When it doesn't sell
Posted: June 2nd, 2012, 2:37 pm
Hi Nathan,
Let's say your agent shopped your YA MS to a dozen big-6 imprints, and it had a few close calls--as in, editors tried to acquire but it didn't get through acquisitions. If your agent doesn't want to keep trying with another round of submissions and is reconsidering you as a client, what might a writer's options be?
Can you query/seek other representation for that same MS, or will agents consider it "tarnished goods" after already going to quite a few imprints?
Is targeting small publishers, with the agent or on your own, a good strategy?
Or better to let the relationship go, put the book on the backburner despite being *soclose,* and focus on the next project?
Thanks,
Deborah
Let's say your agent shopped your YA MS to a dozen big-6 imprints, and it had a few close calls--as in, editors tried to acquire but it didn't get through acquisitions. If your agent doesn't want to keep trying with another round of submissions and is reconsidering you as a client, what might a writer's options be?
Can you query/seek other representation for that same MS, or will agents consider it "tarnished goods" after already going to quite a few imprints?
Is targeting small publishers, with the agent or on your own, a good strategy?
Or better to let the relationship go, put the book on the backburner despite being *soclose,* and focus on the next project?
Thanks,
Deborah