publishers as well. But I did recently query an agent for another one of my books, and they responded by asking for the full manuscript, but because I always put my Amazon page and blog address in my queries, they also enquired about The Grateful Undead series. Wanted to know if I had an agent and if the contract I signed has exclusive rights to the other two books in the series. I emailed them back with the information - so now I wait.
SusanYou're now in the position to interview THEM. I'd ask for their client list and ask what they've sold lately, what they're stats are... What they can and will do for me.
That info and more is typically on their web sites, especially most members of Association of Authors' Representatives (AAR), whose members are "bound" by a code of ethics. Take care. Vern
Last edited by vern (05-29-2011 18:56:13)
If one must die in order to live forever, then what is the purpose in dying? Luke Peters
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#9 09-05-2011 19:41:58
- Ann Walters
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
I'm perusing these threads very carefully now, very interested in getting my novel published. I submitted to a small publisher and received an offer that was not what I wanted. I can't negotiate a contract, and I don't want to be taken advantage of. I'm basically looking for a publisher that can do more for me than I can do on my own through self-publishing. Namely, get me into a bookstore and possibly some distribution effort (posters, ARCs, setting up blog tours, website) I can do that stuff, but would rather write. At least I know someone out there was excited by my book and eager to publish it.
Website: http://flyinghorsebooks.wordpress.com
Works in process:
Under the Almond Trees (Historical Fiction): http://www.thenextbigwriter.com/library … read/50887
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#10 09-05-2011 21:45:07
- madison
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Re: To those lucky ones who have agents...
Oh, Ann.
I'm sorry it didn't work out, but you're right. If one publisher took an interest, another one surely will eventually.
Madison
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