Hi everyone. I’m A. L. Jackson, author of Pulled and Take
This Regret, and I’m excited to share with you all today my tips on avoiding
the slush pile. As an author and the co-owner of a small publishing house, I
know submitting a manuscript can be one of the most nerve-racking steps we ever
take as authors. We sit in front of our computers biting our nails, refreshing
our email hour after hour, waiting to hear something back.
All the while, our submissions are sitting on someone’s desk
waiting to be reviewed.
So how do you keep your manuscript from hitting the slush
pile once someone does look it?
First, be sure you follow the publisher or agent’s
submission guidelines to a tee. If you miss something or ignore instructions,
your manuscript will most likely be rejected before the editor or agent even
reads the first line. Be sure that you
don’t come across as someone who doesn’t know how to follow instructions or
someone who just doesn’t care about them. Both are red flags.
Second and most important in my opinion is ensuring your
book immediately hooks the reader. The writing should be strong and raise
questions that make the reader want to continue on to get those answers. Don’t
start with backstory on your main character or over-describe the setting. Get
right into the conflict and then weave those other details in later. Be sure the
first few pages are both clear and interesting.
The reader should be intrigued, but not confused, and most definitely
should not be bored.
Be sure the portion you’re submitting has been carefully
proofed and is formatted correctly (again check for submission guidelines to
find out if a specific format is requested). Taking these small steps show
you’re serious about your submission and are committed to your writing. If an
editor is spending more time noticing typos or wonky formatting, it will distract
from your writing.
Take the time to ensure your submission stands out from the
masses. These three points above can mean the difference between opening an
email with a rejection letter or one asking to see your full manuscript.
Christian Davison has a plan for his life. He is determined to become an attorney and to one daytake his place as partner in his father’s law firm. Nothing will stand in his way, not even Elizabeth Ayers and their unborn child.
After Christian cuts her from his life, Elizabeth spends the next five years struggling to provide for her daughter and willing to sacrifice anything to give her child a safe, comfortable life.
For five years, Christian has regretted the day he walked away from his family and will do anything to win them back just as Elizabeth will do anything to protect her daughter from the certain heartache she believes Christian will bring upon them.
When Christian wrestles his way into their lives, Elizabeth is faced with asking herself if it is possible to forgive someone when they’ve committed the unforgiveable and if it is possible to find a love after it has been buried in years of hate. Or are there some wounds that go so deep they can never heal?
They say everyone deserves a second chance.
Excerpt:
Two hours later, Christian sat at his desk studying for
his politics midterm, all the while listening intently for the sound of
footsteps outside his door he felt certain he would hear. He trained his
attention on the heavy textbook in front of him, trying to ignore the growing
anxiety he felt each time he picked up his cell phone to check if he’d missed
any messages.
None came.
It was well after midnight when he crawled into bed,
convinced she just needed some time to realize he was right. He had to be right.
He wouldn’t allow himself to think otherwise, so every time that wave of guilt
came, he pushed it aside.
He envisioned her awake, just as he was, tossing
uncomfortably in her small bed that rested in the far corner of her studio
apartment and slowly coming to terms with what she needed to do.
But when he dragged his unrested body from his bed the
next morning, his phone was still devoid of messages.
He had been cruel—he knew it. He could only hope he
hadn’t pushed her too far, but that she would somehow understand he was just
trying to protect their future.
Christian ate a bowl of cold cereal and then forced
himself into the steam of his shower, desperate to find anything to chase away
his fatigue. He found his head in a cloud, both from lack of sleep and from the
scenarios running through his mind, ones including a life without Elizabeth .
What if she never came back?
Could he really give her up?
As he rubbed the soapy washcloth over his body, he tried
to picture an existence without her. A life void of the perfect pitch of her
voice, the way it rang out when she laughed. A life in which he didn’t touch
the softness of her skin or have the right to pull her body against his. A life
without a child crying out from the next room as he tried unsuccessfully to
study for the bar.
Groaning, he shook his head and forced it all away,
telling himself it would not come to that.
He was certain when he saw her in class today, she would
take her normal seat beside him in the lecture hall, lean in, and whisper in
his ear that he was right.
But when her seat remained vacant, his unease grew,
gnawing at his stomach. The moment the professor dismissed class, Christian
raced from the room and to the café where Elizabeth and he studied every
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. He frantically scanned the room, finding several
mildly familiar faces but not the one he wanted to see.
By the time he reached her apartment complex, he was
panting, both from exertion from the mile he had run and the constriction fear
had placed on his heart. He pounded on the door, giving her no time to answer
before he yelled, “Elizabeth !”
There was no sound from the other side, no rustling of curtains or faint
shuffling of feet. Even then, he wasn’t satisfied. Fumbling with his keys, he
found his spare and pushed it into the lock.
The door opened to the quietness, the small studio
comfortably cluttered as always. The only thing that seemed amiss was the
blankets from her normally neat bed were strewn on the floor. Christian crossed
the space to the only separate room. The door to the bathroom rested ajar, that
room as empty as the first.
Christian pressed his back against the wall and took a
deep breath. He wasn’t prepared for this. He’d never thought it would go this
far.
Reluctantly, he forced himself out of the apartment,
shutting and locking the door behind him before he left, hating the voice
inside his head that kept telling him this was for the best.
Review to be posted shortly
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Thanks for the great advice. =)
ReplyDeleteI remember getting one submission wrong - the publisher asked for a partial and I sent the whole manuscript...was that really a mistake? LOL!
ReplyDeleteHave Take This Regret on my Kindle and can't wait to read it! Loved Pulled!
Mandy
Wonderful advice! Thank you for sharing. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for great slushpile tips!
ReplyDeleteSubmitting to agents and publishers is the most stressful thing a writer can go through. Thanks for the wonderful advice!
ReplyDeleteI've read Take This Regret. It's heartbreaking and wonderful.
I agree with the other comments about this being such useful advice. Thanks so much for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Nicole, for the fabulous posting! Pulled was AMAZING. I haven't had the chance to read Take This Regret. Yet. But I plan too.
ReplyDeleteGreat post! :)
ReplyDeleteI just wanted to say thank you to Nicole for hosting me and thanks to all of you for commenting!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Jackson! Thanks for hosting, Nicole. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat advice for all authors out there, and stunning excerpt. Thanks, AL and Nicole.
ReplyDelete