How to find the right literary agent in the USA? Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Announcing our contest results! Tags of the week! April 22-28, 2019: Essay & MarketingHow do I find an agent?How much agent contact should I expect?Can a literary agent be hired?How to find an agent for a children's picture book? How do I write a relevant CV for submitting a manuscript to a literary agent?using a literary agentLiterary agent termsHow Do You Find a Literary Agent?Is it posssible to find a literary agent if I'm Egyptian but write in English?Would a full service PoD company include a literary agent?

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How to find the right literary agent in the USA?



Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Announcing our contest results!
Tags of the week! April 22-28, 2019: Essay & MarketingHow do I find an agent?How much agent contact should I expect?Can a literary agent be hired?How to find an agent for a children's picture book? How do I write a relevant CV for submitting a manuscript to a literary agent?using a literary agentLiterary agent termsHow Do You Find a Literary Agent?Is it posssible to find a literary agent if I'm Egyptian but write in English?Would a full service PoD company include a literary agent?










6















I want to publish an English language book in the USA as a foreigner. Someone told me that the USA is mainly interested in American subjects, so anything else is quite hard to sell. Besides the fact of what America does towards non-American books written by a foreigner, how can I, out of the buttload of literary agents, find a literary agent that is interested in my book without having to check out all the literary agents? I've tried selling internationally by contacting literary agents nationally, but they have either no knowledge or interest in selling internationally.



The book is psychological non-fiction. It's about two subjects, rulers and mental weakness.



When I search for other psychological non-fiction books to know which agents other authors haven chosen, I get 1193 results under 'non fiction psychological' on 'goodreads.com'.










share|improve this question









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  • I'm also interested in this question. I'm a British writer who bases some stories in the US. I recommend editing your question to explain what kind of book you seek to publish. It'll make a big difference.

    – J.G.
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. Thanks for starting off with a good question. Please consider choosing a user name so we can all remember who you are.

    – Cyn
    8 hours ago











  • I changed "mental non-fiction" to "psychological non-fiction." If that doesn't work for you, change it back.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • Keep in mind that most psychological nonfiction is going to be more directly about psychology. You might be better off searching for history or royalty (or government). It takes a while to narrow down a list of which agents to query. There are no shortcuts here. It should take you many hours of work over probably a few weeks.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • It's not just psychological or royalty. In fact, it's not about any royal figure. It's about rulers, so basically any ruling figure, rulers in general. It's about two subjects, mental weakness and rulers

    – user38951
    6 hours ago
















6















I want to publish an English language book in the USA as a foreigner. Someone told me that the USA is mainly interested in American subjects, so anything else is quite hard to sell. Besides the fact of what America does towards non-American books written by a foreigner, how can I, out of the buttload of literary agents, find a literary agent that is interested in my book without having to check out all the literary agents? I've tried selling internationally by contacting literary agents nationally, but they have either no knowledge or interest in selling internationally.



The book is psychological non-fiction. It's about two subjects, rulers and mental weakness.



When I search for other psychological non-fiction books to know which agents other authors haven chosen, I get 1193 results under 'non fiction psychological' on 'goodreads.com'.










share|improve this question









New contributor




user38951 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I'm also interested in this question. I'm a British writer who bases some stories in the US. I recommend editing your question to explain what kind of book you seek to publish. It'll make a big difference.

    – J.G.
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. Thanks for starting off with a good question. Please consider choosing a user name so we can all remember who you are.

    – Cyn
    8 hours ago











  • I changed "mental non-fiction" to "psychological non-fiction." If that doesn't work for you, change it back.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • Keep in mind that most psychological nonfiction is going to be more directly about psychology. You might be better off searching for history or royalty (or government). It takes a while to narrow down a list of which agents to query. There are no shortcuts here. It should take you many hours of work over probably a few weeks.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • It's not just psychological or royalty. In fact, it's not about any royal figure. It's about rulers, so basically any ruling figure, rulers in general. It's about two subjects, mental weakness and rulers

    – user38951
    6 hours ago














6












6








6


3






I want to publish an English language book in the USA as a foreigner. Someone told me that the USA is mainly interested in American subjects, so anything else is quite hard to sell. Besides the fact of what America does towards non-American books written by a foreigner, how can I, out of the buttload of literary agents, find a literary agent that is interested in my book without having to check out all the literary agents? I've tried selling internationally by contacting literary agents nationally, but they have either no knowledge or interest in selling internationally.



The book is psychological non-fiction. It's about two subjects, rulers and mental weakness.



When I search for other psychological non-fiction books to know which agents other authors haven chosen, I get 1193 results under 'non fiction psychological' on 'goodreads.com'.










share|improve this question









New contributor




user38951 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I want to publish an English language book in the USA as a foreigner. Someone told me that the USA is mainly interested in American subjects, so anything else is quite hard to sell. Besides the fact of what America does towards non-American books written by a foreigner, how can I, out of the buttload of literary agents, find a literary agent that is interested in my book without having to check out all the literary agents? I've tried selling internationally by contacting literary agents nationally, but they have either no knowledge or interest in selling internationally.



