photo by Ed Glazar |
by
Dave Amaditz
In a previous post http://rt19writers.blogspot.com/2014/01/announcement-of-representation-amy.html I gave a shout-out to everyone that I had
signed with the awesome, Amy Tipton, Signature Literary Agency http://signaturelit.com/. To say that time
passes quickly is an understatement, as it’s already been six months. Much has
happened since then. Amy has been busy behind the scenes doing what agents do…
Sorry, you’ll have to wait a little while longer to hear what keeps her busy.
As for me…, after doing two or three rounds of
editing with Amy to make sure my novel was ready for submission, I’ve been able
to concentrate on my writing (another young adult novel with the first draft
now nearly three quarters complete). Having Amy’s expertise behind me has made
writing so much easier. Instead of worrying (or worrying too much :-)) about
submission status, I can now more fully focus on the important things like
character, plot, setting and conflict.
Also, before I forget, I want to say that I’ve
gotten a quick taste these last six months of the massive amount work required on Amy’s
part to maintain success as an agent and I know she’s awfully busy… So… Amy… Thank You For Your Time and for Agreeing to the Interview. It means so much
to me that you’re willing and excited to do the interview. It Reminds Me How Lucky I Am
to Have Signed with You.
Now, to the questions……
Dave:
For those who don’t know you, could you give a little history of how you came
to choose a career as an agent… And a bit about Signature Literary Agency.
Dave:
Impressive experience, to say the least. So who better to talk about the fact
that we’re in a changing market, a constantly evolving market. Could you
address a few major concerns your current and future clients should know, or
should be made aware that will affect the likelihood of publication? (The battle
with the self-published market. The book market being oversaturated with
inexpensive or free material as well as poor quality material. Lack of
marketing dollars. Less people reading. Etc. etc.)
Amy:
I think you just addressed a few major concerns yourself: the self-published
market. The book market being oversaturated with inexpensive or free material
as well as poor quality material. Lack of marketing dollars. Less people
reading. Etc. etc. …
Publishing is in transition and it is hard to know
where it will end up but it’s not going away—listen, Chicken Little, the sky
isn’t falling. I think Malcolm Gladwell said in 2013, “No industry sells something people want and need more than the book
industry. If they were selling Styrofoam, I'd be worried, but books have
tremendous impact on people's lives." I agree.
Dave:
Excellent advice. Now that we know that the sky isn’t falling on the publishing
business, it’s obvious writers should continue to write and submit their work.
Which one do you check out first when scanning your submissions? Query letters?
Sample chapters? Or both? Can a terribly written query be overlooked if the
writing sample shows promise? Would you give someone who sent in a writing
sample that wasn’t completely polished a chance to redo it because the concept
addressed in the query was so awesome? How about letting us know your fastest
time to hit the delete button and what it was that could’ve prompted such a
drastic response?
Amy:
Query letters and the actual writing in a book are so different—they’re
completely different animals. I don’t really read sample chapters—though my
colleagues at Signature do (which is why we request the first five pages)—I
mean, if the query is good, I’ll just request and if it’s awful awful, I just reject
(if there are misspellings everywhere, words missing, commas lacking, etc). I
look at the sample if I’m on the fence—so it does pay to send. And a terrible
query *can* be overlooked by me. If I am excited by the idea in the query, if I
see potential, I’ll request. If I read and the concept was awesome but the book
just wasn’t there, I will reconsider/reread later (I have read the same book
4-5 times now by an author in different incarnations because the idea is cool.)
Dave:
You hear that everyone? Sounds to me as if the submission door is open. We’ll
talk later about what exactly she’s looking for, but first, another question
for Amy.
What’s your take on submitting to you what might be
trending in the marketplace? Or don’t you bother with trends?
Amy:
I don’t tend to bother with trends because publishers are so fickle—like, they
*say* they want A but they don’t want A, they want B. (Plus, things that are
trending, I don’t rep nor do they get me excited …).
