Misadventures in (Mis)representation
Lauren Baratz-Logsted, the author of The Thin Pink Line and Crossing the Line, herein tells of her life as a romantic--that is, as a writer who refuses to settle for anything less than true love. Her essay, “If Jane Austen Were Writing Today,” is collected in Flirting with Pride and Prejudice: Fresh Perspectives on the Original Chick-Lit Masterpiece, edited by Jennifer Crusie and due out from Benbella Books on September 1. Lauren can be visited at http://www.laurenbaratzlogsted.com/.
Her third novel, A Little Change of Face, will be published in July '05.
Marriage I
Back in 1994, when I left my job of 11 years as an independent bookseller to take a chance on myself as a novelist, I wrote the kind of book many first-time novelists write: if not necessarily autobiographical, it was definitely what you would call a wish-fulfillment book. In the comic mystery Waiting for Dead Men’s Shoes, Mini Monroe, an underachieving bookstore worker, dreams of being in charge of her world. If only she were running the bookstore, life would be so much better. When her boss is murdered, she gets her wish, getting to run the store and solve the crime.
When I signed with Agent One, I thought I had it made, since “One” said my book was going to be big…really big.
Then the revision process started.
It was One's opinion that, the body not being discovered until page 52, the book was a little too cozy. So, over the next two weeks, I went through four rounds of the book, each time moving the body closer to the beginning. This was back in the day when all I had was a word processor, so it took 13 hours just to print out each version, never mind the time spent revising. After the fourth go-around, with the body now on page 1 – page 1! - One called to say the book looked great, now if only I’d…
I realized then that ours was not a union supremely blessed. So, despite the fact that One represented many best-selling authors, I found the best lawyer in the business to handle my affairs – her name is Dee Vorsay –and had her draw up the dissolution papers. (Which could also be called disillusion papers.) Here’s what she came up with:
Duration of union: three months.
Books together: one.
Manuscript drafts: four.
Submissions made: zero.
Books sold: zero.
Ultimate fate of Novel #1: a box in my basement.
Marriage II
I’d written another book, this time a bittersweet tale about an undereducated septuagenarian who learns her only child will predecease her. The two spend the next year on a physical and emotional odyssey where they see the world and get to truly know one another for the first time.
When I signed with Agent Two, I was asked if I’d mind that the book would inevitably be compared to Terms of Endearment. While the books have nothing in common except that they both feature a mother losing a daughter, I said, “No, I wouldn’t mind.” Terms of Endearment was an award-winner and a genuine cultural touchstone, both as novel and film. Mind? Of course I wouldn’t mind.
After we’d received a few incredibly glowing rejections from publishers – “this book is so sad and funny, but we don’t know how we’d market it” – Two called to say a major studio had faxed the office, looking for a Terms of Endearment type of property. Would I mind if it was sold first as a film rather than a book? I knew that Two’s agency had quite a bit of success with Hollywood. Would I mind? Don’t be ridiculous!
When you are still outside the Pearly Gates [or so they seem, perhaps, to the as-yet-unmarried—ahh, unpublished] you are hesitant to rock the matrimonial boat, lest you find yourself standing, curbside, with a packed bag in one hand and your manuscript in the other, waiting for that lonely cab-ride back to writerly isolation. So for the next few months, I sat on my hands, even though I was dying to know what was going on with the film deal. But finally, unable to contain my anxiety any longer, I called Two to get a status report.
That was when I was told it was actually Two’s partner who handled the Hollywood end of the business; that said partner had to be in the mood to talk to Hollywood; and that said partner simply hadn’t been in the mood lately...
Were these people nuts? Were they on drugs?
I may have never been an agent in real life, but I know this much: if Hollywood was looking for a particular type of property, and I had such a property in my office, I’d walk on hot coals to hand deliver it if need be.
Once again, I called in Dee Vorsay. The text of this round of disillusion papers read:
Duration of union: one year.
Books together: one.
Manuscript drafts: two.
Submissions made: a few.
Submissions made to Hollywood, even after Hollywood asked: zero.
Books sold: zero.
Ultimate fate of Novel #5 [Yes, Dear Reader: I’d actually written a few others since Agent 1, but if I get started on those we’ll be here all day]: a box in my basement.
Marriage III
Though Agent Three and I never had a formal agreement together, we worked closely on another book I’d written [Novel #7], this time an erotic thriller.
In November 2001, Harlequin launched an imprint called Red Dress Ink. I sensed that the editorial sensibility behind these books would be interested in yet another of my novels [#6] I had in my arsenal, The Thin Pink Line, a dark comedy set in London about a woman who fakes an entire pregnancy. I mentioned this to Three, pointing out, Hey, it’s always good to get in on the ground floor with a new publisher. After reading The Thin Pink Line, Three said it was very funny but that sort of thing had been “done too much already.”