The book is psychological non-fiction. It's about two subjects, rulers and mental weakness.



When I search for other psychological non-fiction books to know which agents other authors haven chosen, I get 1193 results under 'non fiction psychological' on 'goodreads.com'.







non-fiction agent international






share|improve this question









New contributor




user38951 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




user38951 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago









Secespitus

5,46733376




5,46733376






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Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 9 hours ago









user38951user38951

312




312




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user38951 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





user38951 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






user38951 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • I'm also interested in this question. I'm a British writer who bases some stories in the US. I recommend editing your question to explain what kind of book you seek to publish. It'll make a big difference.

    – J.G.
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. Thanks for starting off with a good question. Please consider choosing a user name so we can all remember who you are.

    – Cyn
    8 hours ago











  • I changed "mental non-fiction" to "psychological non-fiction." If that doesn't work for you, change it back.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • Keep in mind that most psychological nonfiction is going to be more directly about psychology. You might be better off searching for history or royalty (or government). It takes a while to narrow down a list of which agents to query. There are no shortcuts here. It should take you many hours of work over probably a few weeks.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • It's not just psychological or royalty. In fact, it's not about any royal figure. It's about rulers, so basically any ruling figure, rulers in general. It's about two subjects, mental weakness and rulers

    – user38951
    6 hours ago


















  • I'm also interested in this question. I'm a British writer who bases some stories in the US. I recommend editing your question to explain what kind of book you seek to publish. It'll make a big difference.

    – J.G.
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. Thanks for starting off with a good question. Please consider choosing a user name so we can all remember who you are.

    – Cyn
    8 hours ago











  • I changed "mental non-fiction" to "psychological non-fiction." If that doesn't work for you, change it back.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • Keep in mind that most psychological nonfiction is going to be more directly about psychology. You might be better off searching for history or royalty (or government). It takes a while to narrow down a list of which agents to query. There are no shortcuts here. It should take you many hours of work over probably a few weeks.

    – Cyn
    7 hours ago











  • It's not just psychological or royalty. In fact, it's not about any royal figure. It's about rulers, so basically any ruling figure, rulers in general. It's about two subjects, mental weakness and rulers

    – user38951
    6 hours ago

















I'm also interested in this question. I'm a British writer who bases some stories in the US. I recommend editing your question to explain what kind of book you seek to publish. It'll make a big difference.

– J.G.
8 hours ago





I'm also interested in this question. I'm a British writer who bases some stories in the US. I recommend editing your question to explain what kind of book you seek to publish. It'll make a big difference.

– J.G.
8 hours ago




1




1





Welcome to Writing.SE. Thanks for starting off with a good question. Please consider choosing a user name so we can all remember who you are.

– Cyn
8 hours ago





Welcome to Writing.SE. Thanks for starting off with a good question. Please consider choosing a user name so we can all remember who you are.

– Cyn
8 hours ago













I changed "mental non-fiction" to "psychological non-fiction." If that doesn't work for you, change it back.

– Cyn
7 hours ago





I changed "mental non-fiction" to "psychological non-fiction." If that doesn't work for you, change it back.

– Cyn
7 hours ago













Keep in mind that most psychological nonfiction is going to be more directly about psychology. You might be better off searching for history or royalty (or government). It takes a while to narrow down a list of which agents to query. There are no shortcuts here. It should take you many hours of work over probably a few weeks.

– Cyn
7 hours ago





Keep in mind that most psychological nonfiction is going to be more directly about psychology. You might be better off searching for history or royalty (or government). It takes a while to narrow down a list of which agents to query. There are no shortcuts here. It should take you many hours of work over probably a few weeks.

– Cyn
7 hours ago













It's not just psychological or royalty. In fact, it's not about any royal figure. It's about rulers, so basically any ruling figure, rulers in general. It's about two subjects, mental weakness and rulers

– user38951
6 hours ago






It's not just psychological or royalty. In fact, it's not about any royal figure. It's about rulers, so basically any ruling figure, rulers in general. It's about two subjects, mental weakness and rulers

– user38951
6 hours ago











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















4














I highly recommend http://agentquery.com. It's free, searchable by category and oriented towards North American agents. I haven't personally had any luck yet securing an agent through them, but the listings all seem to be legitimate, and comparable to the ones you can find through other valid sources.



I do recommend, however, taking the time to click through to the agency websites, and not just cold emailing on the basis of what is on the site.



In terms of winnowing down the number of agents, the only filtering you want to do is to make sure they are definitely looking for the kind of work you produce. Getting an agent is a numbers game, and the more options you have, the better. Your first step should be to send out query letters --not manuscripts or full proposals --and you'll want to send out A LOT of them. In my experience, a response rate of 1 proposal request to every 15 queries is doing great.






share|improve this answer

























  • When searching for psychology non-fiction I get 184 results. Although it's less than the total of 950, it's still a buttload

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    That's a feature, not a bug (i.e. a good thing). Getting an agent is a numbers game. Query all 184 and you'll have a better chance of getting through to at least a few.

