Hilarious Joke
Fool
Keep trying, Sylvetra! Remember ,we can try and help you here on the Chron with your prologue.
I was wondering that if an agent asked for more of my book (fingers and toes crossed), would it be all right for me to offer a re-written prologue and a longer word-count?
I was wondering that if an agent asked for more of my book (fingers and toes crossed), would it be all right for me to offer a re-written prologue and a longer word-count?
I am currently adding to the story to tie up a few loose ends and to extend the word-count a little longer. Also, i felt the prologue lacked a lot of the strength the rest of the book has. I wrote it a long time ago so the style was quite different and weaker as a result.
I don't think it will matter too much as i reckon i will get no's from the agents i have sent it to. No biggy, i think i received about twenty no's on my first ever novel, though i can look back and see why lol. It has been a month as well and no replies so i will move on now. I got the Writer's and Artist's yearbook 2009 and it has many agents in it. See what happens.
Well, some writers think that if they edit too much they will grow stale. In my case, I stop doing (minor) edits only when I send back the page proofs. I don't necessarily recommend that other people take it to that extreme.
But the point is that Sylvetra_Snake's instincts are telling her that she could do much better. I think she would be foolish to send out something that even she doesn't feel is good enough.
When I sent out a synopsis and sample chapters for the first time (no query, no agent, just over the transom and into the slush-pile, because you could do that in those days), I kept on revising while I was waiting for an answer -- then kept right on after I sent the partial to the next editor. When that editor said that she wanted to see the rest, I was ready with a book that I believed was the best I had to offer.
Teresa/John: This raises the question does the book have to be more or less finished when you send in your sample chapters. Would publishers get pi**ed off if they liked the sample then had to wait for the rest. Like when -as I understand it- people pitch a line at film and TV producers. At the time they only have an idea with no real substance. Presumably this is because they couldn't afford to employ the writers studios and the like to 'make' the programs first only to be laughed of the stage when the pilot was screened. Is it similar in the publishing world.