Author Laurie Alice Eakes on having the Right Agent, Part 2
Thank you so much, Laurie Alice, for sharing your story. You can find her at her website or her blog, Seize the Chance.
Continued from Part One:
Then tragedy struck. My best friend found out she had four months to live. She told me to go back to writing, to pursue that dream and not let that lousy agent stop me. My friend believed in me. Several other life-changing events occurred, too, and I found myself with a renewed relationship with the Lord, glad my secular stuff had gone nowhere, joined ACFW (American Christian Fiction Writers), and, by a pure miracle of the Lord, got an agent who believed in me.
I had done my research on her. She was new, so no former clients, but also that meant she was hungry. No, she didn’t have great contacts in the industry, but she was outgoing and warm and had a desire to succeed. She was also a writer, so knew people in the business. She was also working with an experienced agent. Frankly, I felt that I had nothing to lose at this point.
Ten years after that first agent told me I couldn’t write and my idea was terrible, I sold that terrible idea to Avalon Books. Family Guardian won the National Readers’ Choice Award for Best Regency the year it came out. And since then, I have sold twelve more books. Why? Yes, I suppose I have some talent and ability, and I also have an agent who believes in me, encourages me, sticks with me, tells me when something won’t work, but also tells me when something does. And an agent who always submits what she says she will.
These are the minimal points you should expect from your agent. Not all will hold your hand. If you want that, then seek one who will. If you want one who just submits and doesn’t care if your dog died and your heart is broken, so long as you meet your deadline, then make sure you know that ahead of time, too. I tend to need some encouragement, someone to call me up and say, Hello, look at that award on your desk when you think you can’t write. Look at those books with your name on the spine. This isn’t for everyone and not every agent will do this for you either. I have a friend whose agent gets her good deals, then disappears. I would hate that. Well, I’d like the deals, but I don’t want my agent to disappear.
Your agent should be honest with you about your work, but should also encourage you. She (or he) should keep you up on the market and pay attention to whom she is selling. If she’s never sold to publishing house X, she may not have a connection there or like the stuff those editors do, so she’s not a good fit.
Whole books are written on this subject, so I’m just summarizing as best I can. Feel free to ask questions in the comments, and I’ll do my best to answer them.
Continued from Part One:
Then tragedy struck. My best friend found out she had four months to live. She told me to go back to writing, to pursue that dream and not let that lousy agent stop me. My friend believed in me. Several other life-changing events occurred, too, and I found myself with a renewed relationship with the Lord, glad my secular stuff had gone nowhere, joined ACFW (American Christian Fiction Writers), and, by a pure miracle of the Lord, got an agent who believed in me.
I had done my research on her. She was new, so no former clients, but also that meant she was hungry. No, she didn’t have great contacts in the industry, but she was outgoing and warm and had a desire to succeed. She was also a writer, so knew people in the business. She was also working with an experienced agent. Frankly, I felt that I had nothing to lose at this point.
Ten years after that first agent told me I couldn’t write and my idea was terrible, I sold that terrible idea to Avalon Books. Family Guardian won the National Readers’ Choice Award for Best Regency the year it came out. And since then, I have sold twelve more books. Why? Yes, I suppose I have some talent and ability, and I also have an agent who believes in me, encourages me, sticks with me, tells me when something won’t work, but also tells me when something does. And an agent who always submits what she says she will.
These are the minimal points you should expect from your agent. Not all will hold your hand. If you want that, then seek one who will. If you want one who just submits and doesn’t care if your dog died and your heart is broken, so long as you meet your deadline, then make sure you know that ahead of time, too. I tend to need some encouragement, someone to call me up and say, Hello, look at that award on your desk when you think you can’t write. Look at those books with your name on the spine. This isn’t for everyone and not every agent will do this for you either. I have a friend whose agent gets her good deals, then disappears. I would hate that. Well, I’d like the deals, but I don’t want my agent to disappear.
Your agent should be honest with you about your work, but should also encourage you. She (or he) should keep you up on the market and pay attention to whom she is selling. If she’s never sold to publishing house X, she may not have a connection there or like the stuff those editors do, so she’s not a good fit.
Whole books are written on this subject, so I’m just summarizing as best I can. Feel free to ask questions in the comments, and I’ll do my best to answer them.
Comments
May God continue to bless your writing journey! :-)
Yeah, I wouldn't my agent to just disappear either. Thanks again for sharing!
Jessica:
I have a gift for you on my blog.
One thing I want to tell you is the serendipidous way in which I got my agent. I joined ACFW and got into a critique group because I knew little about Christian fiction. At the same time, I did submit something to an agent. She was booked up, so passed it along to a new agent in her agency because that woman had been talking about the new person in their critique group and how much she liked her writing. I didn't even know one of my new critique partners was an agent starting out in the business. I didn't even have anything finished to sellable point then, as I was in grad school. It took another 2.5 years, due to a crosscountry move on my part, finishing my master's thesis, and enduring a corporate job, but it finally happened with lots of encouragement.
Laurie Alice, that is an amazing story! I can't believe she was in your crit group. LOL
I pray when the time comes I will be sensitive to making a wise choice over an anxious one.
T. Anne, thanks for handing out that hug! You're so sweet. :-)
Cindy, I'm so glad this inspired you! I think it's an incredible story and I'm really thankful Laurie Alice shared it.
Tamika, wise words. We should never negate our needs. That's so true.
Excellent posts! Thanks for your advice and warnings.
Blessings,
Susan :)
Regarding Avalon, they are great to work with. Mind you, they don't pay much, only enough to get you into the Published Authors Network of RWA, and rarely do the books sell enough to give you royalties. On the other hand, the books are beautiful and are often--at least one a year out of the 36 romances they publish--winning awards. I've sold five books to them, only one of which is out. The others are coming out over the next couple of years, one in August.
Working with them is good. They always want a completed manuscript, and if you have a submission in, take note that Faith Black left in August and Chelsey Gilmore is now the senior editor. She's a dear, too.
How does my agent feel about them? Shelikes working with them. No, she makes little, too, but she likes seeing her authors sell to them, mainly because it is publishing credits that are highlyr espected in the industry. They are also so squeaky clean no CBA publisher is bothered by one of their authors having written for them. Avalon authors have gone on to sell to Thomas Nelson, Barbour Publishing, Steeple Hill, and at least two of us to Baker/Revell.
I'd gotten a rather obnoxious rejection from an editor (she told me I didn't know what I was talking about, when, for various reasons, I know I knew more than she possibly could, but that's another story) at a big publisher and was going to quit writing. I had a corporate job and little time with the commute. My agent recommended I write a Regency for Avalon, just a proposal, as it would take time to get back with her anyway. I dusted something off and we sent it in. She got back with my agent in two days. I scrambled to get that full written, writing on my PDA on the train, writing on mylunch hour, and getting up at 4 in the morning for a few minutes before work. It was nuts. But I did it and the editor bought it.
It's a tough business. Editors are people and don't have good days, too. They are not always the most polite in their rejections. And rejection is inevitable. One dusts oneself off and keeps going. If it'syour calling and your gift, you can't do anything else.
Well, Jesus is the BEST, but I love happy endings, too. *grin*
Thanks so much for sharing all that! I've wondered about Avalon, actually, but didn't know too much.
but now I am thinking of your friend, too --
Great story, right Deb? I'm still in awe over all those contracts! LOL
I'm so glad you found a new agent and I can't wait to get my hands on your new titles. You are an incredibly gifted writer who puts the reader in the skin and heart of the character and drops us right into the setting with vivid description.
I'm praying the Lord blesses your work beyond what anyone could ever dream!
Hugs to you, Laurie Alice!