How to submit a novel to an agent

What to send

Covering letter

You need to write a covering letter stating:

Remember to do it in a mail-mergeable format because it will save you a lot of time. If you can’t mailmerge, it’s well worth spending an hour or two ploughing through the guidance in Word because it will be worth it in the long run.

Précis

You need a 1 to 2 page (maximum) summary of the whole thing, introducing the main themes, characters & plot. Follow it through right to the end… it’s a mistake to say, ‘to find out what happens, you’ll have to request the rest’. The agent wants the whole picture.

Sample chapters

An agent will be able to get a feel for your writing from a sample; they do NOT want the whole book at this stage.

You need to select the first couple of chapters, or around 15 pages of a novel.

Stamped, addressed envelope

Buy a large quantity of 2nd class stamps – you can get them in 100’s and a pack of normal sized plain white envelopes i.e. A4 sheet folded into 3. Then print off labels with your name & address on them & put a label & a stamp on each envelope.

If you don’t enclose an SAE, you won’t hear from many of these people as they’re not a charity.

Paper

If you’re serious, you need to obtain a box of good quality paper. I use Conqueror textured paper in cream. It’s quite expensive for a box, probably £20 - £25, but mine’s still over ½ full & I’ve sent out 3 novels.

Use paper as follows:-

Identify possible agents

You need a writers & artists’ yearbook or writers’ handbook – a current one as they go out of date quickly.

As a very rough guide, I’ve approached 90 for each novel. There is no point in sending one at a time, then waiting 6 weeks to get a rejection, if you even hear from them, then doing another one.

Mailmerge

If you’ve selected 90 agents, prepare an approach to the first 20.

You can either mailmerge the agents’ addresses onto labels or if you’re good at mailmerge, get the address in the right place to use window envelopes. Use A4 envelopes – don’t try to fold anything up because it doesn’t look professional.

Agent packs

Put together a pack for each agent. This should consist of:

DO NOT staple because this is frowned upon. Use a paper clip.

Pay attention to detail all the way through. For example, address your letter to a person if you possibly can, not to the company. Make sure their name & address is 100% correct. If you’ve used labels for the addresses, make sure they’re on the right envelopes, which is harder than it sounds if you’re doing multiple approaches.

And finally ...

Send them all out 1st class. When you get replies, mark them off on the spreadsheet. When you’ve heard from over half of the agents, start on the next batch.

Good luck!!

Produced by Letchworth Writers’ Group 2008