    – Chris Sunami
    7 hours ago











  • I did check out the first 8 results, of which 5 I could find information about subjects. As I suspected, all of them give a broad range of subjects, what they want a non fiction book to be about is something that can be applied on any subject you write about

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    Again, this is a good thing. If there's one and only one agent, and she represents exactly what your book is about, but she doesn't like your work --or doesn't respond, or has enough projects, or is out on vacation, or is retiring --you're out of luck. You're better off with fifty potential agents who are open to the general ballpark of what you're offering.

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What kind of advice are you looking for? "Go to 5th Avenue and duck down the second alley. Knock three times and then go wait at the park. The first person who approaches you after that will be the right agent."

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago


















1














Answer: Another way to think about your question is:



How do I get the right literary agent to find me?



For non-fiction, the following details are routinely requested by US agents. Not every time, but these things are requested (for NF) regularly:



  1. A full proposal of the work (it sounds as though you have this covered)

  2. A robust media platform (this is to prove that you have reach, 'followers,' and can sell books)

  3. A track record (i.e have authored pieces in journals, anthologies, or so on. This idea plays into 'platform.' It means you have begun creating a potential market.)

In other words, you might find the perfect agent. But if you are not the perfect client, (if they don't see an easy or at least profitable sale in your work), then there is a new issue for you to deal with. And, some agents refuse re-queries.



It might be worthwhile to put some time toward the things they like to see in a non-fiction query.






share|improve this answer























  • That's good advice. One problem, I don't have a robust media platform or a track record, because this is my first book. I don't want to sell on Amazon ebooks. Maybe you didn't read my comment, but isn't the story what matters and if you have a well written story you can make a great proposal and I said that agencies were interested in me, but couldn't do international publishing. No worries, I do put quite some time in my work.

    – user38951
    5 hours ago











  • @user38951 I think that's the point--it isn't as cut and dried as any of us hope. Think about it from the agent perspective, it is a different game entirely. What will sell? That's all. But you can research how to play the game from their viewpoint, and this might be helpful to do. Arguing that you don't need a platform will ensure to them that you are not someone they want to work with. having a platform makes their job easier=a good thing. Sorry. p.s. I missed that agencies are interested--This is Great! Best luck.

    – DPT
    4 hours ago



















0














It's not easy, but the core answer is: You need to learn the market.



Being from outside the U.S., or not having an existing platform, might be issues, but they shouldn't be dealbreakers -- lots of U.S. agents work with foreign clients, and a good book on a good topic can sell beautifully.



But: you need to know what else is out there. What other books on similar topics look like; what readers will be expecting from a book like yours; whether anyone else has already covered your precise topic, or something extremely similar. Without those, your book will have a really hard time being a good book for the current U.S. market. You're not going to get all those things right by sheer good luck -- you're going to get them right by knowing those other books, and adjusting your own text and approach accordingly.



That's why Googling "non fiction psychological" is not enough on its own. I suggest you look for books on related topics to yours, specifically. Read some of them; read reviews of others; learn which are considered major works.



Gradually, you'll figure out which existing books yours is most comparable to. And then you can check and see what agency they've gone through.



This might seem like a lot of work -- but it needs to be done, to place your book in a very big market. You'll find that even if right now somebody gave you the name of the most perfect agent ever, the first thing that perfect agent will want is a proposal -- detailing precisely which other existing books your work is comparable to, and how yours is different from what's already out there. So this isn't double work you're doing; it's some of the most important work in querying.



Best of luck!






share|improve this answer























  • Thanks for the advice. Although I understand what you say and it is important to mention similar works for almost anyone, if that would be the case for me, I wouldn't have to write this book. I don't say this to make me look good, but only to inform you. I don't say this to discuss your answer and I don't expect you to comment back

    – user38951
    3 hours ago











  • "similar" is not the same as "comparable." You want to find comparable books, so you can find out what agents represented those books. If nobody is publishing anything that can even be compared to your book -- not identical, but similar in certain regards -- then you're probably going to have a hard time finding an agent...

    – Standback
    2 hours ago












  • How do I know which books to refer to and which not? How do I know that the books which are comparable have a good name to represent? Besides, how can I make sure that one book is more comparable than another by reading the summary, since I'm not gonna read every book that might be comparable.

    – user38951
    46 mins ago











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














I highly recommend http://agentquery.com. It's free, searchable by category and oriented towards North American agents. I haven't personally had any luck yet securing an agent through them, but the listings all seem to be legitimate, and comparable to the ones you can find through other valid sources.



I do recommend, however, taking the time to click through to the agency websites, and not just cold emailing on the basis of what is on the site.



In terms of winnowing down the number of agents, the only filtering you want to do is to make sure they are definitely looking for the kind of work you produce. Getting an agent is a numbers game, and the more options you have, the better. Your first step should be to send out query letters --not manuscripts or full proposals --and you'll want to send out A LOT of them. In my experience, a response rate of 1 proposal request to every 15 queries is doing great.






share|improve this answer

























  • When searching for psychology non-fiction I get 184 results. Although it's less than the total of 950, it's still a buttload

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    That's a feature, not a bug (i.e. a good thing). Getting an agent is a numbers game. Query all 184 and you'll have a better chance of getting through to at least a few.

