How to Land a Literary Agent in 7 Days: You Ain't Got No Platform Honey!

How to Land a Literary Agent in 7 Days: You know your Query Letter sucks when...
You Ain't Got No Platform Honey!

"I wrote the rest of The Innocents Abroad in sixty days and I could have added a fortnight's labor with the pen and gotten along without the letters altogether. I was very young in those days, exceedingly young, marvelously young, younger than I am now, younger than I shall ever be again, by hundreds of years. I worked every night from eleven or twelve until broad daylight in the morning, and as I did 200,000 words in the sixty days, the average was more than 3,000 words a day- nothing for Sir Walter Scott, nothing for Louis Stevenson, nothing for plenty of other people, but quite handsome for me. In 1897, when we were living in Tedworth Square, London, and I was writing the book called Following the Equator, my average was 1,800 words a day; here in Florence (1904) my average seems to be 1,400 words per sitting of four or five hours."
Mark Twain

Random picks

  • “You are a New Yorker the first time you say, That used to be Munsey’s…” Finally getting around to Colson Whitehead’s The Colossus of New York.
  • Room: Canada's Oldest Literary Magazine By and About Women issue 33.4 is a themed issue on women and spirituality. Room's website offers samples of full-cover art, poetry from Michelle Barker, and fiction from Holley Rubinski. Pictured: "The Edge" cover art by Susan Point.
  • Even when you don
  • Enhancing something one possesses is a phenomenon that gets people fast paced lately. They desired to improve their possession into something more enhanced and attractive. On the list of primary things frequently tailored is a car and nowadays it is normally referred to as pimped cars. Pimp is a slang term for customizing something particularly a car.
  • A Sports Writer is Born

Recommended sites

Most recent titles

02
19 hours ago
03
20 hours ago
04
21 hours ago
05
23 hours ago

Fast fact about writing

Recently, the writer and neurologist Alice W. Flaherty has argued that literary creativity is a function of specific areas of the brain, and that writer's block may be the result of brain activity being disrupted in those areas.