By: Lisa Silverman
I spent about five years of my life as an agent, representing both screenwriters and book authors. I wasn't a scumsucking bottom-feeder. Then again, I ultimately decided I wasn't cut out to be an agent. Agents, especially in today's book business, are essentially salesmen. Therefore, many of them are, to varying degrees, sleazy, slippery, or even unethical. On the other hand, most do what they do because they love books. People you'll come across in this business, whatever their faults, aren't in it for any other reason. One doesn't choose a career in the book industry to become rich.
Still, though many agents are literary types with excellent taste--and these days, many are former editors--business realities dictate that their choice of client isn't always merit-based. They can read great books in their spare time; during business hours, they need to make money. Most successful agents strike a balance between labor-of-love projects and bring-home-the-bacon projects, with that balance being about 15% to 85%. So if you're an unpublished writer, without serious connections at a publishing house, you need to take commercial issues into consideration when approaching agents.
You also need to take personal issues into consideration. Look at things from the agent's perspective: Who's their ideal client? A writer who:
By the way, I did have a few successes as an agent, ranging from a chick-lit mystery series to a literary ghost story to a diet book. It can happen to you, too...
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About the Author
Lisa Silverman is a freelance book editor and works in the copyediting department at one of New York's most prestigious literary publishing houses. She has also worked as a ghostwriter and a literary agent representing both book authors and screenwriters. She founded BeYourOwnEditor.com in order to provide writers with free advice on both writing and the publishing business.
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