    – Chris Sunami
    7 hours ago











  • I did check out the first 8 results, of which 5 I could find information about subjects. As I suspected, all of them give a broad range of subjects, what they want a non fiction book to be about is something that can be applied on any subject you write about

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    Again, this is a good thing. If there's one and only one agent, and she represents exactly what your book is about, but she doesn't like your work --or doesn't respond, or has enough projects, or is out on vacation, or is retiring --you're out of luck. You're better off with fifty potential agents who are open to the general ballpark of what you're offering.

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What kind of advice are you looking for? "Go to 5th Avenue and duck down the second alley. Knock three times and then go wait at the park. The first person who approaches you after that will be the right agent."

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago















4














I highly recommend http://agentquery.com. It's free, searchable by category and oriented towards North American agents. I haven't personally had any luck yet securing an agent through them, but the listings all seem to be legitimate, and comparable to the ones you can find through other valid sources.



I do recommend, however, taking the time to click through to the agency websites, and not just cold emailing on the basis of what is on the site.



In terms of winnowing down the number of agents, the only filtering you want to do is to make sure they are definitely looking for the kind of work you produce. Getting an agent is a numbers game, and the more options you have, the better. Your first step should be to send out query letters --not manuscripts or full proposals --and you'll want to send out A LOT of them. In my experience, a response rate of 1 proposal request to every 15 queries is doing great.






share|improve this answer

























  • When searching for psychology non-fiction I get 184 results. Although it's less than the total of 950, it's still a buttload

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    That's a feature, not a bug (i.e. a good thing). Getting an agent is a numbers game. Query all 184 and you'll have a better chance of getting through to at least a few.

    – Chris Sunami
    7 hours ago











  • I did check out the first 8 results, of which 5 I could find information about subjects. As I suspected, all of them give a broad range of subjects, what they want a non fiction book to be about is something that can be applied on any subject you write about

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    Again, this is a good thing. If there's one and only one agent, and she represents exactly what your book is about, but she doesn't like your work --or doesn't respond, or has enough projects, or is out on vacation, or is retiring --you're out of luck. You're better off with fifty potential agents who are open to the general ballpark of what you're offering.

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What kind of advice are you looking for? "Go to 5th Avenue and duck down the second alley. Knock three times and then go wait at the park. The first person who approaches you after that will be the right agent."

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago













4












4








4







I highly recommend http://agentquery.com. It's free, searchable by category and oriented towards North American agents. I haven't personally had any luck yet securing an agent through them, but the listings all seem to be legitimate, and comparable to the ones you can find through other valid sources.



I do recommend, however, taking the time to click through to the agency websites, and not just cold emailing on the basis of what is on the site.



In terms of winnowing down the number of agents, the only filtering you want to do is to make sure they are definitely looking for the kind of work you produce. Getting an agent is a numbers game, and the more options you have, the better. Your first step should be to send out query letters --not manuscripts or full proposals --and you'll want to send out A LOT of them. In my experience, a response rate of 1 proposal request to every 15 queries is doing great.






share|improve this answer















I highly recommend http://agentquery.com. It's free, searchable by category and oriented towards North American agents. I haven't personally had any luck yet securing an agent through them, but the listings all seem to be legitimate, and comparable to the ones you can find through other valid sources.



I do recommend, however, taking the time to click through to the agency websites, and not just cold emailing on the basis of what is on the site.



In terms of winnowing down the number of agents, the only filtering you want to do is to make sure they are definitely looking for the kind of work you produce. Getting an agent is a numbers game, and the more options you have, the better. Your first step should be to send out query letters --not manuscripts or full proposals --and you'll want to send out A LOT of them. In my experience, a response rate of 1 proposal request to every 15 queries is doing great.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 7 hours ago

























answered 7 hours ago









Chris SunamiChris Sunami

33.2k341121




33.2k341121












  • When searching for psychology non-fiction I get 184 results. Although it's less than the total of 950, it's still a buttload

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    That's a feature, not a bug (i.e. a good thing). Getting an agent is a numbers game. Query all 184 and you'll have a better chance of getting through to at least a few.

    – Chris Sunami
    7 hours ago











  • I did check out the first 8 results, of which 5 I could find information about subjects. As I suspected, all of them give a broad range of subjects, what they want a non fiction book to be about is something that can be applied on any subject you write about

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    Again, this is a good thing. If there's one and only one agent, and she represents exactly what your book is about, but she doesn't like your work --or doesn't respond, or has enough projects, or is out on vacation, or is retiring --you're out of luck. You're better off with fifty potential agents who are open to the general ballpark of what you're offering.

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What kind of advice are you looking for? "Go to 5th Avenue and duck down the second alley. Knock three times and then go wait at the park. The first person who approaches you after that will be the right agent."

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago

















  • When searching for psychology non-fiction I get 184 results. Although it's less than the total of 950, it's still a buttload

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    That's a feature, not a bug (i.e. a good thing). Getting an agent is a numbers game. Query all 184 and you'll have a better chance of getting through to at least a few.

