Never thought I would retract my long held position about agents saying pass on projects by not replying, but on Friday I received this email:
Dear Sam,
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to review The Last Track. As much as I enjoyed reading this, I am sorry to say I did not fall in love with the novel like I had hoped. As agents do, I need to truly love a project to take it on. Considering that you will also want and need an agent who will get behind your work with her full commitment, I wish you the best of luck placing your project with an agent who adores it. Thanks again and apologies for my belated response.
Best regards,
* Name redacted By Sam *
* Agency redacted by Sam *
Normally I do not post rejections but I thought this one was interesting for several reasons.
1) They actually sent it on their own volition. Usually I query, get a request for material, send it off and the project disappears into a void. Usually any request about the project status is unanswered.
2) Response time. Five weeks to evaluate a manuscript is very acceptable, given the circumstances, as BEA sat squarely within the consideration period. And for perspective, I can cite one agent that took more than eighteen months to reply to a query.
3) Professional tone. This was not written by a snarky junior assistant. If it was, they are ready to be an agent.
As soon as I prep another query blast pack, I’ll send this agent a thank you note. They did me a favor.
After a few years of trying to sell agents on a manuscript, I finally have some closure. With one agent, at least. And apparently there are some with manners, even in NYC.
While it is never easy to take rejection it is nice to get some feedback and closure on a query. Keep sending them out!
Thanks for the support, Jaysen.
Ultimately, it’s a numbers game. The search for Mike Brody’s champion continues and I press on.