What I have learned from researching literary agents...and nothing about being chased by a mountain goat!

When I was taking the Writing for Children Certificate at the University of Washington from fall 2016 to spring 2017, one of our assignments was to research agents. At the time, looking for potential agents seemed so far into the future that I took it seriously, but the stakes were not at all high. I wanted to complete the assignment and make it worthwhile, but at the same time, nothing was riding on who I chose. I'm not even sure how I found the agency and agent I did back then, but the funny thing is that she now occupies a space on my agents-to-query list. So, I must have done a better job than I thought at finding someone I considered a possible match. After that exercise in spring 2017, I didn't think about agents all that much because I wanted to focus on actually writing (and illustrating) so that maybe I'd have a need to find an agent some day.

Well, it is now spring 2018 and "some day" has arrived. Since the agent assignment, I have finished the Certificate, started a critique group (with 4 classmates from the UW program--I will write about that in another blog post), started working a few hours a week as a Kindergarten, library and fourth grade aide, have worked on several manuscripts, made three dummies from three of my most polished manuscripts, and have worked on sample art. And so the time has come (in my humble opinion) to start seriously considering querying agents.

A few months ago, I began making a list of agents by doing some Google searches with phrases such as:  "top literary agents children's books". That brought up links to blogs like Darcy Pattison's. Every year or so she comes up with a Top 20 List of Top Literary Agents based on her research of who has sold the most titles. 

Here are a couple of other links that helped me get started:

Great! Storybook (Nov 2015)

The Children's Book Academy (Aug 2014)

I spent some time compiling a list of agents who mentioned in their profiles that they were seeking picture books and author/illustrators. A couple of months went by, during which the list sat quietly in my folder. Recently, I learned that in the world of agents, an "open for queries" status can change in a matter of only a few months. So just because I had my nicely typed list, it became critical to double-check each agent for their current status. A good place to do this, apart from the agent's profile in the agency's site, is Query Tracker. On this site, they make it very clear in red type if an agent is closed for queries. I figured out pretty quickly that checking there first gave me the green light (or not) to continue with my more extensive research on a particular agent. 

I have read from several sources that a smart approach to sending out query letters is to send them in batches of 5 to 7 at a time. Not more than that. I have come to terms with the reality that  I will have to do many batches, as I've also read that it will likely take querying around 100 agents before I actually find one who will take a chance on me. This process is not for the faint of heart or for the thin-skinned! It's for the hard-working and the hopeful!

The reasons for small batches, as I understand them:

  • I have a much better chance of personalizing my letters:  I know I should absolutely try to do this; and it doesn't mean only using the agent's name in the greeting. It means trying to connect with a particular agent from what I found out about them and their agency in my research. Writing individual letters is only possible if I concentrate on a few agents at a time.
  • I discover that my query letter needs revising: I don't want to reread my letter after I've mass mailed about 100 agents, and realize that my letter is not actually doing its job of describing my story or me. It will probably be wise for me to revise if I haven't heard back after 4 to 6 weeks and send queries to a new batch, and see how that one goes! "Keep Calm and Query On!"
  • My manuscript needs more work: if I were very impatient (which I don't think I have been) and didn't workshop my manuscript enough, or didn't put it away in a drawer for a couple of months after several revisions, as many suggest, I may reread it (after having mailed it out to every agent out there!) and kick myself when I see a bunch of changes I could've made.
  • As the ad copy for Botany men’s suits (1966) used to say “You never get a second chance to make a first impression”: Most agencies state that if one agent doesn't accept your MS submission, you should consider it an agency-wide rejection. To please not submit that MS to another of their agents, even if you've revised it. Smaller batches guarantee that I won't mess up big time. Better to strike out with a small batch than a huge one. Another thing I've learned along the way is that there are a lot of agents out in there! Sure, as in every field, some agents are better-known, but there also have to be many great ones who are not as known.

I would be lying if I said that that I haven't felt overwhelmed with regard to this process more than once...or many times. But I finally told myself that feeling overwhelmed wasn't going to get me anywhere soon, so I began my Excel sheet (I actually use Numbers for Mac) and started drawing up a list of a few agents that are now my "first batch". 

The one thing that has me a bit befuddled is the suggestion that I should not necessarily choose my "top choice agents" (brings back memories of college applications! I wonder if I can also speed up the process with a request for "early decision"?) for my first batch of query letters. I don't know much about agents to begin with, even after extensively researching many of them, let alone try to rank them based on something other than having a "feeling" that some might be a better match than others. I guess that would be reason number 5 for not making that "top list" your first query batch: you don't want to run the risk of messing up with the ones you most want to impress? (Did I mention that this process is overwhelming? Always remember: you're not alone about feeling this way. It's guaranteed to overload your noggin!). I still don't know how to fully figure this one out, really.

