Friday, May 06, 2011
Keeping it positive

It’s been a crazy Spring – tons of travel, arguably too many conferences (despite all three being very good), and a succession of deals coming from the Greenhouse both at home and abroad. It’s all great, we are awash with opportunity, but it’s taken a toll on blogging. I’m very happy to have a period of quiet through May and June and will hopefully be able to return to my habit of blogging weekly. I’ve missed it!
To see what we’ve been up to in more detail, do make sure to follow us on Facebook – our address is http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Greenhouse-Literary-Agency/359292813053.
The overwhelming feeling I have this Spring, as we slide into Summer, is one of positivity and energy. In honour of that, all the pics on this post are of things that make me feel outstandingly excited and positive. See below to find out more about them!
Let’s start with Bologna, which was great and we had lots of lovely comments about our upcoming titles and the books/authors we’ve already sold. Industry professionals around the world seem to be liking our taste and what we offer – very encouraging to have so much affirmation that we’re on the right track.
Given how buoyant things feel generally, it took me by surprise when I was asked to do an online interview a while ago that felt quite gloomy in tone. There were questions like, ‘Now editors don’t edit as much, how do you manage/deal with …. Etc etc.’ ‘Now publishers are paying smaller advances, how do you manage/deal with . . . .etc etc.’
It brought me up short because anyone who hangs around Twitter will know that many editors are hard at work editing at weekends, and the experience of our authors is overwhelmingly that today’s editors are incredibly precise, rigorous and dedicated as they go over and over texts in often multiple revisions. Plots are dismembered and reincarnated, editorial axes are taken (painfully) to dead wood, and no detail is spared in the exacting quest for the best possible manuscript.
I hate this negative stuff about editors – most do their utmost, often at considerable personal sacrifice of time and leisure, and we should give them a loud cheer for going beyond the call of duty (especially since not many are exactly earning a bomb of money). However arduous and scary a major revision can feel, all our authors have ultimately been delighted that they were asked/cajoled/persuaded into getting dug into their stories again and again. You will meet very few writers who won’t one day say, IT WAS ALL WORTH IT!
The thing about publishers paying ‘smaller advances’? Well, I’d only say subscribe to Publishers Marketplace and you’ll see no shortage of deals being done – again a great feeling of acquisition energy. I recently had two publishers in one week contacting me to say, ‘We have money to spend, what can you sell us?’ And several more emailing: ‘It’s Spring – bear us in mind for any great manuscripts.’ While we shouldn’t get too fixated on those 6-figure deals, they are popping up everywhere too! Realistic advances? I can live with that – and your first royalty statement (ie, what is unearned) won’t look so terrifying either.
A pervasive sense of gloom can also be detected at times in my submissions inbox – a small percentage of (usually scrappy) queries written by people who say things like, ‘I know the submission process is all a lottery. My chances of being picked for representation are about a million to one.’
I want to grab those people, give them a shake – and then put a kindly arm around their defeated shoulders. No – it’s NOT a lottery. It’s a weird, commercial kind of meritocracy, where writing skill, great ideas, WILL be spotted and ultimately win out. However, there’s one big proviso: the submission in question has to be something I personally feel I can sell, at a time when I can do it, and you the writer, full justice.
At my conferences this Spring I’ve talked about novelist Graham Greene’s theory of ‘emotional compost’. That each of us has our own personal history, experience, attitudes, perception, tastes – and that we READ from that place (authors WRITE from there too). This means that we all react to stories differently; even editors and agents have a surprising range of opinions about the same manuscript. So what I’m trying to say is – I can only take on the small number of manuscripts that hit that sweet spot for me personally - and I will inevitably make different decisions to other agents on some work.
The decisions we make have nothing to do with the writer’s worth as a human being (though I’m guessing it must sometimes feel like that as most rejections and setbacks in life do). They are commercial decisions and very carefully considered.
But not, for one moment, is the submission system a lottery! If you write something fabulous and unique, we – or another agent – will find it. And it’s worth reiterating that virtually all the authors Greenhouse represents came to us through a simple query.
