RangerWickett
Legend
I recently finished revising a novel I've been working on for a few years, and I think it's ready to go off to publishers. As this is my first serious attempt to publish a novel (surprisingly, the one I wrote in 9th grade didn't get accepted by anybody), I may intellectually understand the advice I've read on how to get a book published, but I know it will require a lot of trial and error.
Step one is tracking down agents. Thankfully the university where I work has tons of resources for writers, including Writer's Market, but I got some advice that it helps to find agents who have worked in material like the novel you've written. I've written a fantasy novel with a light-hearted style about characters who are more concerned about finding a job than saving the day, but it still has elements of adventure. I compare it more to stuff by Joss Whedon than by George R. R. Martin.
Thing is, I long ago got fed up with reading fantasy because I'd over-exposed myself to low-end, formulaic, shared-world stuff. In the past five years, about the only fantasy I've read has been decidedly non-'adventure.' About the closest I got to 'heroic' was Perdido Street Station, which is a great setting, but certainly not focused on any sort of question.
So I don't know what sorts of books I should look at when trying to track down an agent that would like my style. I'm looking for suggestions.
Step one is tracking down agents. Thankfully the university where I work has tons of resources for writers, including Writer's Market, but I got some advice that it helps to find agents who have worked in material like the novel you've written. I've written a fantasy novel with a light-hearted style about characters who are more concerned about finding a job than saving the day, but it still has elements of adventure. I compare it more to stuff by Joss Whedon than by George R. R. Martin.
Thing is, I long ago got fed up with reading fantasy because I'd over-exposed myself to low-end, formulaic, shared-world stuff. In the past five years, about the only fantasy I've read has been decidedly non-'adventure.' About the closest I got to 'heroic' was Perdido Street Station, which is a great setting, but certainly not focused on any sort of question.
So I don't know what sorts of books I should look at when trying to track down an agent that would like my style. I'm looking for suggestions.