Fourth revision
Dear Query Shark,
The words were written on a sign posted just outside Aura Jefferson’s hometown
of Langston, in rural Oklahoma, and she’s spent her entire life trying to
forget them:
“NIGGER DON’T LET THE SUN GO DOWN ON YOUR HEAD OUT HERE.”
Let's try to make this more immediate: Aura Jefferson's spent
her entire life trying to forget the words on the sign just outside her
hometown: “NIGGER DON’T LET THE SUN GO DOWN ON YOUR HEAD OUT HERE.”
Do you see the difference? If you start with the main
character it's a stronger sentence. Stronger sentences are better.
At the risk of boring everyone with repetition, I will remind you that when I see sentences like this in a query, I KNOW I will see them in a novel. This is the kind of self-editing you MUST be able to do. This sentence isn't wrong, but it's not strong. It's not the BEST sentence. I'm looking for the best, strongest work I can find. I need Doberman sentences, not sheepdog sentences.
For Aura – a strong, independent black woman – forgetting is a kind of survival
tactic. She left her little brother and her Grams back in Langston, moved to
the city (what city?) and never looked back. Now she’s a physical therapist who helps
patients recover from devastating injuries. But white folks in this corner of
the world (what corner of the world?) don’t always welcome the help (Aura has heard the “N-word” more times
than she cares to count). And a thin skin, no matter what the color, just
doesn’t cut it in her line of work. <----good sentence="">----good>
"Kind of" weakens the sentence. I call it girl-speak. If you watch the differences in speech patterns of men and women, you'll notice women qualify their statements MUCH more often than men do. A lot of "my opinion" "I think" and "kind of" phrases creep in. You'd be stunned how hard it is to coach women out of talking like that too. Don't let it creep into your writing unless you need it there to illustrate character. I'm thinking Aura is pretty resolute. No "kind of" about it.
Then her brother Carl, a former basketball star, is murdered in a drug deal
gone wrong. When she’s asked to testify in the trial of his killer, Aura meets
four strangers, each of whom begins to test the necessary boundaries she has
established between herself and the world.
You're losing momentum at "meets four strangers" because it's vague. Vague is Not Good. Remember, you do NOT need to cover everything in the query. You only need to entice me to read on. Do we need to know about the four strangers? Is it enough to know she's being tested?
Before taking that witness stand, Aura will need to forgive her little brother
for embracing the thug life that got him killed … and forgive herself for
abandoning him in Langston. First she’ll have to forget everything she knows
about mere survival, and remember what it’s like to really live – maybe even
love – again. And that will mean depending on someone other than herself.
At 99,000 words, AMERICAN PRAYER is a story about race, justice, faith and
forgiveness in America’s heartland. Told from alternating points of view, the
novel will appeal to fans of character-driven fiction such as Dan Chaon’s
“Await Your Reply” or Colum McCann’s “Let the Great World Spin”.
You might consider putting more in about the four alternating points of view. I assume one is Aura, one is Dean. Consider: The novel is told in four points of view: Aura; Dean the Choctaw-in-name-only defense investigator: POV 3 (short description); and, POV 4 (short description)
That can work if the descriptions are enticing, not just short bios.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
This is better in that it's more interesting. I must tell you however that seeing a novel that's 99k and has four POVs makes me very very skeptical. You've really chomped on a big challenge.
Coupled with the flabby sentences, this is still a pass. Calisthenics all around!
Tighten up, revise, resend. And don't forget to look at your novel and see how much tightening you can do there too.
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Third revision
Dear Query Shark,
Dean Goodnight learned to spell ambidextrous when those English-speaking teachers tied his left arm behind a chair. Southpaws weren’t allowed in the American school and neither was Dean’s first language: Choctaw. Abandoning his heritage, Dean embraced the law. Now he works for the Oklahoma City public defender’s office, trying to save convicted killers from the death penalty. Problem is, this new Choctaw defendant of his? Dean can’t find one damn redeemable thing about him.
I can see what you're trying to say here, but it's not on the page.
