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Old 11th November 2008, 10:07 AM   #1261 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

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John, do you know if sales tend to pick up as you go on into a series? I'd be interested to know especially with the longer series (more than 3 books).
Two specific examples I can give you. Robert Jordan's WHEEL OF TIME series suddenly doubled sales about six books in. And Maggie Furey's ARTEFACTS OF POWER series went this way in sales terms, on publication dates of the four novels in paperback: 12k, 20k, 25k, 42k...
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Old 11th November 2008, 11:08 AM   #1262 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

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Two specific examples I can give you. Robert Jordan's WHEEL OF TIME series suddenly doubled sales about six books in. And Maggie Furey's ARTEFACTS OF POWER series went this way in sales terms, on publication dates of the four novels in paperback: 12k, 20k, 25k, 42k...
Thanks John, and I do take your point about being the exception. This feels like another variation on the 'How to write what you want to write while also writing what the market wants'. Well, I'd just love to have the opportunity to try, is all I can say! My preference as reader and writer is for the shared world style of Banks and Mieville, for example. And going back a bit Conan Doyle wrote a series, so it's not really a new thing.

How do you see people like Charles Stross fitting into this, as from what I know of his work they are standalones.
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Old 11th November 2008, 11:25 AM   #1263 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

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Author groups, I'd say wait for the response here!
If you mean writing groups, then it depends what you want and where you are. Being in a writing group is invaluable to me, having regular contact with other genre writers is great for ideas, for morale, and for getting honest and high quality criticism of your work in progress.
My first short story pro sale came from a throwaway 'I bet you can't write a story about...' in the bar after one meeting. The second challenge like that also sold.

I'm in two groups:
- The T Party (The T Party - Home), a monthly genre group in London, traditional style crit group.
- MillionMonkeys (A Million Monkeys - About) , a weekly writer's productivity session (i.e. we meet just to write, to help build up our weekly word count, also London based.

The T Party is open to writers who have publishing credits. John I think knows one or two members.
MillionMonkeys is free, and open to anyone who wants to turn up and write.

There are other very good groups around the country, but if there's nothing organised where you are, then I would start your own. It will take time to build, you need to keep at it and pull people in and you will get something well worth being a part of.
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Old 11th November 2008, 12:20 PM   #1264 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

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There are other very good groups around the country, but if there's nothing organised where you are, then I would start your own. It will take time to build, you need to keep at it and pull people in and you will get something well worth being a part of.
In addition, there are internet-based groups organised by the BSFA -- the Orbiters, where members are divided into working groups of around half a dozen. You submit a piece each round, read and critique the other members' pieces and return them, all via email.

So not having a group in your area is no excuse. And I can't stress enough how invaluable such peer feedback can be. Every would-be writer should be part of a writing group or two.
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Old 11th November 2008, 01:00 PM   #1265 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

agreed. i'm no longer like a ship without a rudder and, since i joined my writers' groop, i've written more - and more consistently - than i ever did before.
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Old 16th November 2008, 12:33 PM   #1266 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

Hi, john. When you say publishers favour SF/Fantasy debuts somewhere in the region of 100-150,000 words does that include the smaller, independent presses etc? Would they typically avoid such overhead costs or follow the market- the potential revenue justifying the risks?
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Old 20th November 2008, 02:35 PM   #1267 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

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Thanks John, and I do take your point about being the exception. This feels like another variation on the 'How to write what you want to write while also writing what the market wants'. Well, I'd just love to have the opportunity to try, is all I can say! My preference as reader and writer is for the shared world style of Banks and Mieville, for example. And going back a bit Conan Doyle wrote a series, so it's not really a new thing.

How do you see people like Charles Stross fitting into this, as from what I know of his work they are standalones.
Charlie varies - SINGULARITY SKY and IRON SUNRISE are in the same series, as are THE ATROCITY ARCHIVE and two others, and his fantasy series...but then he does write four or five books a year, which is very unusual! And again, NEVER expect everything to fit a template. But series are the norm, in terms of selling well.
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Old 20th November 2008, 02:36 PM   #1268 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

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Hi, john. When you say publishers favour SF/Fantasy debuts somewhere in the region of 100-150,000 words does that include the smaller, independent presses etc? Would they typically avoid such overhead costs or follow the market- the potential revenue justifying the risks?
Depends on the individual indy press...
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Old 21st November 2008, 12:43 AM   #1269 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

Hi John;

I have two questions.

