Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Queries, queries, and yet more queires II


First there was QueryFail, then came AgentFail, events that touched tender spots in many people and stunned many others with their fury. If you wade through them (I only managed to read snippets) you may agree that we can learn from them if we can find a way to manage the negativity.

In comes Nathan Bransford, ever helpful and positive, with Agent for a Day. He invited readers to submit queries, 50 of which were randomly chosen and posted on his blog on Monday, April 13. His readers chimed in to comment on these queries and to choose the five queries that interested them.

There is still some negativity in the comments but if we ever wonder how our queries compare to the others, this is a fabulous opportunity to find out. I discovered that I couldn't read more than seven to ten queries at a time, and even then I skim, a lot. A few of them piqued my interest: voice, plot, possibilities. I plan to re read those to see if I can pinpoint just what attracted me to them.

You want more real-life examples, you say? Well, another uber-agent, Kristen Nelson, posts examples of the queries that caught her eye, with comments by her, as well as letters she sends to editors. Check them out.

4 comments:

Douglas Florian said...

Everything you can imagine is real.
Pablo Picasso

Yat-Yee said...

Your comments always catch me by surprise, like your platform shoes one.

Corey Schwartz said...

Hi Yat-Yee. There was also recently a Query Day on Twitter. Tara Lazar sums it up very well on her blog if you are interested.

Yat-Yee said...

Hi Corey,
Yes, I am very interested to find out how the reaction to QueryFail has affected version 2.0. The name change is a good sign. :) And thanks for the recommendation of Tara Lazar's blog. I'll be sure to check it out.