I'm put off by the discrepancy of tone between "learned to spell ambidextrous" with "tied his left arm behind his chair". Sure, I see what you're getting at but you're missing what would make this powerful. A first grade little boy has his arm tied behind the chair? I gotta tell ya, I think my reaction would be rage. A very deep burning rage that would never ever go away. I think I would hate teachers, and English-only teachers a lot.
( My grandmama was left-handed and despite the soft spoken gentlewoman that she was, she still sounded angry when telling us what her first grade teacher did to get her to learn to use her right hand. Mind you, this was 75 years later, and she was still angry.)
And I don't get the connection between abandoning his heritage and embracing the law.
Some of this may require more nuance than a query letter can accommodate. That might be the case here.
If you start here ---->Dean wants to believe that the laws make justice possible: for the good guys and the bad. But the corruption he encounters on a daily basis – police coercing confessions, district attorneys suppressing evidence, expert witnesses falsifying forensics – puts him on the losing side of an increasingly unfair fight.
we see the the conflict instantly.
The closer he gets to understanding this brutal murder,
(what brutal murder?) the more Dean reconnects with his own forgotten Choctaw upbringing.
During the investigation Dean becomes involved with four strangers, including the victim’s sister, Aura Jefferson. In order to save his client’s life, Dean will need to convince Aura that life in prison can represent a more fitting punishment than the death penalty.
Again, I don't see the connection between understanding the murder and reconnecting with his forgotten Choctow upbringing.
Focus on Dean. You're getting sidetracked with these other characters. What does Dean want? What's keeping him from getting it?
But he might have to break the law to do it. And that could spell … well, a lot of things. And none of them are good.
"a whole lot of things, none of them good" is too nebulous to be the stakes of a novel.
At 103,000 words, AMERICAN PRAYER will appeal to fans of suspenseful, character-driven fiction such as Richard Price’s “Lush Life” or Colum McCann’s “Let the Great World Spin”.
I've read LUSH LIFE and this doesn't sound like it at all. LUSH LIFE is set in NYC, specifically the Lower East Side, and is a very taut crime novel. We get no sense of setting from your query, no sense of the plot, and only a hint that Dean had a pretty awful upbringing.
It's time to punch harder in this query. Get down to the core events and show us why they matter and how they are connected. Your job here is to entice me to read the novel and you're not there yet.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
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Second revision
Dear QueryShark:
-->
Mitigation investigator Dean Goodnight is the only Choctaw
Indian at the Oklahoma County Public Defender’s office. His job is to find a
killer’s redeemable qualities, in the hopes of convincing a jury to spare them
the death penalty.
When you're introducing the reader to a book, it's best to
be as simple (and enticing!) as possible.
In the first paragraph you're telling us a lot of things about Dean
Goodnight:
mitigation investigator
only Choctaw Indian
public defender
It's not till you get to the second paragraph that you say
something that catches our interest.
Thus, that's what you want to lead with, and then fill in the other
details later (if at all).
Problem is, this new Choctaw defendant of his? Dean can’t find a thing worth
saving.
Consider this:
Dean Goodnight is supposed to find redeemable qualities that
will spare a convicted killer from the death penalty. Problem is, this new Choctaw
defendant of his? Dean can’t find a thing worth saving.
Delving into the killer’s past, Dean discovers unsettling similarities to his
own. And the closer he gets to understanding this brutal murder, the more Dean
understands about his complicated Choctaw heritage. During the investigation
Dean becomes increasingly involved with four strangers, including the victim’s
sister, Aura Jefferson. In order to save his client, Dean will need to convince
Aura that life in prison can represent a more fitting punishment than the death
penalty.
First, though, he’ll need to convince himself.
At 103,000 words, AMERICAN PRAYER combines elements of historical and literary
fiction to paint an intimate portrait of Oklahoma in the mid-1990s, when both
the state and the country are on the cusp of radical, often violent, change. It
will appeal to fans of suspenseful, character-driven fiction such as Richard
Price’s “Lush Life” or Colum McCann’s “Let the Great World Spin”.
Elements of historical fiction? I'm hard pressed to think of
what those are. Historical fiction
generally means fiction set during historical times. I'm not sure there are any elements specific to it that
wouldn't also apply to any other novel.
And calling this literary fiction isn't a good idea at all.
