I
was sitting at my computer one day when my email dinged—that glorious and
terrifying sound for a querying writer. It’s infinitely more terrifying when
you have fulls out to agents. When I saw the name of the sender, my heart
dropped. It was from an agent that had my full. I tentatively clicked on the
email expecting a couple line response including a thanks but I didn’t connect
enough to take this on. To my surprise I saw a decent sized paragraph ending
with the phrase “I’ve decided to pass, but I’d be happy to take a second look
if you decide to revise.”
And
here I was. It wasn’t a no, but it wasn’t the happy yes either. I was stuck in
limbo. The gift and curse of a revise and resubmit. If I did it well it could
be that yes, but if I screwed it up, didn’t do enough, or took it in a direction
the agent didn’t like, it’d be a no. I didn’t know if I could handle that kind
of pressure.
What
did I do?
I
reread the paragraph again. There was a line of notes about what the agent
liked and many more about what wasn’t quite working. But in reading it again, I
started to get angry. It didn’t seem like this agent even read my whole
manuscript let alone really liked it. Why even ask for a revision? I stewed for
a bit then messaged one of my critique partners with HELP WHAT DO I DO???
After
what seemed like an eternity, my CP got back to me. I sent her a copy of the
email from the agent. After reading it, she said, wow it sounds like this agent
really likes your work and gave you a lot of great notes.
Wait,
what? Were we even reading the same email? I expressed my concerns to my CP, and
she told me to read the email again.
So
I did. I read it about five more times. And the more I read it, the clearer it
became. This agent did really like the story, and despite my original inference,
it did appear she’d read the whole manuscript with interest in the concept and had
passion for the story. But if I hadn’t taken a step back and gotten some
additional advice, I might never have seen that. I might have just stewed in
anger forever.
That
said, there were still some items there that I agreed with and others I didn’t,
most of the feedback though I didn’t know how to address. One of the comments
was one I’d even seen before from two other agents, but I still didn’t know how
to tackle it. So instead of responding that day to the agent, I sat on it. I
periodically went back and read what the agent said expecting a great epiphany to
hit me, but it didn’t.
I
put the email aside, but in the back of my mind were some changes I had
previously wanted to make running through my head. They didn’t really address
the issues the agent raised, but it would make the story a bit better. And on
top of that, was one piece of important information about my main character
that I’d always known but hadn’t ever mentioned because I didn’t know how to
make it mean anything to the story.
All
this information was swirling around in my brain and bugging me. And then that
evening when I sat down to watch TV something clicked. That piece of
information about my main character I’d always known but not included, I
finally knew how to make it matter. Even better, the key to making it mean
something was rooted in the feedback I’d gotten from the agent. I’d had this
comment twice before and not known what to do with it, but something in the way
this agent had written it made it finally click in my brain. I FINALLY
understood the problem and knew how to fix.
Once I’d made the big epiphany, the
wheels began turning and the ideas were flowing. I took lots and lots of notes.
When I felt like I had a clear path forward, I opened a reply email to the
agent. I thanked her again for her time, that I appreciated her honest feedback,
and let her know that I’d be interested in making some edits.
And
then I hit send.
It
wasn’t another minute before the panic set in. What was I thinking? I had no
idea what I was doing. What if the agent hated the direction I was taking the
manuscript? I hadn’t told her what I was thinking, just that I’d like to opportunity
to edit with her feedback in mind. What if I did all this work and the answer
was no?
After
many frantic messages to my CPs and their reassuring words that I was doing the
right thing because I had a direction and a passion to make this manuscript
better, I finally calmed down a little bit. But I still had this fear in the
back of my mind. A fear of doing what I needed to do, what was right for the
story.
This
fear was crippling me. There was so much riding on this. If I did this right, I
could come out with an agent. If I didn’t, it was back to the dreaded query
trenches. As my brain reeled I had to ask myself an important question. Was I
doing this just to get an agent or because I wanted to make my manuscript
better?
The
answer was first and foremost that I wanted to make the manuscript better. Sure
I wanted an agent, but whether that happened or not, I believed in this
manuscript and the new direction I had planned up.
In
order to move forward, I put the crippling thoughts aside (as best as I could),
and threw myself head first into the edits. Sure the doubt crept in from time
to time, but every time it did, I went back to that important question and my
answer: this was about improving my manuscript, making it the best it could be.
And
when I finally finished the edits and submitted them back to the agent, I was
proud of the manuscript. I was proud of what it was and even more proud of what
I accomplished. And whether that agent decides to take it on or not, I had the
best piece of work I could offer. And that was something to smile about.
5 comments:
I enjoyed your honest, soul-searching post. It illustrates so clearly all the inner questions, doubts, and turmoil of being in the query trenches. Right now I'm in the midst of removing an important, but distracting subplot in my own MG WIP, while racing to finish this revision before an interested editor gets back to me.
I really admire the integrity of your revision process, and relate to your commitment to making it the best book possible. I hope the agent absolutely falls in love with it!
I enjoyed your honest, soul-searching post. It illustrates so clearly all the inner questions, doubts, and turmoil of being in the query trenches. Right now I'm in the midst of removing an important, but distracting subplot in my own MG WIP, while racing to finish this revision before an interested editor gets back to me.
I really admire the integrity of your revision process, and relate to your commitment to making it the best book possible. I hope the agent absolutely falls in love with it!
Thanks so much! I'm so glad you enjoyed the post. We're all in the query trenches together! Best of luck finishing your edits. I hope the editor falls in love with you manuscript as well!
Thank you for letting me know how to properly panic before I get there. :)
you're welcome ;) Maybe you'll get lucky and never get one and go straight to an offer from a full.
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