    – Chris Sunami
    7 hours ago











  • I did check out the first 8 results, of which 5 I could find information about subjects. As I suspected, all of them give a broad range of subjects, what they want a non fiction book to be about is something that can be applied on any subject you write about

    – user38951
    7 hours ago







  • 1





    Again, this is a good thing. If there's one and only one agent, and she represents exactly what your book is about, but she doesn't like your work --or doesn't respond, or has enough projects, or is out on vacation, or is retiring --you're out of luck. You're better off with fifty potential agents who are open to the general ballpark of what you're offering.

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    What kind of advice are you looking for? "Go to 5th Avenue and duck down the second alley. Knock three times and then go wait at the park. The first person who approaches you after that will be the right agent."

    – Chris Sunami
    6 hours ago
















When searching for psychology non-fiction I get 184 results. Although it's less than the total of 950, it's still a buttload

– user38951
7 hours ago






When searching for psychology non-fiction I get 184 results. Although it's less than the total of 950, it's still a buttload

– user38951
7 hours ago





1




1





That's a feature, not a bug (i.e. a good thing). Getting an agent is a numbers game. Query all 184 and you'll have a better chance of getting through to at least a few.

– Chris Sunami
7 hours ago





That's a feature, not a bug (i.e. a good thing). Getting an agent is a numbers game. Query all 184 and you'll have a better chance of getting through to at least a few.

– Chris Sunami
7 hours ago













I did check out the first 8 results, of which 5 I could find information about subjects. As I suspected, all of them give a broad range of subjects, what they want a non fiction book to be about is something that can be applied on any subject you write about

– user38951
7 hours ago






I did check out the first 8 results, of which 5 I could find information about subjects. As I suspected, all of them give a broad range of subjects, what they want a non fiction book to be about is something that can be applied on any subject you write about

– user38951
7 hours ago





1




1





Again, this is a good thing. If there's one and only one agent, and she represents exactly what your book is about, but she doesn't like your work --or doesn't respond, or has enough projects, or is out on vacation, or is retiring --you're out of luck. You're better off with fifty potential agents who are open to the general ballpark of what you're offering.

– Chris Sunami
6 hours ago





Again, this is a good thing. If there's one and only one agent, and she represents exactly what your book is about, but she doesn't like your work --or doesn't respond, or has enough projects, or is out on vacation, or is retiring --you're out of luck. You're better off with fifty potential agents who are open to the general ballpark of what you're offering.

– Chris Sunami
6 hours ago




1




1





What kind of advice are you looking for? "Go to 5th Avenue and duck down the second alley. Knock three times and then go wait at the park. The first person who approaches you after that will be the right agent."

– Chris Sunami
6 hours ago





What kind of advice are you looking for? "Go to 5th Avenue and duck down the second alley. Knock three times and then go wait at the park. The first person who approaches you after that will be the right agent."

– Chris Sunami
6 hours ago











1














Answer: Another way to think about your question is:



How do I get the right literary agent to find me?



For non-fiction, the following details are routinely requested by US agents. Not every time, but these things are requested (for NF) regularly:



  1. A full proposal of the work (it sounds as though you have this covered)

  2. A robust media platform (this is to prove that you have reach, 'followers,' and can sell books)

  3. A track record (i.e have authored pieces in journals, anthologies, or so on. This idea plays into 'platform.' It means you have begun creating a potential market.)

In other words, you might find the perfect agent. But if you are not the perfect client, (if they don't see an easy or at least profitable sale in your work), then there is a new issue for you to deal with. And, some agents refuse re-queries.



It might be worthwhile to put some time toward the things they like to see in a non-fiction query.






share|improve this answer























  • That's good advice. One problem, I don't have a robust media platform or a track record, because this is my first book. I don't want to sell on Amazon ebooks. Maybe you didn't read my comment, but isn't the story what matters and if you have a well written story you can make a great proposal and I said that agencies were interested in me, but couldn't do international publishing. No worries, I do put quite some time in my work.

    – user38951
    5 hours ago











  • @user38951 I think that's the point--it isn't as cut and dried as any of us hope. Think about it from the agent perspective, it is a different game entirely. What will sell? That's all. But you can research how to play the game from their viewpoint, and this might be helpful to do. Arguing that you don't need a platform will ensure to them that you are not someone they want to work with. having a platform makes their job easier=a good thing. Sorry. p.s. I missed that agencies are interested--This is Great! Best luck.

    – DPT
    4 hours ago
















1














Answer: Another way to think about your question is:



How do I get the right literary agent to find me?



For non-fiction, the following details are routinely requested by US agents. Not every time, but these things are requested (for NF) regularly:



  1. A full proposal of the work (it sounds as though you have this covered)

  2. A robust media platform (this is to prove that you have reach, 'followers,' and can sell books)

  3. A track record (i.e have authored pieces in journals, anthologies, or so on. This idea plays into 'platform.' It means you have begun creating a potential market.)

In other words, you might find the perfect agent. But if you are not the perfect client, (if they don't see an easy or at least profitable sale in your work), then there is a new issue for you to deal with. And, some agents refuse re-queries.



