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Stephen S. Power's avatar

If it's not too far from this newsletter's brief, I'd be interested in knowing what's changed for agents these last four years:

1. Did you get a deluge of covid novels you're still working through?

2. Are houses making fewer deals (as opposed to deals for fewer books, such as 2-book deals instead of 3)?

3. Are the metrics of what publishers are looking for, such as "followers" and "platform" changing?

4. What topics/genres are falling out of favor and what's taking their place? Me, I see women's historical fiction taking the place of all the WW2/Civil/Founders histories from the 90s; true? Are publishers still looking for what SMP called "twisty women's psychological thrillers"? What comes next?

5. What's the state of lunches with editors?

Thanks.

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Annette Laing's avatar

Glad you're feeling better, and well done on four years of Substackery. I self-published four books, and even without knowing that I self-published, or whether I was successful at it, people come to me in the most awkward and inappropriate settings and demand my advice. They rebuff my suggestion that they consult more knowledgeable sources, and if I try to be genuinely helpful, they resent my not confirming their fondest hopes about how publishing works. Kate, I also have a dear friend who's an agent, and I have the greatest sympathy with what you guys have to put up with (and I speak as someone who seems a bit troll-y at times, so sorry about that). This is a terrific resource, and I now know to sic these people on you! :)

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