What I'm hoping you've got here is a crime novel. I hope that because 1) that's what I
like to read; 2) crime sells a lot better than literary fiction; and, 3) cause
this query letter doesn't indicate literary fiction at all.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
There's still no real sense of a compelling plot here. All you have is that Dean Goodnight has
to confront his past, and since he's a stranger to us, who cares.
You've gone from too much to not enough.
There's a template for getting plot on the page in the query. Find it. Use it.
Revise.
Resend.
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First revision
Dear Query Shark,
A killer always runs home. It’s instinct. But investigator Dean Goodnight knows
most of those homes are broken beyond fixing. Dean’s the only Choctaw Indian in
the Oklahoma County Public Defender’s office. So when his latest client’s crime
orphans a young Choctaw boy, when his girlfriend starts pushing for a family,
Dean follows his own gut: he runs.
Whoa! There's WAY too much going on here. You've got the
killer running, Dean knowing, kid being orphaned, girlfriend kvetching, and
Dean running.
You're trying to connect the dots in a splatter pattern here
and it's not pretty.
When Olympic divers are scored, the two highest and lowest scores are
tossed out, and the score is created from those remaining. When you dive into revisions here (oh,
aren't I clever with the metaphors tonight!) toss aside the things that don't
relate to the matters at hand.
Leaving the orphan with a C.P.S. volunteer named Becca Porter - caring for this
kid’s not in the job description - Dean throws himself into the new case,
looking for any evidence that might save his client’s life. To do so he’ll need
to convince the victim’s sister, Aura Jefferson, to move past the anger
haunting her since the murder.
At this point I don't know who's who or what's what. Who's important here? So far you've
named or mentioned seven people. That's classic character soup.
He has his work cut out for him. Aura’s a proud black woman, a physical
therapist who doesn’t take advice … she gives it. When Aura goes into a
patient’s home, the goal is to teach him how to adapt to some devastating
injury. So why is recovering from her own tragedy so difficult?
What? Now I'm lost. If this query came to me for
consideration, I'd stop reading right here.
Her new borderline-bigot patient sure isn’t helping. Before he was paralyzed in
a car crash, Cecil Porter dreamed of playing pro basketball, just like Aura’s
brother did. Maybe this is why she tolerates the old man and his brother: “Big”
Ben Porter, a charismatic huckster who’s got everyone in his pocket. Maybe even
the district attorney prosecuting Dean’s client.
As Dean chases down leads, as Aura wrestles with the effects of prejudice and
regret, as Ben tries to repair the damage Cecil’s accident has wrought on their
relationship, Ben’s wife Becca Porter (Dean’s volunteer) uncovers a link
between the orphan and her own traumatic upbringing.
Can these five strangers forget their differences, come together, and give this
orphaned Choctaw boy a better future? Maybe. But first, they’ll each have to
stop running from the past.
At 105,000 words, AMERICAN PRAYER is my first novel. It will appeal to fans of
suspenseful, character-driven fiction such as Richard Price’s “Lush Life” or
Colum McCann’s “Let the Great World Spin”.
Ok, here's the Wikepedia plot summary for LUSH LIFE:
On the way home from a
night of drinking, three men—cafe manager Eric Cash, bartender Ike Marcus, and
a friend of Marcus'—are accosted by two muggers. Marcus is shot and killed. NYPD
Detective Matty Clark winds up investigating the crime, and keeping an eye on
Ike's distraught father Billy, whose behavior becomes increasingly erratic.
Cash is initially arrested for the crime, but later released when the accounts
of other witnesses back up his own; his own behavior is affected as he has
difficulty coping with the memory of the incident and the stresses of the
police interrogation. Interwoven with the main plot are vignettes of the Lower
East Side and the waves of immigrants that have come through there and lived in
its tenements over the years.
There are a LOT of characters mentioned but we can keep them
all straight and we know who the main guy is. If you need to mention more than one or two characters in your
query, this is the way to do it.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
This is not a buttoned down query. This is a ragbag of
remnants.
Time to revise, restyle, and resend.
--------------------------------
Original query
Dear Query Shark,
It’s 1994 in Oklahoma City: the Waco siege is over, the OJ Simpson trial isn’t.
