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Category Archives: Finding an Agent

A Chance to Get Your Debut Novel onto the Bookshelves?

15 Monday Apr 2019

Posted by ninevoices in Competitions to Enter, Finding an Agent, Maggie

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The Girl with the Pearl Earring, Tracy Chevalier

 

To celebrate the 120 years since Albert Curtis Brown founded his literary agency, and their authors past and present, Curtis Brown have just announced their inaugural Curtis Brown First Novel Prize. Tracy Chevalier, bestselling author of Girl with a Pearl Earring and Single Thread, will chair a judging panel formed of Curtis Brown Agents and the Curtis Brown Creative Team.

The prize is open to manuscripts, both finished and unfinished, across all genres of adult fiction. Entry is FREE, but must be online. Authors must be 18 or over and not represented by an agent.

Applications are open until midday on August 1st of this year, but the summer will slip past, so you might want to concentrate your mind now. There is even sufficient time to pen the 10,000-words required for entry from scratch.

A shortlist of six will be chosen for consideration by the judging panel.

The author of the winning novel will be offered representation by Curtis Brown, plus a prize of £3,000. The first runner-up will receive a place on a three-month novel-writing course and a mentoring session with one of their literary agent team. A further four shortlisted entrants will be offered a place on a six-week online course with Curtis Brown Creative and a mentoring session with one of their agent team.

To enter, send the opening of your novel, (up to 10,000-words, including any prologue), together with a single page synopsis (up to 400 words).

If you are not already aware of it, Curtis Brown produce an excellent newsletter, packed with advice and information. Currently it concentrates on how to perfect your submission, from format to the opening; from the synopsis to the title. Worth subscribing to, even if you don’t intend to enter this particular competition.

I suspect more than one member of ninevoices will consider this too good an offer to refuse.

Details and rules are available on http://www.curtisbrowncreative.co.uk/first-novel-prize and should be checked before entry. For example, they will not accept a manuscript which has already won a prize.

Since Curtis Brown are anxious to publicise this great opportunity, I don’t imagine they’ll mind me lifting the quote from their announcement:

‘Every book starts with a first line, every career with a first moment of inspiration.’

 

 

The Rejection Diaries

23 Sunday Sep 2018

Posted by ninevoices in Finding an Agent, Maggie, submissions

≈ 6 Comments

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Juliet Mushens, rejection

I haven’t penned one of these for a while because I’ve been concentrating on my novel. However, things could be about to change.

As a rubbish swimmer, and someone nervous about heights, I’ve decided I must finally leap off the high diving board and submit to my wish-list of literary agents.

I’ve typed The End on my final page. Proof-read every damn one of them. Deleted as many adverbs and adjectives as I can. And subjected my friends in ninevoices to countless readings of chapters that were giving me difficulty. I could nitpick for ever, but feel like someone with a much-loved blouse: I want to keep washing it, but might that make the colour fade?

 

So I think I’d better jump.  And hope the agents to whom I submit don’t fall about laughing at my presumption in thinking it can properly be called a final draft.

Watch this space…

 

“Ponder” photograph of diving board courtesy of Kat @ flickr

 

NIGHTMARE ON HARLEY STREET

11 Friday Aug 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Finding an Agent, Humour, Maggie

≈ 2 Comments

 

BIFFIELD:           Don’t let them get me!

THERAPIST:         You’re perfectly safe, Mr Biffield. Lie back on my couch and relax.

BIFFIELD:           But I’m NOT safe…

THERAPIST:         My receptionist will bring you some green tea.

BIFFIELD:            No! Keep her away from me. She’s sure to be one of them.

 

 

THERAPIST:         Okay. Just the two of us, then.

BIFFIELD:          Lock the door. Quickly!

THERAPIST:        That isn’t necessary. You’re clearly suffering from some    kind  of persecution complex. Let’s talk it through quietly.

BIFFIELD:          There’s no escaping them. Dark glasses don’t help. A beanie hat fools nobody.  Should I try a false beard?

THERAPIST:        WHO do you imagine is after you, Mr Biffield? The Russians? MI6 agents? Aliens?

BIFFIELD:          The bastards always look innocent. Bin men.   Double glazing  salesmen. Pizza delivery guys. Yummy Mummies in the Waitrose queue. It’s a massive conspiracy.

THERAPIST:      Why on earth would these people be after you, Mr Biffield?=

BIFFIELD:         Because…  Oh, God. I can’t take any more. Even my wife…

HERAPIST:        Your wife?

BIFFIELD:          My EX-WIFE. The evidence was on her computer. She plotted to entrap me. I never even suspected. NEVER!

THERAPIST:         You’re having a panic attack. Try deep breaths…

BIFFIELD:          Discovering she was like all the rest. (SOBS) That was what    finally broke me.

THERAPIST:         But who ARE these people?

BIFFIELD:          WRITERS, man! Aspiring bloody WRITERS! They HOUND me. Night and day.

THERAPIST:         Writers HOUND you…but why?  Unless… You don’t mean you’re…

BIFFIELD:           A literary agent? YES, I am. 

THERAPIST:         Wow. Now I understand.

BIFFIELD:           At the beginning of my career I enjoyed work. Loved                having  envelopes rammed through my letterbox at midnight, handwritten in purple ink and secured with knicker elastic. Book proposals thrust at my poor cleaning lady. But now…

THERAPIST:         I feel your pain Mr Biffield. The quest for another Harry Potter must be challenging.                           

BIFFIELD:             …these days switching on my computer unleashes a sunami of synopses that are total gibberish. Chapters heaving with adverbs and split infinities. Letters insisting that absolute drivel will sell millions of copies.

THERAPIST:         You must have suffered terribly. Fortunately, I believe I have the cure in my desk drawer.

BIFFIELD:          Happy pills? I’ve swallowed them like a kid with Smarties. Useless.

THERAPIST:         Far better than that. A two-million-word trilogy about a voluptuous female vampire who is desperately in love with her handsome psychiatrist. My mother swears it’s a masterpiece…

 

 

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