It might be worthwhile to put some time toward the things they like to see in a non-fiction query.






share|improve this answer























  • That's good advice. One problem, I don't have a robust media platform or a track record, because this is my first book. I don't want to sell on Amazon ebooks. Maybe you didn't read my comment, but isn't the story what matters and if you have a well written story you can make a great proposal and I said that agencies were interested in me, but couldn't do international publishing. No worries, I do put quite some time in my work.

    – user38951
    5 hours ago











  • @user38951 I think that's the point--it isn't as cut and dried as any of us hope. Think about it from the agent perspective, it is a different game entirely. What will sell? That's all. But you can research how to play the game from their viewpoint, and this might be helpful to do. Arguing that you don't need a platform will ensure to them that you are not someone they want to work with. having a platform makes their job easier=a good thing. Sorry. p.s. I missed that agencies are interested--This is Great! Best luck.

    – DPT
    4 hours ago














1












1








1







Answer: Another way to think about your question is:



How do I get the right literary agent to find me?



For non-fiction, the following details are routinely requested by US agents. Not every time, but these things are requested (for NF) regularly:



  1. A full proposal of the work (it sounds as though you have this covered)

  2. A robust media platform (this is to prove that you have reach, 'followers,' and can sell books)

  3. A track record (i.e have authored pieces in journals, anthologies, or so on. This idea plays into 'platform.' It means you have begun creating a potential market.)

In other words, you might find the perfect agent. But if you are not the perfect client, (if they don't see an easy or at least profitable sale in your work), then there is a new issue for you to deal with. And, some agents refuse re-queries.



It might be worthwhile to put some time toward the things they like to see in a non-fiction query.






share|improve this answer













Answer: Another way to think about your question is:



How do I get the right literary agent to find me?



For non-fiction, the following details are routinely requested by US agents. Not every time, but these things are requested (for NF) regularly:



  1. A full proposal of the work (it sounds as though you have this covered)

  2. A robust media platform (this is to prove that you have reach, 'followers,' and can sell books)

  3. A track record (i.e have authored pieces in journals, anthologies, or so on. This idea plays into 'platform.' It means you have begun creating a potential market.)

In other words, you might find the perfect agent. But if you are not the perfect client, (if they don't see an easy or at least profitable sale in your work), then there is a new issue for you to deal with. And, some agents refuse re-queries.



It might be worthwhile to put some time toward the things they like to see in a non-fiction query.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 5 hours ago









DPTDPT

15.8k23287




15.8k23287












  • That's good advice. One problem, I don't have a robust media platform or a track record, because this is my first book. I don't want to sell on Amazon ebooks. Maybe you didn't read my comment, but isn't the story what matters and if you have a well written story you can make a great proposal and I said that agencies were interested in me, but couldn't do international publishing. No worries, I do put quite some time in my work.

    – user38951
    5 hours ago











  • @user38951 I think that's the point--it isn't as cut and dried as any of us hope. Think about it from the agent perspective, it is a different game entirely. What will sell? That's all. But you can research how to play the game from their viewpoint, and this might be helpful to do. Arguing that you don't need a platform will ensure to them that you are not someone they want to work with. having a platform makes their job easier=a good thing. Sorry. p.s. I missed that agencies are interested--This is Great! Best luck.

    – DPT
    4 hours ago


















  • That's good advice. One problem, I don't have a robust media platform or a track record, because this is my first book. I don't want to sell on Amazon ebooks. Maybe you didn't read my comment, but isn't the story what matters and if you have a well written story you can make a great proposal and I said that agencies were interested in me, but couldn't do international publishing. No worries, I do put quite some time in my work.

    – user38951
    5 hours ago











  • @user38951 I think that's the point--it isn't as cut and dried as any of us hope. Think about it from the agent perspective, it is a different game entirely. What will sell? That's all. But you can research how to play the game from their viewpoint, and this might be helpful to do. Arguing that you don't need a platform will ensure to them that you are not someone they want to work with. having a platform makes their job easier=a good thing. Sorry. p.s. I missed that agencies are interested--This is Great! Best luck.

    – DPT
    4 hours ago

















That's good advice. One problem, I don't have a robust media platform or a track record, because this is my first book. I don't want to sell on Amazon ebooks. Maybe you didn't read my comment, but isn't the story what matters and if you have a well written story you can make a great proposal and I said that agencies were interested in me, but couldn't do international publishing. No worries, I do put quite some time in my work.

– user38951
5 hours ago





That's good advice. One problem, I don't have a robust media platform or a track record, because this is my first book. I don't want to sell on Amazon ebooks. Maybe you didn't read my comment, but isn't the story what matters and if you have a well written story you can make a great proposal and I said that agencies were interested in me, but couldn't do international publishing. No worries, I do put quite some time in my work.

– user38951
5 hours ago













@user38951 I think that's the point--it isn't as cut and dried as any of us hope. Think about it from the agent perspective, it is a different game entirely. What will sell? That's all. But you can research how to play the game from their viewpoint, and this might be helpful to do. Arguing that you don't need a platform will ensure to them that you are not someone they want to work with. having a platform makes their job easier=a good thing. Sorry. p.s. I missed that agencies are interested--This is Great! Best luck.