[Right: that crowded comedies-about-fake-pregnancies genre…]When I asked if Three would submit it to just this one publisher, I was told no: Three claimed to know for a fact the editor of Red Dress Ink did not want books with a London setting. I found this so hard to believe that I asked Three for permission to send it myself. This suggestion was greeted scathingly, and dismissively. I went ahead with the submission, and subsequently sold The Thin Pink Line all on my own to Red Dress Ink—indeed, I was offered (and accepted) a two-book contract. They even decided to publish The Thin Pink Line as the imprint’s own first-ever hardcover and came to me with the offer of an additional three-book contract before my debut had even pubbed. Not surprisingly, Three was shocked—shocked!—to receive the divorce papers, which read:
Duration of union: five months.
Books together: one.
Manuscript drafts: three.
Submissions made: zero.
Books sold: none. [Two books were sold during this time, followed by three more… but I did it all myself!]
Ultimate fate of Novel #7 (it was #6 that I sold to RDI): See “MARRIAGE IV.”
Marriage IV
Having felt I’d negotiated the first contract to the best of my ability – I’d read 700 pages of publishing law while waiting for that first contract to arrive – the idea of a publisher wanting to nail down three more books before the first was even out seemed unusual enough that I decided it was time to go back to my dressmaker’s for another fitting. (For one thing, I had no idea what a reasonable advance should be.) So I wooed several agents--
[Memo to CBS:“How to Marry a Wage-Earning Novelist”—think we might be onto something??]
To Four’s credit, the advance finally wound up being negotiated upwards to double what I’d been offered. But were we a good match? Let’s put it this way: if my favorite Beatles song was “Can’t Buy Me Love,” Four’s was “Money”:
There’s a laundry list of ways in which we were incompatible, but space is short, so I’ll confine myself to a single illustrative story.[Money don’t get every thing, it’s true—But what it don’t get, I can’t use! I want money...]
Silence.
Duration of union: one year.
Books together: one.
Manuscript drafts: three.
Submissions made: one, but not the book we were working on. The book sub'd was Novel #5 and that was only submitted because I handpicked a place.
Books sold: zero.
Ultimate fate of Novel #7: about to be submitted, but obviously not by Agent Four.
Agent Five is the only one about whom it feels slightly uncomfortable for me to tell tales out of school. There was so much I liked, even loved, about Five. And yet…and yet…
Let’s cut to the chase here, because even I’m starting to have problems telling all these agents apart.
Anyone who has been paying attention to this saga so far must realize that, having already basically sold five books on my own, I was not about to let a little thing like this stop me, not when I believed passionately in the book, and certainly not when I felt, as I do still feel, that it was the most important piece of writing I’d ever done.
Duration: eighteen months (hey, I’m lasting longer with agents who don’t sell anything!).
Books together: two, sort of.
Manuscript drafts: four, sort of.
Submissions made: three of one book; none of the YA title.
Books sold: zero.
Ultimate fate of Novel # 7 (yes, that book again!): about to be submitted, but obviously not by Agent Five.
Ultimate fate of YA Novel: about to be submitted, but obviously not by Five.
Unlike some of Elizabeth Taylor’s husbands (at least the deceased ones), four of my five agents still have thriving careers. And I am sure they all have done and will continue to do wonderful things for other writers’ careers. But they were not, none of them, the right agent for me.
I’m sure there are those who believe Liz has been married so often because she’s faithless or suffers from lack of sticktoitiveness or is just too high-maintenance. Who knows? I think differently. We—Liz and I—are two of the world’s great Pollyannas. We work hard, we keep dreaming, and no matter what happens, we still believe in the possibility of true love. That our right, special someone is out there, somewhere, maybe just around the corner.
And I’ll go on believing—at least until Friday. Because I’m ready to send out my next novel. And so if I don’t find someone who impresses me enough by then, this time I’m going it alone.
Coda
Since this piece was written, Dear Reader, I’ve remarried! Six – as I call her fondly – and I exchanged vows on Monday, June 20. Six already has placed one of my books in the hands of a baker’s dozen of editors and we’ll be moving forward with two other projects shortly. The champagne still tastes wonderful, the sheets are still clean, and I’ve tossed D.V.’s business card away. As for what the future holds:
Blog Roll
"Writing is considered a profession, and I don't think it is a profession. I think that everyone who does not need to be a writer, who thinks he can do something else, ought to do something else. Writing is not a profession but a vocation of unhappiness. I don't think an artist can ever be happy."
PRACTICAL MARKETING [Courtesy Zornhau, 2005]
"They should put the 1st couple of pages up in subway adverts. Having read them several times, you'd feel compelled to try the book - if it was any good."