1) At some point in this thread I seem to recall you saying that although some agents sell work both here in the States and also in your corner of the globe, an author should seek representation in the same region as where he lives. With this newfangled thing called email and other such wonderful technologies (such as the push-button telephone and canned tuna), what is the reasoning behind that? Is it just so it’s easier for us authors to take you agents out for a round of drinks?

2) Regarding query letters: While attending high school (many, many years ago) I completed a correspondence course at the Institute of Children’s Literature. And in my senior year I received a partial college scholarship as a result of a fantasy story that appeared in my school’s paper. Are those things worth mentioning in my query letter? They say you are to include a short writer's bio, but other than that I don't have any publishing credits to list. Since (A) neither of those things are directly related to the novel I’m currently shopping, which is science fiction, and (B) that was so long ago, would they at all help or should they be left out?
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Old 21st November 2008, 09:19 AM   #1270 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

An agent in your home country will first approach the local genre editors, who he or she probably sees at least once a month. As a UK agent, although I am in regular touch with US genre editors by e-mail (and I've known many of them for twenty years because I was an SF editor and visited the US regularly), there is nothing like the personal, face-to-face, touch...thus I always approach the UK editors. US publishers are still more interested in new US authors, first and foremost.

You might as well mention those facts, making it clear you're aware they don't impinge directly on your present submission, but saying that you want those to whom you are submitting to have as much information as possible. Good luck!
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Old 21st November 2008, 10:53 AM   #1271 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

Hi John. Can you please advise me of the correct layout of a letter to an agent to get his/her attention. I'm getting a bit disheartened but my small fanbase tell me to keep at it as my work must get taken up eventually. Perhaps there is some magical formula? I have digested the Writers and Artists yearbook and have followed their advice but haven't even had a request to go further than the initial letter. I have sent three book covers (as I have self-published the first three in a five book series) plus a synopsis, some sample chapters, a bit about me and info on my website but all to no avail. Can you help me please?
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Old 21st November 2008, 12:19 PM   #1272 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

The letter is not a magic key, to be honest - as long as the basic infomation is there and you sound both professional and intelligent, no specific layout will make any difference. The agent has to be interested in what you are writing, in general terms, before they ask to see chapters. There isn't a magic key. I know that several agents are looking more and more to concentrate on the authors they already represent, but I'm sure others are still interested. As I've said before, every agent is an individual - so check out their websites first, because I imagine some say that they are not presently accepting new submissions, so it's pointless getting in touch with them. If it took Iain Banks over ten years, I don't think anyone else can expect fast results...
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Old 21st November 2008, 01:08 PM   #1273 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

I just want to add that there are exceptions like Hannu, but that's a very rare exception.
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Old 21st November 2008, 03:22 PM   #1274 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

And it is an exception, as you rightly point out! The rule is that for over 99% of authors it's a hard slog, and any new writer must be prepared for that, and not point to the exception and say 'that will work for me'. It won't. As I've said before, in twenty years working in SF publishing, I've never known a deal like Hannu Rajaniemi's, for a debut SF novelist.
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Old 22nd November 2008, 04:13 AM   #1275 (permalink)
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Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold

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An agent in your home country will first approach the local genre editors, who he or she probably sees at least once a month. As a UK agent, although I am in regular touch with US genre editors by e-mail (and I've known many of them for twenty years because I was an SF editor and visited the US regularly), there is nothing like the personal, face-to-face, touch...thus I always approach the UK editors. US publishers are still more interested in new US authors, first and foremost.
I find that very interesting. It also brings to mind a couple more questions.

1) Do agents typically meet their clients face to face during the initial stages of signing them up? Or do you often sign contracts with authors you have never met in person? If so, what percentage of your clients have you never actually met?

2) You say US publishers are more interested in US authors. Makes sense. Is the converse then also true....that UK agents are primarily interested in UK authors? More specifically, and hypothetically speaking, suppose you found a US author that you really liked and thought you could get him/her published in the UK, would you take them on as a client if they were not concerned about getting published in the US?

3) Regarding your UK clients, what percentage of them, if any, have their work published in both regions?

As always, thanks for your insight, John!
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