– DPT
4 hours ago






@user38951 I think that's the point--it isn't as cut and dried as any of us hope. Think about it from the agent perspective, it is a different game entirely. What will sell? That's all. But you can research how to play the game from their viewpoint, and this might be helpful to do. Arguing that you don't need a platform will ensure to them that you are not someone they want to work with. having a platform makes their job easier=a good thing. Sorry. p.s. I missed that agencies are interested--This is Great! Best luck.

– DPT
4 hours ago












0














It's not easy, but the core answer is: You need to learn the market.



Being from outside the U.S., or not having an existing platform, might be issues, but they shouldn't be dealbreakers -- lots of U.S. agents work with foreign clients, and a good book on a good topic can sell beautifully.



But: you need to know what else is out there. What other books on similar topics look like; what readers will be expecting from a book like yours; whether anyone else has already covered your precise topic, or something extremely similar. Without those, your book will have a really hard time being a good book for the current U.S. market. You're not going to get all those things right by sheer good luck -- you're going to get them right by knowing those other books, and adjusting your own text and approach accordingly.



That's why Googling "non fiction psychological" is not enough on its own. I suggest you look for books on related topics to yours, specifically. Read some of them; read reviews of others; learn which are considered major works.



Gradually, you'll figure out which existing books yours is most comparable to. And then you can check and see what agency they've gone through.



This might seem like a lot of work -- but it needs to be done, to place your book in a very big market. You'll find that even if right now somebody gave you the name of the most perfect agent ever, the first thing that perfect agent will want is a proposal -- detailing precisely which other existing books your work is comparable to, and how yours is different from what's already out there. So this isn't double work you're doing; it's some of the most important work in querying.



Best of luck!






share|improve this answer























  • Thanks for the advice. Although I understand what you say and it is important to mention similar works for almost anyone, if that would be the case for me, I wouldn't have to write this book. I don't say this to make me look good, but only to inform you. I don't say this to discuss your answer and I don't expect you to comment back

    – user38951
    3 hours ago











  • "similar" is not the same as "comparable." You want to find comparable books, so you can find out what agents represented those books. If nobody is publishing anything that can even be compared to your book -- not identical, but similar in certain regards -- then you're probably going to have a hard time finding an agent...

    – Standback
    2 hours ago












  • How do I know which books to refer to and which not? How do I know that the books which are comparable have a good name to represent? Besides, how can I make sure that one book is more comparable than another by reading the summary, since I'm not gonna read every book that might be comparable.

    – user38951
    46 mins ago















0














It's not easy, but the core answer is: You need to learn the market.



Being from outside the U.S., or not having an existing platform, might be issues, but they shouldn't be dealbreakers -- lots of U.S. agents work with foreign clients, and a good book on a good topic can sell beautifully.



But: you need to know what else is out there. What other books on similar topics look like; what readers will be expecting from a book like yours; whether anyone else has already covered your precise topic, or something extremely similar. Without those, your book will have a really hard time being a good book for the current U.S. market. You're not going to get all those things right by sheer good luck -- you're going to get them right by knowing those other books, and adjusting your own text and approach accordingly.



That's why Googling "non fiction psychological" is not enough on its own. I suggest you look for books on related topics to yours, specifically. Read some of them; read reviews of others; learn which are considered major works.



Gradually, you'll figure out which existing books yours is most comparable to. And then you can check and see what agency they've gone through.



This might seem like a lot of work -- but it needs to be done, to place your book in a very big market. You'll find that even if right now somebody gave you the name of the most perfect agent ever, the first thing that perfect agent will want is a proposal -- detailing precisely which other existing books your work is comparable to, and how yours is different from what's already out there. So this isn't double work you're doing; it's some of the most important work in querying.



Best of luck!






share|improve this answer























  • Thanks for the advice. Although I understand what you say and it is important to mention similar works for almost anyone, if that would be the case for me, I wouldn't have to write this book. I don't say this to make me look good, but only to inform you. I don't say this to discuss your answer and I don't expect you to comment back

    – user38951
    3 hours ago











  • "similar" is not the same as "comparable." You want to find comparable books, so you can find out what agents represented those books. If nobody is publishing anything that can even be compared to your book -- not identical, but similar in certain regards -- then you're probably going to have a hard time finding an agent...

    – Standback
    2 hours ago












  • How do I know which books to refer to and which not? How do I know that the books which are comparable have a good name to represent? Besides, how can I make sure that one book is more comparable than another by reading the summary, since I'm not gonna read every book that might be comparable.

    – user38951
    46 mins ago













0












0








0







It's not easy, but the core answer is: You need to learn the market.



Being from outside the U.S., or not having an existing platform, might be issues, but they shouldn't be dealbreakers -- lots of U.S. agents work with foreign clients, and a good book on a good topic can sell beautifully.



But: you need to know what else is out there. What other books on similar topics look like; what readers will be expecting from a book like yours; whether anyone else has already covered your precise topic, or something extremely similar. Without those, your book will have a really hard time being a good book for the current U.S. market. You're not going to get all those things right by sheer good luck -- you're going to get them right by knowing those other books, and adjusting your own text and approach accordingly.



