I’m off at WorldCon: home of the Hugo Awards, which is being held in Finland this year! So, here’s a flashback post from last year, when I was in this same #pitchwars stage…
What To Expect After You Query
It really is just like dating…
1- Anticipation
You start by joining the Facebook groups, the twitter chats, and incessantly checking your email. Just knowing, they’re going to start #PWTeaser your novel now. Meanwhile, you’re trying to engage with the other writers in your genre and cheer them on (while not-so-secretly hoping yours is better).
2- Rationalization
With my superpower of being able to rationalize anything (the perfect skill for a great henchman, or a decent writer!), I start making lists:
TOP 5 REASONS YOU HAVEN’T GOTTEN A REQUEST YET:
- Your chapter was so good, they don’t think they can help
- They see where you need work, but do better at the other type of editing (line edits vs big picture)
- It’s too close to what they’re writing, they feel it’s a conflict of interest
- They like your genre, they just like a different type of it better (action, adventure, quests, etc.)
- They read it on the 1st day, along w/the huge crush of submissions and have it blended with a different one. You’ll get the request when they reread
REALISTIC 5 REASONS YOU HAVEN’T GOTTEN A REQUEST:
- It’s great, but the market is saturated and they don’t think it’ll sell
- Your query or chapter misled them and they don’t know it’s going somewhere AWESOME!
- They wanted more (diversity, action, poetic descriptions).
- It’s well done but just doesn’t POP.
- It uses too many tropes without subverting them.
3 – Bargaining
You start to think, maybe if I engage just right, I can entice the mentor to pick me!
(I may have started a #PWQueryTeaser tag for those things that didn’t fit in my query, but might entice someone to give it a try.)
You think, if I skip dinner and write for 3 hours, the writing karma will be paid back.
If I don’t check my email for 4 hours, I’ll be rewarded with a request.
4 – Distraction
You try to get back to work. Depending on what stage you’re in, you try different things.
Writer Style Distractions
- Write on your other WIP.(1)
- Start outlining your sequel.
- Participate in word sprints.
- Research Agents for that picture book you’ve been sitting on…
- Edit your synopsis and full, one more time. Checking for passive verbs, formatting, and typos.
- Find a Critique Partner on the FB groups and start helping each other. (CHECK!)
Non-Writing Distractions
- Pokémon walks.(2)
- Clean your house, catch up on that neglected laundry.
- Cook some tasty meals.(3)
- Read all your webcomics.
- DO ALL THE SOCIAL MEDIA.
- Visit your friends.
- Remember what the gym looks like.
- Catch up on your reading! (4)
5 – Acceptance
The choice is entirely out of your hands at this point.
Be honest with yourself. Look inside yourself.
- Did you polish it, making it agent ready?
- Are there any plot points that make it weak?
- Did you fail to market it appropriately?
- Is it too much like whatever else is out there, with nothing to differentiate it
- Did you bandwagon on Dystopia or Steampunk, without really doing anything new, without bringing the love to it?
- Can you fix the pacing?
- Is it clearly a first novel: great for the learning experience, but not so much for the sharing?

Which stage are you in? What’s your coping technique?
1 – Work In Progress
2 – Hey! It’s walking, it totally counts as healthy, self-care!
3 – Because if you get in, ain’t nobody got time for that.
4- If one must read to write well, it’s really just helping yourself grow as a writer! Clearly.
EXCELLENT post!! Thank you!
Best of luck at the Hugos!
Xox
LikeLiked by 1 person