PLATE OF SHRIMP [Courtesy Alex Cox’s REPO MAN, circa 1984]
"A lot of people don't realize what's really going on. They view life as a bunch of unconnected incidences and things. They don't realize that there's this like lattice of coincidence that lays on top of everything. I'll give you an example, show you what I mean. Suppose you're thinking about a plate of shrimp. Suddenly somebody will say like "plate" or "shrimp" or "plate of shrimp" out of the blue, no explanation. No point in looking for one either. It's all part of a cosmic unconsciousness."
24 comments:
Good grief! I'm amazed any of these people are still alive. By Agent #3, I'd be hiring Serbian Mercenaries, not Lawyers.
I'd be hiring mercenaries too...and I'm an agent.
Not one of the six..or seven. But one who's screwed up of course on deals...cause we all have. And miss some chances, yes, we've all done that too.
But the truly galling one is the agent who turned down the web piece, without asking the client and THEN letting it slide. That's when I'd be suscribing to Soldier of Fortune.
And the weird thing is...agents don't make a dime until the client makes a dollar. If for nothing than our OWN self interest you'd think we'd be on top of this stuff.
MissSnark.blogspot.com
Heh. I think I may need to call on you nice people if I'm ever in another tight spot.
And, Miss Snark, you ought to get a kick out this, since as I said my essay is in no way inclusive of all the offenses. The same agent who turned down the webpiece, blah blah, also still gets a cut of the three later books in my contract since Four brokered it. When, earlier this year, some snafu resulted in me not getting paid for work that had been accepted months earlier, Agents Four and Five each sent a single message to my publisher. Nothing happened. Finally, I got involved myself and was paid so quickly my head spun. But you would think Four would have kept the pedal to the metal, given that Four would be getting - and did get - 15% of an amount that was a lot bigger than the webpiece price.
God's Teeth! Am I reading you right? Can't you get some of these legacy contracts declared void?
Can you now suggest a good procedure for picking and aquiring a suitable agent?
Close your eyes and stick a pin in Jeff Herman's guide? Honestly, no. I'm a fairly smart person, some think, and look what happened to me. I have every faith in the agent I have now - the fact she has moved a project out so quickly and to so many top people - speaks well of her intentions and connections. As I say, we shall see.
Hi Max. Hi Lauren.
Thank you so much for your instructive, forthright post. I think it’s egregious what you’ve experienced, Lauren, but thankfully you have the gift of self-possession and knew enough to get out of those unhappy marriages—or maybe you should think of them as “engagements” because engagements are designed to be broken, if necessary. Obviously, in your case, Lauren, you’ve been right to move on.
I, too, have gone through a few agents but when I think about it, many, many of my writer friends have “gone” through a few as well. It’s not unusual.
Of course, you’ll find many who don’t undergo this shedding process, but if you do, my cheap advice to anyone suffering through it is not to do the typical, writerly thing. Don’t take it all on yourself or decide it must be your fault entirely. It ain’t a crime to find a new agent if the one you have isn’t working.
Before he died, the co-author of my first book gave me some simple advice about agents. It was so simple I didn’t quite get it at first. But I listened to him because he knew about business. He founded Dunkin’ Donuts, and started several other multi-million dollar ventures. (He was appalled by the publishing industry but that’s getting off track--)
He said: FIND AN AGENT WHO CARES.
What does that mean? I think it means several things. It means finding someone who not only loves your work but cares about your work because a caring agent will try harder.
Selling books to publishers is insanely competitive. Agents are competing against how many other agents? (Maybe we should all do some math on how many agents are out there in the marketplace, selling how many books every month? to give us some perspective.)
If your agent cares, she’ll return your calls or respond to your emails within a couple of days. She’ll apologize if she doesn’t get back to you soon enough and will make up for it by being more diligent as you move forward—that’s caring. She’ll let you know, in detail, where she is submitting your work and she’ll follow up with the people she has submitted it to.
An agent who cares will work out problems when they come up, because life is gonna throw you some issues just to mess with your day.
Can you talk comfortably with your agent? Do your personalities click? Do you feel good after you’ve hung up the phone with your agent?
I think these things can’t be overstated. It’s much easier to care when there’s chemistry between you.
If you find yourself second guessing yourself or feeling weird or guilty about things your agent has said, and these feelings begin to overtake what you should be feeling, which is: good, supported, confident, then start looking for someone who cares.
But here’s the funny rub. Much of what I just wrote and what my dear co-author advised me to look for can’t be known or borne out until you enter the new relationship and see how it unfolds. All you can really know at the outset is whether your agent gets your work, in other words, loves it, appreciates it, etc. The caring part, you can only hope, will follow.