That's why Googling "non fiction psychological" is not enough on its own. I suggest you look for books on related topics to yours, specifically. Read some of them; read reviews of others; learn which are considered major works.



Gradually, you'll figure out which existing books yours is most comparable to. And then you can check and see what agency they've gone through.



This might seem like a lot of work -- but it needs to be done, to place your book in a very big market. You'll find that even if right now somebody gave you the name of the most perfect agent ever, the first thing that perfect agent will want is a proposal -- detailing precisely which other existing books your work is comparable to, and how yours is different from what's already out there. So this isn't double work you're doing; it's some of the most important work in querying.



Best of luck!






share|improve this answer













It's not easy, but the core answer is: You need to learn the market.



Being from outside the U.S., or not having an existing platform, might be issues, but they shouldn't be dealbreakers -- lots of U.S. agents work with foreign clients, and a good book on a good topic can sell beautifully.



But: you need to know what else is out there. What other books on similar topics look like; what readers will be expecting from a book like yours; whether anyone else has already covered your precise topic, or something extremely similar. Without those, your book will have a really hard time being a good book for the current U.S. market. You're not going to get all those things right by sheer good luck -- you're going to get them right by knowing those other books, and adjusting your own text and approach accordingly.



That's why Googling "non fiction psychological" is not enough on its own. I suggest you look for books on related topics to yours, specifically. Read some of them; read reviews of others; learn which are considered major works.



Gradually, you'll figure out which existing books yours is most comparable to. And then you can check and see what agency they've gone through.



This might seem like a lot of work -- but it needs to be done, to place your book in a very big market. You'll find that even if right now somebody gave you the name of the most perfect agent ever, the first thing that perfect agent will want is a proposal -- detailing precisely which other existing books your work is comparable to, and how yours is different from what's already out there. So this isn't double work you're doing; it's some of the most important work in querying.



Best of luck!







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 4 hours ago









StandbackStandback

24k640121




24k640121












  • Thanks for the advice. Although I understand what you say and it is important to mention similar works for almost anyone, if that would be the case for me, I wouldn't have to write this book. I don't say this to make me look good, but only to inform you. I don't say this to discuss your answer and I don't expect you to comment back

    – user38951
    3 hours ago











  • "similar" is not the same as "comparable." You want to find comparable books, so you can find out what agents represented those books. If nobody is publishing anything that can even be compared to your book -- not identical, but similar in certain regards -- then you're probably going to have a hard time finding an agent...

    – Standback
    2 hours ago












  • How do I know which books to refer to and which not? How do I know that the books which are comparable have a good name to represent? Besides, how can I make sure that one book is more comparable than another by reading the summary, since I'm not gonna read every book that might be comparable.

    – user38951
    46 mins ago

















  • Thanks for the advice. Although I understand what you say and it is important to mention similar works for almost anyone, if that would be the case for me, I wouldn't have to write this book. I don't say this to make me look good, but only to inform you. I don't say this to discuss your answer and I don't expect you to comment back

    – user38951
    3 hours ago











  • "similar" is not the same as "comparable." You want to find comparable books, so you can find out what agents represented those books. If nobody is publishing anything that can even be compared to your book -- not identical, but similar in certain regards -- then you're probably going to have a hard time finding an agent...

    – Standback
    2 hours ago












  • How do I know which books to refer to and which not? How do I know that the books which are comparable have a good name to represent? Besides, how can I make sure that one book is more comparable than another by reading the summary, since I'm not gonna read every book that might be comparable.

    – user38951
    46 mins ago
















Thanks for the advice. Although I understand what you say and it is important to mention similar works for almost anyone, if that would be the case for me, I wouldn't have to write this book. I don't say this to make me look good, but only to inform you. I don't say this to discuss your answer and I don't expect you to comment back

– user38951
3 hours ago





Thanks for the advice. Although I understand what you say and it is important to mention similar works for almost anyone, if that would be the case for me, I wouldn't have to write this book. I don't say this to make me look good, but only to inform you. I don't say this to discuss your answer and I don't expect you to comment back

– user38951
3 hours ago













"similar" is not the same as "comparable." You want to find comparable books, so you can find out what agents represented those books. If nobody is publishing anything that can even be compared to your book -- not identical, but similar in certain regards -- then you're probably going to have a hard time finding an agent...

– Standback
2 hours ago






"similar" is not the same as "comparable." You want to find comparable books, so you can find out what agents represented those books. If nobody is publishing anything that can even be compared to your book -- not identical, but similar in certain regards -- then you're probably going to have a hard time finding an agent...

– Standback
2 hours ago














How do I know which books to refer to and which not? How do I know that the books which are comparable have a good name to represent? Besides, how can I make sure that one book is more comparable than another by reading the summary, since I'm not gonna read every book that might be comparable.

– user38951
46 mins ago





How do I know which books to refer to and which not? How do I know that the books which are comparable have a good name to represent? Besides, how can I make sure that one book is more comparable than another by reading the summary, since I'm not gonna read every book that might be comparable.

– user38951
46 mins ago










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