The sun is shining. I was in London for the royal wedding and saw all the country come together in thousands of parties – in parks, pubs, and streets. I saw a gorgeous wedding dress on a beautiful girl – and some truly insane hats. I stood in a field in the deepest English countryside waving my cellphone in the air to catch a signal and a call from New York that would transform the life of a debut author thousands of miles away.
Positive? You bet I am.
Pix: Sarah’s gallery of positivity: 1) Royal Wedding pic sneaked into a hair stylist’s window in my English home town; what fun that day was! 2) A foal, one hour old, in my favourite English village; such a happy memory. 3) The most gigantic piece of carrot cake, consumed with ease in the sunshine beside a pebbly beach. All the sweeter since I haven’t allowed myself cakes in weeks. FANTASTIC!!
Comments (12)
What a great post for a Friday afternoon
I love the attitude you have, and it’s true - it can be hard to maintain a positive outlook in a field that is so saturated with people trying to ‘hit it big against all odds’. It’s truly awesome to read these words, just a nice refresher for those still tapping away at the keyboard.
Thanks for writing, Sarah!
PS The hats *were* insane - what was Beatrice thinking?!
PPS That cake looks amazing
Well said! People can find gloom and doom anywhere; it’s so good to take the time to think about the things that are sunny. Thanks for the reminder!
Cake AND a shoulder shake - perfect. Every published writer I know has only positive things to say about their editors - both of the experience of working with some one else and of the wonderful things that happened with their manuscripts. A little curtsey to those oft unsung heroes of literature from me too.
Thank you for sharing your optimism with us. So much of perception is attitude, and you have an inspiring one!
You have been busy!
I love the image of the waving cellphone in a field that is forever England. And the cake. And the birthing foal.
Why, indeed, do writers have to be so gloomy? I can’t understand why people write mealy-mouthed query letters. Would anyone start a job interview with “I know I’ve got a million-to-one chance of getting this job?” My “query theory” is: no personal boasting, no abasement. Just let the fantastic story you’ve written speak for itself.
So nice to read these optimistic thoughts! The gloom and doom mentality gets wearying. Whether we worry or look on the bright side, wonderful debut authors continue to be discovered, and great books continue to be published. Why not hope for and expect success?
Thank you for such an uplifting post, Sarah. I have been following the activities at Greenhouse for a long time,and I must say this is why! You always find a way to hit the right cord at just the right time for me, and many other writers too, I’m sure. Thank you for the reminder of all there is to be positive about-especially the fact that we are able to write at all!:)
BTW, my daughter and son and I had a tea party at 4am in honor of the Royal Wedding. Not an English meadow, but fabulous just the same.
Cheers!
Thank you so much for posting this. Optimism is a choice and I truly believe it’s almost invariably the best choice. Still, no matter how positive the attitude, listening to one Eeyore-type after another lamenting this, that and the other thing wrong with publishing, with the economy, with the world...it gets so exhausting! Thanks for spreading some good news. It’s a welcome change.
This beautiful post is just one of the many reasons I hope you’ll represent me once I get my manuscript polished enough to start querying.
Great attitude, and well deserved cake.
I was so glad to find a blog post from you here today.
I attended the WW SCBWI conference lecture you gave. Thanks for sharing so much of your knowledge and experience. One thing in particular that you said stuck with me: : “The best stories don’t just tell us about the characters; they tell us about OURSELVES.”
Thanks.
It’s true, it’s very easy to feel like the submission process is a lottery. After sending out your manuscript a certain number of times, the rejections can feel a bit personal. And the name slush pile… there’s a lottery minded term.
But you’re right. The best thing is just to keep on going and find someone who fits your writing style. Thanks for the pep talk.
I’m a first time reader here and I’m just blown away by your positivity. In an industry where so many are muttering under their breath about all the changes on the horizon, and looking at everything through not-so-rose-colored glasses, it’s so refreshing to see joyfulness and excitement! It truly it a meritocracy, as you put it, and there’s something incredibly thrilling about that. It’s not about who you know, or who’s prettiest, or who can flatter and bribe their way to the top. This industry celebrates TALENT, and that should breed hope, not despair.
Well said!