Here's what I've been doing to gather enough information about my first group of agents. I swear that this part of a writer's life is so time-consuming I could spend a year just doing this very thing, and not writing a single story. I have to admit that I enjoy this kind of information gathering, so as Kirby Larson once told me when I asked her "when do you know you've done enough research for your historical fiction?"...she said that research can be endless, but at some point you can just call it procrastination! Ah! There's a quote that says: "I put the Pro in Procrastinate!" I resemble that remark! So in conclusion: know when to stop, use what you've learned and move on to the next agent, or on to actually writing your query letters.

These are the places where I have been looking online for information about agents, and taking notes:

  1. Query Tracker:  I find this to be the most useful to check if an agent is open for queries or not.  That said, I'm sure it's useful in a myriad of other ways that I have yet to discover.
  2. The agency's website: most agency websites have a separate profile or bio for each of their agents. Many times these profiles will also include an agent's wish list, but not all of them do. Make sure you check out the "Submissions guidelines" page where you will learn what exactly to include in your query letter, what to send, if the agency accepts submissions by email, or if they have a query form you must fill out, or even if any or all of their agents are closed for submissions. Note to self: follow these guidelines to a tee. 
  3. Publisher's Marketplace: a good source of information about agents, their twitter handles, a list of clients, wish lists, and also information that mirrors the one on the agency's website. Again, there's probably much more, but I haven't dug deep enough!
  4. Google search: the results are mostly interviews or guest posts on author blogs; sometimes posts where readers have a chance to submit to that agent for a limited time; still other links might take you to an agent's website--some agents are also authors, which is great! What's nice about these interviews is that they tend to provide more personal information, not only professional.
  5. Social media search: I have often read how important it is to follow agents on Twitter to get a better sense of their voice, to read if they are sharing wishes for submissions, and to know who and what they are following themselves. On Facebook, I only request a connection if what I can see of the agent's Facebook page focuses on promoting kid lit topics, client books and other people's books, photos from conferences and expos, or their agency. If it looks like it's solely a personal page (or there are too many cat photos) I stay away from it. Better to "Like" the agency's page instead. I'm relatively new to Instagram, and although I have found agents with accounts, there are some that have accounts but are not posting...that doesn't mean they are not following others, though. Instagram is a great place for me to discover other illustrators. So that's the extent of my social media socializing! I'm an introvert by nature, so having added Twitter and IG to my daily routine of Facebook checking makes me feel like an electronic social butterfly. It's fun but mentally exhausting!
  6. Manuscript Wish List: a site where you can search for agents, and read their wishes for the kinds of manuscripts they want to receive in their inboxes. Not all the agents you search will appear (agents have to join to add their information), but sometimes through searches articles will pop up as options, and you might get distracted once again and read them instead of continuing your search. It's okay. As long as you're learning new stuff! (at least that's what a friend has told me could happen!) Also, look for #MSWL to find agent wishes.

I would estimate that it takes me a half hour to 45 minutes (maybe up to an hour--depends on the person) to get through researching one agent. Yes, I'm sure I get distracted frequently along the way ("Squirrel!"), but I want to make sure I have enough information to give me a sense of that particular agent, and to find out if there are tidbits that will provide me with any insights, common ground or shared interests.

During all this sleuthing, I have not hesitated to ask questions within a few communities I'm part of on Facebook about things I don't understand about the process of querying: KidLit 411, Storyteller Academy, or my chapter of SCBWI. If you've heard that the kidlit community is very supportive, you heard right. People are always willing and happy to share their insights and experiences, so go ahead...ask away!

Now that I have notes on 5 to 7 (or 8) agents who might be open to the type of stories I write, and with whom I think I could have a good working relationship, I celebrate a little, but I know this is not over yet! It's not a sprint, it's a marathon, or more like a 100K trail race up steep rocky mountains with lions and tigers and goats waiting to chase me!

Now it's time for me to take these notes and put them to work in my impressive, intriguing, awe-inspiring, mind-blowing query letters! (No pressure...whatsoever! Yikes!) But writing the query letter is a whole other blog post and...Look! Over there! It's a mountain goat! "Bleeeeeeh!" Run! And wish me luck!

 

ps. If you have read this whole thing and have additional suggestions based on your own agent search experiences, or have any questions, send me a message using the contact page.

pps. You might also find these links useful:

Author/illustrator Debbie Ridpath Ohi, (@inkyelbows) has created several Twitter lists that I found just the other day, and will come in handy when you want to find agents and editors to follow:

Agents kidlit/YA List and Kidlit/YA Editors List

Agent Query

Writer Beware

Thumbs Down Agencies List 

 

Please remember that any use of materials on this website, including reproduction, modification, distribution or republication, without the prior written consent of Carolina Pedraza, is strictly prohibited. Thanks!

 

Why People Draw: Matt Davies, Political Cartoonist & Picture Book Illustrator

Hello!

In 2010, I launched a website for my creative projects called Wacky Shorts Creations. As part of that website, I started writing a blog about drawing called The Hamster Wheel and did a series of interviews on Why People Draw. I remember I enjoyed the correspondence with others who like to draw, and loved learning different points of view about drawing from people in a variety of disciplines. I learned about the many approaches to the same activity—that of drawing, or making a mark. I let that website expire, so there's no way to access the interviews. I would like to start posting them here in my new website so you can enjoy them!