Dave:
I mentioned earlier that I’ve been able to write, and write a lot, since
signing with you. Could you give us a brief rundown of what it is that occupies
your day as an agent. The exciting, and what we might consider the
not-so-exciting. Could you let us know what is your favorite part of being an
agent, and if like me and most writers, you’re often checking the email inbox
for messages of good news?
Amy:
Of course, I’m checking my email for good news! Always! That is my favorite
part—passing on the good news! (Hopefully, I’ve sold someone’s book and get to
tell them! Or I’ve offered rep to someone and they’ve accepted!)
I am super busy but it’s mostly boring stuff (like
contracts or royalty statements or following up with editors that have various
subs) and sometimes it’s fun (like cover consultations) … I get tons of queries
to read and I am either rejecting or requesting, plus reading (and
editing—which takes time) my already-signed clients; I also work with a foreign
rights agent so I’m talking foreign with them and I am working with a film/TV
agent and I keep in contact with them too … I also do awesome interviews (which
also takes time)!
And I do try to do it all in a timely fashion and
that’s hard …
Especially (and I never talk about my personal
life—why would you care?—but this info pertains to occupying time) now, I am
relearning to walk—I had a stroke a few years back—and physical therapy is
intense and I do it about once a week but anything/everything I do (even this
interview) is therapy and hard for me.
Dave:
And you still didn’t hesitate, didn’t blink an eye to agree to do this. Which
makes what you’ve done here so much more impressive. So readers, listen up!!
You’ll definitely want to hear the answer to the next question.
Amy, what, if any, is the one story you’re dying to
hear a pitch for? Why that story?
Amy:
I am DYING for some sort of YA about homegrown terrorism/anarchy/Black Bloc
group—kinda like the movie “The East.” Or some secret society. I could get into
an idea about a bitchy/dark sorority … Hazing gone wrong, maybe?—not some
“Afterschool Special” about the dangers of drinking too much either, please! I
actually read a ms. (I requested) that addressed this YA terrorism idea, which
I (reluctantly, even stupidly) passed on. Then I rewatched that documentary
about the Weathermen and it rekindled the idea.
I also rewatched that movie “Heavenly Creatures” and
am searching for a story that explores a close/weirdly close
friendship/relationship between 2 kids …
Also, I am super into the shows “Orange Is The New
Black” (which, yes, was a book) and “Breaking Bad”—if there is anyone out there
with an idea like these shows, I’m listening …
Dave:
Wow! I know that I’d love to read something on those topics, too. But just in
case somebody’s written something else that doesn’t exactly fall into those
categories, perhaps you can give the readers an idea of your taste in
literature. What are some of your favorite all-time reads? Can you perhaps pick
two or three classics and two or three more recently written?
Amy:
Favorite all-time read is either “The Abortion: An Historical Romance 1966” by
Richard Brautigan or “To Kill A Mockingbird” by Harper Lee. Adult reads I love
include “The Great Gatsby” and “She’s Come Undone” and even “Fear of Flying”
and I love author Michelle Tea. Kid books include “The Outsiders” and any
Ramona Quimby book or any Judy Blume (but especially “Are You There God? It’s
Me, Margaret”) and, I know it’s not great literature or anything, any Sweet Valley
High book. Books I love as of late are “Butter” by Erin Jade Lange and “Charm
& Strange” by Stephanie Kuehn and, of course, “Wonder” by RJ Palacio. (It’s
not recent recent but also shout out to “Living Dead Girl” by Elizabeth Scott.)
