Today, I welcome fellow Indie Chick Prue Batten to my blog. This is her story from Indie Chicks: 25 Independent Women, 25 Personal Stories.
Mrs.
So-Got-It-Wrong Agent
by Prue Batten
After writing forever, I decided to finally
go down the independent road in 2008. At that time, it was called
self-publishing and the track I decided to take was POD. Part of my reason for
the move was that my books had been declared commercially viable by the UK
literary consultancy that assessed them, but in every instance they were
declined by the Big Six.
The only time I had any sort of meaningful
comment prior to POD publication was from a highly regarded English agent who said
she loved the novels and knew she would kick herself for declining but felt I
lived too far away to engage with. I know I reside in the southern hemisphere,
in a place called Australia, but this is a new world in which we exist. Amazingly there is a thing
called email, something else called Skype and even video-conferencing, so I was
rather gobsmacked at her antiquated approach. This, I felt, was the time to
take my destiny in my own hands!
You see, I was getting older and with age
comes a degree of intransigence and that was when I took up the POD offer…
basically in a fit of disgust at the ‘old ways’.
I did everything right: good covers, great
PR, super website and then a blog with which to engage with the reading public,
even radio and print media interviews… you name it, I did it. Book Two came out
and I continued to sell to a niche market online and in stores. At one point,
my first novel took the prime display position in bricks and mortar stores,
selling more than any other unknown first release for that chain.
Then, whilst working on A Thousand Glass
Flowers, I had the misguided idea that it would be nice to secure an agent who
could handle all this PR and marketing stuff and maybe help me push the barrow
further. With the success of the first two novels under my belt, with stats of
web and blog hits as well, I contacted the first Australian agent on my list.
Imagine my surprise when two days later, on
a Friday afternoon, she rang me to talk business.
Her first comment after a loud monologue on
her credentials was ‘Why in the hell did you POD your first two books?’ Ironic snicker followed this acid question.
‘Because I was tired of submitting the old
way and getting nowhere in a very long time.
‘But you’ve signed your own death warrant.’
‘Then why are you talking to me?’
‘I am intrigued that you managed to get the
web hits and the book-sales you have.’
Her tone was sarcasm incarnate. Something about good books and hard work was on
the tip of my tongue.
I was so flummoxed at this point that I
allowed her to ram-raid me and roast me. Heaven help me, I agreed to send her
mss of the first two novels (even though they had been published!) Perhaps I am a masochist. Who knows?
She read them and sent them back slashed to
pieces. These were fantasy novels about love, loss, grief and revenge, novels
that have secured 5 star reviews. She had deleted every conceivable piece of
emotion from the manuscripts so that they expressed nothing. If she read them
right through, I’d have been surprised as she asked elementary questions about
the plot resolution… questions that were answered in the denouement of each of
the novels. Her editing was unbelievable, her spelling appalling and she got my
name and address wrong for the return of the mss. Now remember… this is supposedly
one of the top agents in my country,
top obviously not equating with manners and sensibility.
When I rang her to say politely, thanks but
no thanks, she lambasted me and said, ‘You are a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Small-time.’
My reply was that if she had taken me on, what a good talking point she would have had
about her exciting new author. As it was, I continued, I was declining any
further involvement with her as my books were out there and selling.
‘You have committed professional suicide.’
***
In the last three years, this agent is the
only negative in my writing career and far from depressing me, it proved to be
the biggest shot of tenacity in the arm! Reverse psychology at its very best!
So guess what, Mrs. So Got it Wrong Agent,
I’m having a ball. The books are now in e-form and selling well. My third novel
consistently took a place in the Top 100 of Kindle novels in its category not
long after publication. I’ve sold across the globe, I have a niche following,
I’ve made the friends of a lifetime and I am master of my own destiny. There
are two further books to be published in The
Chronicles of Eirie and in a step sideways, my first ever historical
fiction will be published in February.
And at this point in my life, I don’t
regret not having an agent one bit!
***
Addendum: Whilst writing this piece for the anthology, I nursed my little
muse, the dog who would jump up behind me on my chair and sit whilst I typed.
He had terminal cancer and in the intervening time between publication of the
anthology and the posting of my piece on these blogs, he has gone quietly to
his rest… a brave, funny companion who was my inspiration. I dedicate the above
tale to him… to Milo.
Website: http://www.pruebatten.com
Facebook: Prue Batten
Twitter: Prue Batten
Books may be purchased at: Amazon.co.uk http://amzn.to/v2mosZ
And at Amazon.com http://amzn.to/rHBVoy
4 comments:
Love this story. I'm dying to know what became of that agent. I wonder if she's still partying like it's 1999?
Donna, thank you for hosting me on your blog. If the anthology inspires only one other woman it will be a job well done. The fact that it will prbably inspire a host is amazing. Add to that money for breast cancer research and it's perfect.
Anne. that agent is so far behind the eight ball, she probably thinks there's no such thing as Amazon!
I LOVE this story! And what beautiful book covers. Thanks for sharing your story with us, Prue.
What an inspiring story, told with grace and humor! Thanks for sharing, Prue.
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