Jessica, your post is wonderful and wise.
Thanks to Lauren and Jessica. Lauren so nice to know I'm not alone LOL though even five months after firing my first, I'm still not ready to go hunting again.
Lauren, what a saga! Reading this only makes all of us (at a certain agency I need not name) all the more determined to take good care of you. You may not be with Allstate, but you're in good hands now! And with those five lousy exes in your past, it won't be hard to look good by comparison ;-)
Cece, feel free to email me about the project you have an agent for, if you'd like. If I can help, I most surely will.
Judson, how nice to meet you (and in what a peculiar way)! If you want to link my essay to the Knight Agency blog and later on use how wonderful you've all been to me as advertizing, I would not be averse. :) I figure the best revenge is being successful and, by my own definition of success, I've long passed that.
I don't want to cast too much cold water on "caring," but I found that an agent who cared too much was consuming and difficult. I'm really glad to be with my new agent, quick and efficient.
What a scary prospect! I've turned down three agents myself so far because my gut instinct told me something wasn't right. Best of luck with your new one!
Whoa. This was some umm ...enlightening reading. Being in the midst of the dark storm of finding an agent myself, this kind of makes me want to assume the fetal position and rock back and forth while staring at a wall.
Luckily, I'm too stubborn to do that.
I hope Six is the ticket for you! And you're absolutely correct: Success says it all, and we all know you've found it.
Thanks, Michelle, and good for you for turning down three marriage offers that didn't feel right. Best of luck - hold out for The Right One.
Thanks, Brenda, stay stubborn and keep your eyes/ears open. You'll make it through (and hopefully with a lot less grief than I had).
Am I the only one who wonders if it's possible that all these agents sucked and the writer was right in every case? By her own admission she did her homework and these were reputable folks. So everyone of them screwed her? It's just a little hard to buy.
An author friend of mine (I'll call her Sara) has had a lot of trouble with agents as well. The one Sara has right now is very high profile and has an excellent reputation -- but has never sent any of her books out.
Sara is by no means a newbie writer, either; she got said agent because she'd sold 5 novels and loads of short fiction. Since allying with this agent, Sara has so far sold 3 novels on her own that the agent sat on for ages. In two cases it was because the agent couldn't deal with a particular publisher due to a legal wrangle between pub. and one of the agent's other clients, but when that got cleared up, the agent didn't tell Sara he was clear to negotiate with them again, and as a consequence she didn't get the deal she might have on the second book.
Very frustrating. Agents don't seem to be nearly the godsend beginning writers suppose them to be.
Good luck with Agent #6!
Best,
Shalla
www.shalladeguzman.com
Egad, Lauren, what a horror story!
Thanks for sharing it.
Cindy
If you can tell a tale of woe so grippingly, you must be a terrific novelist. Good luck with your new marriage -- which, as an agent myself, I prefer to call a business partnership. Because that can be like a marriage -- but I like to remember we're in business together.
Brenda's comment -- "Luckily, I'm too stubborn to do that" -- is the best single predictor of future success any writer can have. She'll make it.
Thanks for sharing your story (and to Rob at emptybeach for pointing me your way). At a time when I am wondering whether I 'need' or want an agent right now-never mind whether they want me, this has been a good 'story' to read.
Thank you!
Lola
Thanks for sharing your story (and to Rob at emptybeach for pointing me your way). At a time when I am wondering whether I 'need' or want an agent right now-never mind whether they want me, this has been a good 'story' to read.
Thank you!
Lola
Ann Rittenberg, I've heard only good things about you as an agent. Thanks for your kind words.
Lola, best of luck with your journey. Stay alive, keep putting one foot in front of the other, and remember that the only person who can ever take you out of this game is you.
This saga is downright scary! Bless your heart. I can tell you that if you are with Deirdre Knight, you are in good hands--she seems 100% pro and on-the-ball. I am trying to work up the courage to email her (actually Nephele) my work . . . over a year ago, she requested the full of a manuscript, and I queried a couple of weeks ago (routinely) to see what was happening, and THEY NEVER GOT THE BOOK IN THE MAIL. They said I could re-send. I printed it to reread myself (and do a quick tweak) and then got cold feet. Have been praying over manuscript and using voodoo magic in hopes that the manuscript will be worthy. Their agency even has a contest for the best pitch line. A very cool place to be.
But I agree with that earlier consensus--put out "contracts" of your own on those other agents. That'll be "offers they can't refuse." **GRIN** (Irony indicators on. Comic exaggeration detector pegged. Do not take previous joke seriously. This disclaimer comes to you courtesy of the Avoid Visits From Homeland Security Agents Dept.)
Send it, Shalanna. They're nice people, and thanks so much for your kind words!
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