Hello, all...
As an amateur historian and writer-waiting-for-publication, I'm ready to submit my medieval novel, which is set in 13th century England. I've decided to begin the process by selectively choosing contests that have, as the finalist editor or agent, someone who might be interested in my type of book.
Has anyone else tried this route? I find it beneficial in many ways:
1. It gets my book "out the door" pretty quickly.
2. It forces me to create and polish a short synopsis, which many pubs and agents ask for.
3. It also forces me to polish those all-important first three chapters, as the submission requirement of most contests is somewhere between 20-55 pages.
4. In the meantime, I'm honing a query letter for submittal directly to agents I will choose.
I have no desire to go with electronic publishing. So for me, this route seems helpful. And I must say, I do know of other writers who became published authors after finaling in contests.
What does anyone else think? :)
Carolyn
Tags:
Share
-
▶ Reply to This