Literary agent runs away screaming

27th February 2010
Blog
2 min read
Edited
8th December 2020

Can a simple comment on a submission make a literary agent howl with horror? Yes, absolutely, according to this agent's guest post:

Simon Trewin blog

Let’s start with the science bit – every day by email, post, carrier pigeon and osmosis I receive 10 unsolicited approaches from unrepresented writers out in the big wide literary firmament.

These come from all genres. There’s fiction (from coming-of-age to fin-de-siècle), non-fiction (from ‘My 38 Years As a Bank Manager’ to ‘Mucus – the bodily secretion that changed the world’), poetry (from love poetry to stalker poetry), cookery books and academic texts to verse drama – usually about earwigs taking over the world for some reason.

On one level I sit there excited about the wealth of creativity and on another I sit there silently screaming and wondering where the STOP button is!

The truth is that there are more writers than readers and almost all of this material will never be published in the conventional manner. But like a theatre critic sitting there as the lights go down night after night, one is always hoping that, as an agent, this is going to be your J. K. Rowling Moment. If only it were something that happened so much more often…

As one of the quality filters in the system, I am often asked how I sort the wheat from the chaff and the good from the evil.

The answer is that it really isn’t rocket science and that you, dear reader, could soon pick it up.

I start by reading the covering letter – if someone misspells my name that is never a good start and if they tell me that they have tried every agent in town and are now trying me, then that can, on a bad day, be a deal breaker. And if someone tells me they have analysed the bestseller list and created the ‘perfect bestseller’ in lab conditions, then I will most certainly run down the street screaming.

Funnily enough, screaming is not conducive to my taking on a new client.

Yours,

Grumpy Old Agent*

*Grumpy Old Agent is Simon Trewin, a literary agent at United Agents. He tweets as simontrewin.

Writing stage

Comments

This is a wonderful site, and full of precious information, especially for someone starting out, as I am.

I would love some advice on my particular situation. I'm writing a very British book, set in the days just after the end of WW2 in London and Europe. I'm a British citizen, but I live in Perth, Australia.

Would it be better to approach Australian agents, or British ones? Sadly love has displaced logic, and I'm living in something of a cultural vacuum! Perth is not renowned for its literary agents!

Help please!

Profile picture for user Daniel.e_6157
Daniel
Ellis-Jones
270 points
Developing your craft
Daniel Ellis-Jones
24/03/2010

I admit to not writing one, ever. But I'm young, my work is far from the can...

But I'm good with letters and I know that agents are "the power that be" so... When the time comes, I don't plan on writing some scribble in 15 minutes and sending it off without proof-reading by my favourite grammar Nazi.

But, mistakes happen to everyone.

Profile picture for user farli101_3602
Tea
Maljkovic
270 points
Developing your craft
Tea Maljkovic
23/03/2010

Ah, "a letter of style and substance." The Holy Grail of cover letters. When you figure out how to do it, be sure to let me know...

Profile picture for user alifolwe_6105
Alison
Folwell
270 points
Developing your craft
Alison Folwell
21/03/2010