Writer's Digest

The Story of a Book: Writing Without Rules

I’d like to lodge a complaint. As a kid growing up, I imagined my career choice of “writer” would be filled with adventure and private jets, possibly an estate in Hawaii where my own personal private detective would routinely borrow my sports car.1 Every single television show and film that had a writer as a character typically showed them in full-on Castle mode, wealthy, and (for some reason) solving crimes, and I wanted that life.2

The reality of the author-agent relationship has turned out to be … different.

CRIME-SOLVING CATS

I found my agent, Janet Reid, wayyyyy back in 2002, utilizing stone tablets and smoke signals. OK, maybe it wasn’t quite that primitive, but I mail her an actual paper query letter. The fact that she signed me as a client set the model for our relationship, in my mind: I would write whatever I felt like, she would think it was a work of absolute genius and sell it immediately.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writer's Digest

Writer's Digest6 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
Don’t Let the Machines Win
I have been engaged in a yearslong war with Grammarly over the phrase “in order to.”1 I occasionally use the grammarchecking site in my freelance writing work as a kind of “super spellcheck,” and every time it highlights the phrase and suggests, pre
Writer's Digest3 min read
Jennifer March Soloway
Jennifer March Soloway (she/her/hers) is a senior agent with the Andrea Brown Literary Agency. Previously, she worked in marketing and public relations in a variety of industries, including financial services, healthcare, and toys. She has an MFA in
Writer's Digest4 min read
You Got The Offer—Should You Sign?
Congratulations! You’ve received an offer of representation from your Dream Agent. It’s the moment you’ve been waiting for. In the good ole’ days of threehour lunches and cocktails sharply at 5 p.m., many authors signed with their agents on a handsha

Related Books & Audiobooks