When a single line appears at the top of a query it signals a log line or a hook.
This is neither. After reading the entire query the only thing this line tells me is the novel is set between April 19, 1993 and October 3, 1995. (More on this later.)
This is a classic example of why "Kill your darlings" (which begs to be a Raymond Chandler title) is good advice. This opening line is a good sentence. It seems to glow with promise.
But, it doesn't work. It doesn't work because it doesn't illuminate the novel. Thus it must die.
A good hook is not just an enticing sentence; it's an enticing sentence that illuminates the novel.
A young Choctaw boy named Caleb has just been orphaned by the criminal justice system, both parents jailed on separate murder and drug charges. Investigator Dean Goodnight’s job at the Public Defender’s office is to save the life of Caleb’s father at all costs. But the more Dean understands about this particular killer’s crime, the less he understands about himself - and his own Choctaw heritage.
Have you come across the phrase "character soup?" This is getting close. Too many characters. Start with the main guy. Tell us what's at stake for him. When we see the choices he faces, it makes us care about him. Right now all you've got is set up.
Dean enlists four seemingly unrelated strangers into the investigation. There’s Aura Jefferson, the murder victim’s older sister and perhaps the angriest physical therapist in Payne County. Her borderline-bigot patient, Cecil Porter, who broke his spine in a car crash nearly fifty years ago. Cecil’s brother, “Big” Ben Porter, who’s not above bribing a few councilmen to bag the construction contract that will determine the city’s future. And Becca Porter, Ben’s wife, who discovers a link between the orphaned Choctaw boy Caleb and her own traumatic past.
And this is classic character soup. We still don't have an inkling of the plot. That's crucial in a query. You've told us who the characters are but not given us a reason to care what happens to them.
Together, these five people might just be able to offer Caleb a new kind of life. But they had better hurry. Because now it’s 1995. On April 19 a bomb is going to go off, and life will never be the same.
Again, this doesn't work. If the OKC bombing is the climax of the novel, you've got to get us interested in the people and events long before it happens. In fact, if it's the climax of the novel, it really has no place in the query.
More on the log line at the start of the novel: The OKC bombing occurred on 4/19/95 after Waco and before the OJ Simpson verdict, yes. But those two events, and in fact the OKC bombing itself, are peripheral to the plot and thus should not be in a query letter.
I can hear you saying somewhat perplexedly "It's not peripheral, it's the climax of the plot - the bombing changed everything." In a novel something always happens that changes everything. Whether it's the terrorist attacks on 9/11, the flood ravages of Superstorm Sandy, or the death of Old Yeller, something happens at the climax of a book to change the protagonist's world.
Unless the protagonist performed the world changing act (ie shot Old Yeller) the specific event is superfluous to the plot. Thus it isn't in the query.
In this case, the plot is what's at stake for the investigator if he doesn't help the kid. The plot doesn't depend on the OKC bombing; the world could change for a variety of reasons. It just happens to change this time because of the events of 4/19/95.
The problem with using Waco and OJ and the OKC bombing here is that you're cloaking your query in buzzword events, rather than showing me what the book is about. It's a crutch. And the interesting thing here is that it's a crutch you don't need. You actually have an interesting concept. You obviously can write. What you haven't done is tell me what the book is about. That's a deal breaker in a query.
At 105,000 words, AMERICAN PRAYER is my first novel. It might appeal to fans of suspenseful, character-driven fiction such as Don DeLillo’s “Libra” or Colum McCann’s “Let the Great World Spin”.
It might isn't compelling. It will is the phrase you want here.
LIBRA was published in 1988. No matter how wonderful, it's not a book you'll use as a comp because it's 25 years old. Comp titles should always be new titles. New means within the last two years at best, five at most.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
This is a great example of well-written query that doesn't work. A good query entices the reader to want more. Enticing means you tell us about the start of the book in a way that makes us want to read on.
This is all character set up, timeline and CNN headlines.
There are LOTS of queries that fall in to this category: well-written but ineffective.
Take a look at the queries that got to YES. (There's a section on the left side of this blog with links to them.) Watch how those queries enticed me to read more.
Revise.
Resend.