I also love “Night Film” by Marisha Pessl and, of course, “Gone Girl” by
Gillian Flynn. (And not recent recent is “Snakes and Earrings” by Hitomi
Kanehara—OMG, love! And “Chump Change” by Dan Fante. And “Homeboy” by Seth
Morgan.) How about those books in my TBR (to be read) pile? Now, I don’t know
if they’re any good—I can’t vouch for them—but the idea of them is making me salivate: “Bird Box” by Josh Malerman,
“The Fever” by Megan Abbott, and “Room” by Emma Donoghue. There are so many great books—I am not even
able to list them all … I didn’t even touch nonfiction …
Dave:
What an awesome list - many I’ve not read but are now on my to-read list. So,
say someone has written about a topic that you love, that you’re DYING to hear.
What is it that sells you on a story? Voice? Characterization? Both?
Amy:
Both. Definitely. You should have 1 or the other, at least.
Dave:
Would you choose to not represent an author or a story because you have a sense
it’s not marketable enough? Or do you go after it finger on trigger simply
because you’ve fallen in love with the story?
Amy:
It depends. I used to go full-force simply because not only did I love the
story but I loved the idea behind the
story. But it’s a lot of work to take on a project like that so now I weigh my
options—consider the pros and cons. But I’m still more likely to take on
something because I love it—market be damned! (You know that song by Tom Petty,
I Won’t Back Down? Marry that with Joan Jett’s Bad Reputation. That is me.)
Dave:
I Won’t Back Down. Isn’t that the attitude any writer should want from their agent?
I mentioned above that I’ve done a few edits for you
to make my novel submission ready. Can you briefly describe for the reader your
editing process, how hands-on are you, what you expect from an author once
they’ve signed etc. etc.? And just as importantly: is editing necessary before
submission?
Amy:
I’ve also mentioned projects taking work so that should clue you in that I am
hands-on. Extremely hands-on (but have no fear—I will not suggest that your cat
turn into a ninja!—I try to stay with you/your vision). Editing is necessary in
most cases (and you should always, always edit before subbing agents!)—even
just a word misspelled or a comma needed is something I will revise before
submitting (see?--hands-on).
The only thing I require/expect from an author once
they’ve signed is patience! It is a S-L-O-W process. I can’t stress that
enough. Add even more time to the already slow process because I rarely follow
what’s “hot”—the trends—so it’s a fight with publishers to publish what I like,
what I do. (And trust me—I want to get you/your book published, I want to get
paid too—so, believe me, I’m working my a** off for you! OMG, relax will ya!
Re-lax! You’ve found an agent—let them work for you, it’s their job so let them
do their job!)
Dave:
Yes. We talked about that right away, and you answered a whole list of
questions for me before I signed. Fees. Royalties. Expectations etc. etc. What
are some questions a prospective client should ask of you, or any agent for
that matter, before signing?
Amy:
I don’t know! Ask anything! Ask everything!
Dave:
Could you give a brief rundown before we close of what it is you are looking to
see come your way? And, what it is you have absolutely no desire to read and
therefore, should not ever be sent?
Amy:
Do. Not. Send. Sci Fi. Please! That means no paranormal or magical or supernatural
or fantastical or even alt worlds; I don’t rep books with made-up languages or
faeries or wizards or vampires or ghosts or aliens, etc. No magic potions (or elixirs) here. There are many other
agents, good agents, who do rep those things. I like reality-based YA and MG.
Dave:
What should an author include in their submission package when sending to you?
Is there a best time to send? And finally, where and how can you be reached?
Amy:
I am always working (even on vacation) so send your query any time (I am up
late and rise early) or day. Send by email: amy@signaturelit.com.
Thanks
again, Amy, for taking the time to answer this long list of questions.
I know it was extremely detailed, but by doing this I was hoping to let
everyone know everything about your awesomeness,
and just as importantly to allow them to do a one-stop-shop where they could
find out everything they ever wanted and needed to know before sending you a
query.
Dave and Amy, thanks for such a great and informative interview! Dave, I can see why you've been raving about Amy. I love your attitude - "I won't back down!"
ReplyDeleteAnd I have new books to add to my to-be-read list.
"I won't back down!" matches well with my own philosophy and work ethic. Doesn't it?
ReplyDelete