As you know, the WIP is really making progress - slow, but happening. Now I have some pages in my hand, I am wondering ...
As part of the Romantic Novelists' Association conference which takes place at the end of July attendees have the opportunity of a short consultation with an agent or editor - possibly more than one, to discuss a manuscript. Big question - should I have a go? The MS is a long way from anything like finished. A looong way. And I have no idea what I intend to do with it when that happens, except a nebulous idea about self publishing. But - now I am tempted. The 1-2-1 sessions at conference are acknowledged to be only the very first step on a book being taken on, so there would be no six figure contracts in the offing. (Don't we all wish!) but it would be interesting to find out from a professional whether they found it interesting, particularly as I am crossing genres - romantic suspense and dark academia. (And which is a big reason why I have assumed I would have to self publish).
Thing is, the selection process requires all the usual submission stuff, synopsis, elevator pitch, bio, the opening of the actual book ... I haven't done any of that for a long time.
Do I want to?
Would I be better off spending my time just quietly plowing on with the actual WIP? Currently dithering and scribbling 30 word pitches on bits of scrap paper.
I'm really not sure. But if I don't, will I get to the conference, hear the valuable feedback other people are getting and wish I had?
I used to do those author/editor/agent meetings at every opportunity before I had a book accepted. And it was as a result of one of those 1-2-1s at the RNA conference in Greenwich, many moons ago, that I got my contract with Choc-lit.
No expectations now, and it will be a while before there is actually a viable book.
But I am curious ...
No expectations now
