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How To Non-fiction Submitting

Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir

All right, we’ve dealt with what we’re looking for in practical, prescriptive non-fiction.  Now onto the next biggest category of non-fiction that we get submissions for: narrative and memoir.

Let’s start with the good news — unlike with prescriptive, you don’t need those fancy letters after your name for narrative and memoir.  All you need is a good story.  And a platform.  For non-fiction, you always need a platform.  For Lauren Slayton, a key part of hooking editors for her Little Book of Thin was the fact that she has a Masters in Clinical Nutrition and has founded her own nutrition consulting business.  But for Jenny Feldon, all she needed for her Karma Gone Bad was her crazy, amazing experience being outsourced with her husband to India for a couple of years.

And a platform.  That she was a blogger and had a circle of blogger friends all ready and willing to blast out her publication went a long way to hooking an editor’s interest.

The other good news?  Like all other non-fiction, narrative and memoir non-fiction are pretty much sold on proposal.  That’s right, you do not necessarily need to have the entire book written before you sell it.  But it does mean that every single page and line and word in that proposal functions as a writing sample.  Even more so than practical non-fiction, your narrative or memoir proposal needs to serve as a microcosm for your book as a whole, so the proposal has to be a tight and exciting read, and capture the arc of the book.  Sometimes it is harder to capture that arc in a proposal than in a whole book.

Narrative and memoir can also be a little trickier than practical non-fiction, however, because at heart it’s not a book of information.  It’s a story.  Real life often doesn’t follow the rules of standard story-telling, but your narrative or memoir needs to be shaped as a story, with character growth and an arc — as in Karma Gone Bad, where in spite of her loneliness and the immediate, staggering culture shock, Jenny learned that her biggest problems were her expectations, and once she was able to accept India for what it was, she was able to enjoy and embrace it.  Narrative and memoir also needs a take-away, the perspective or lesson that your readers will carry with them after they turn the last page.  It’s something we look for when considering a proposal, and that editors ask us for when we’re pitching one.

That’s general stuff.  Now, what are we looking for with narrative/memoirs?  The biggest thing we’re looking for is something new — a perspective we haven’t seen before, an experience we haven’t heard about. Ben Mattlin’s Miracle Boy deals with his experience growing up with spinal dystrophy during the cusp of the disability rights movement.  His perspective was what set him apart. Instead of asking readers to pity him, he pretty much told readers how fantastic his life was, especially given his time in disability history.

We get a lot of submissions from people who have truly heart-breaking stories to tell — but, unfortunately, simply having a horrible experience isn’t enough to sell a book.  The memoir market is very crowded, and there are a lot of misery memoirs out there already (and misery memoirs aren’t really our thing).

What we’re also not looking for is general life stories. If your narrative starts at birth and ends at the present day without a hook, it’s not for us either. What’s a hook in narrative? Well, it’s something detailed that shapes the story. Tom Holland drafted a memoir about his rise in the personal trainer industry, and while it was his story, it was also an expose of gym culture. It aimed to do for gyms what Kitchen Confidential did for restaurants. His was the gimlet eye going behind the scenes and revealing all the dirty little secrets of such institutions as Crunch or Equinox or NY Sports Club. And it had personal growth along the way, how despite the sleaziness of the business, it was a saving grace for him.   While he ultimately did another book, Beat the Gym, instead, his narrative worked; it got us, and editors, interested.  The best part — readers could learn something, about him, about the industry, about what their trainer probably thought about them.

Another lesson to learn — the narrative can’t be too narrow. While one author’s experience going back to law school as a married woman in her 40s was fascinating and funny and well told, editors ultimately felt it was too specific and passed.

Just the other month at BEA, some of the editors we spoke to made a point of asking about ‘quirky’ memoirs, or experience-based narrative non-fiction.   If you’ve made a vow to eat as local as possible for a year and have spent the past twelve months turning your backyard into a fruit and vegetable garden, that’s a book (but it’s been written recently so if you’re doing that, give us a new element).  If you decided that you’re going to fulfill your lifelong dream of becoming an astronaut and want to chronicle your adventures in trying to make the cut, we’d love to see it.  If you have a memoir about your monster of an ex-husband and your struggle to reclaim your self-esteem after finally kicking him out, I’m very sorry, but that’s not really for us.

What it boils down to?  What we want out of narrative and memoir is what everyone wants out of a book: a good story.  One that we haven’t seen before, or with a new take on an old idea.  We want to see experiences that change people’s lives, how it changed them, their struggles, and how it made them better.

And, please, don’t forget about the platform.

 

CRB

Categories
Non-fiction Submitting

Dear Agent

Sadly there is also no room for zombies on the non-fiction side of our list. As Caitlen wrote, children’s fiction is new to LKG Agency, but non-fiction is our bread and butter, it’s right in our wheelhouse, it’s squarely on our radar. How many other clichés can I conjure up in this one short blog?

The question I’m addressing here is how to submit. Next blog post: What to submit. That’s going to be a longer one.

The mechanics: Your best bet is to craft a pitch letter that encapsulates your idea, why it is different from other books in the category, along with a synopsis of your platform and publicity opportunities. If we are interested, we will email back asking for a completed proposal, which you can attach to an email response.

LKG Headshot GreyWhat we don’t want to see: A mass pitch letter addressed to “Dear Sir or Madam” or “Dear Agent.” Make a little effort — pretend you crafted this just for us. What particularly drives us crazy? A mass pitch letter addressed to “Dear Sir or Madam” and simultaneously sent to 200 OTHER LITERARY AGENTS, which, yes, we can see because you were goofy enough to do cc instead of bcc. Then we have to scroll down through that endless list to even get to your pitch. Which we won’t do. We’ll just hit delete. If you want us to take the time to carefully read about your book, then take the time to carefully sell us on your book.

Next please read, reread, and re-reread your pitch letter. That letter serves as a writing sample, a calling card if you will, for you and your book. If it’s a mess, with poor spelling, terrible punctuation, wretched grammar, chances are your book will be too. And it won’t have a chance in hell of getting picked up even if the idea is strong. After all, as an agent, I gleefully worked on Paul Yeager’s Literally the Best Language Book Ever. (Wondering how this is relevant? Go to Amazon and read about it. Then buy it. It will do wonders for how people perceive you.) This is a peeve of mine. Caitlen is nicer.

Get excited about your pitch and your book. Be creative with your letter (not crazy creative but a little is good), to get us fired up about it. The more your pitch resonates, the more we are eager to read your proposal. And frankly we will be predisposed toward you and your idea. I have gotten some amazing pitch letters where the proposals did not live up to that promise, but generally that’s not the case. The great pitch letters have often meant great proposals, which meant Agency Agreements, which is the goal here.

Last but not least, but which should probably be first, do your research. It’s likely the most often repeated bit of advice, so I know I’m not coming across as too clever or creative here. But it’s true. Read the LKG submission guidelines. If it says no screenplays or no picture books, there’s no point in sending them. It ends up being just wasted effort on your part. We used to respond to all of those by saying they were not for us. Now we just delete and you are left wondering what happened to your pitch. Did it go into a black hole? The answer is yes, it did.

But that’s just basic research. Look at the books we actually did pick up and sell. Is yours comparable but with a key difference? Score! Mention that in your pitch. It shows your effort. “I see you represented Clinton Kelly’s Freakin’ Fabulous. I’ve written a style book all about introducing color to your wardrobe. And by the way, I have a blog with hundreds of thousands of followers.” That is a beautiful statement.

I think that covers it. Now stop reading my musings and pitch, but pitch wisely. Happy writing.

— Lauren Keller Galit