MATT DAVIES 

The first time I learned about Matt Davies (pronounced: Davis), was not in the newspaper, but from an email from the Westport Arts Center (WAC) in Westport, CT.  Matt was having an exhibition of his editorial cartoons there, and would be giving a talk later that week. Matt is one of the best presenters I had heard speak.  He is laugh-out-loud funny, engaging, tells great stories, and that night, he even drew some political figures the audience was eager to see.  Matt is also very kind and grounded, which is always impressive in a person who has done a lot in their career.  I enjoyed his talk so much, that for the following year’s Draw On! (a program I coordinated and ran for The Aldrich Museum in Ridgefield, CT), I asked my contact at WAC if they could share Matt’s contact information with me.

Matt (@MattDavies) ended up doing hilarious evening presentations for Draw On! on two consecutive years, the second one with his friend and fellow editorial cartoonist Scott Santis (@sstantis).  Audiences loved him in both. 

Here is editorial cartoonist and children's book author/illustrator Matt Davies in his own words. It was such a pleasure to work with Matt on this interview from March of 2011. Thanks [again] Matt!

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HW: What's your earliest memory of drawing (or of being able to draw)?

MD: I honestly don't really know. I can't remember not being able to draw. When I was about five or six, I got in big trouble at school for illustrating an age-inappropriate poem about the Queen. To my detriment, the art was so carefully and lovingly drawn that my teacher could see exactly who was depicted, and what was going on. I grew up in England where that sort of thing was frowned upon—unlike corporal punishment, which was actively employed—and it all ended very badly. But I definitely learned an early lesson in the breathtaking power of art.

HW: What does being able to draw mean to you?

MD: It means that I have both an escape, and a voice. 

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HW:  What part of your day is spent sketching and drawing, and what part is spent infusing your brain with what's going on in the world so you can draw about it?

MD: I spend a majority of my time thinking, and reading: Trying to find the angle that no one else would think to depict. I am always fearful of producing obvious things. While all art is at least tangentially political (the second you publicly place a mark on a piece of paper you will piss SOMEONE off), mine is deliberately overtly political. I take issues and events and try desperately to make sense of them. Like a columnist, I practice opinion journalism except I actually draw my conclusions, so to speak. 

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HW: Do you keep a sketchbook? If so, do you find that you write or draw more in it, and what is its purpose?

MD: My sketchbooks are a mess. I use them as sounding boards so there's a mixture of writing, word associations, and incomprehensible squiggles. Except when I am trying to perfect a caricature, the art in them is blisteringly rudimentary. That didn't used to be the case. Over the past twenty years I have learned not to waste time on tight pencil sketches, as I found that recreating the spontaneity of the virgin line in ink was impossible, so now I pretty much ink without pencil. I like to feel it gives my ink lines movement and life.

HW: Who are 2 current illustrators whose work you enjoy? Why?

MD: I honestly can't limit myself to only two. There are so many cartoonists and illustrators whose work I admire. I have spent this winter writing/drawing a children's book, and have been really paying attention to what's out there in that field and the standard of artwork is often delightfully astounding (and pretty intimidating). 

HW: What do you find is the easiest thing about seeing the world through humor and funny images? What do you find is the toughest?

MD: I find that I can say so much more through humor. People are far more likely to absorb a message or opinion if it is wrapped in wit.  And I can't honestly think of a downside to that, except for perhaps there was this one woman at my office who used to say every time she saw me: "so, what's funny?" I know she meant well, but it really misunderstood—and completely glossed over—what I do.

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HW: If you could write a recipe for your drawings, what would the ingredient list be (read like)?

MD: Take one whole fresh social and/or political issue, a one gallon jug of chaos, four pounds of daydreaming, an ounce of ink, two ounces of white out, a teaspoon of panic and a grain of irritation. Mix together indiscriminately, place on highly heated deadline for two to three hours and serve with a garnish of smirk. Serves millions.

HW: What gets your Hamster Wheel running? (what gets you itching to draw or create?)

MD: One of the best feelings I can imagine is when I have conjured a really solid idea that I know works well, and includes a drawing I know I will enjoy doing, and can't wait to finish and get out there for people to see (I wish every day could be like that). I walk on air on days when I reach that point by, say, lunchtime...

 

Other places online where you can find more about Matt and his work:

mattdaviescartoon.com

gocomics.com/mattdavies

projects.newsday.com/cartoons/opinion/matt-davies-political-cartoons/#!/

pulitzer.org/winners/matt-davies

niemanreports.org/articles/cartoonists-reach-out-to-educators/

niemanreports.org/articles/are-we-witnessing-the-dusk-of-a-cartooning-era/

us.macmillan.com/author/mattdavies-1

blogs.slj.com/afuse8production/2013/09/02/review-of-the-day-ben-rides-on-by-matt-davies/#_

kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/matt-davies/ben-rides/

 

 

Please remember that any use of materials on this website, including reproduction, modification, distribution or republication, without the prior written consent of Carolina Pedraza, is strictly prohibited. Thanks!