spotlight: aq connect
Tuesday, September 8th, 2009Agent Query Connect is a website billed as “the internet’s most interactive social networking community for the publishing industry”. I don’t know for a fact that it’s the MOST interactive blah blah…but it is very helpful indeed. And best of all, IT’S FREE.
My favorite groups:
AQ Connect – Query Critique Corner- when you put your query up here people from all over will swoop in to give you advice. Some of it is very helpful and some of it requires a thick skin. But if you didn’t have a thick skin you wouldn’t be putting your writing out for all to see…right? Take it with a grain of salt. Use what sounds right for you and matches what the helpful literary agents say they want in a query. Remember, some of the people commenting are just as novice as you, so don’t take everything to heart. (Oh, and paste your query into the body of your discussion. Many people don’t want to open attachments for obvious reasons.)
First Page Critique – Put your first page up and see how many people would like to keep reading.
First Chapter(s) Critique - Same as above, only you have slightly longer to hook a reader.
The five most popular groups:
AQ Connect – Query Critique Corner
First Page Critique
AQ Connect – Agent Updates
First Chapter(s) Critique
AQ Connect – New Member Shout-Out!
I spent quite a bit of time last week on AQ Connect polishing my query which was so covered in soot, it was really hard to know it was a query at all. In other words, I learned a whole heckuva lot about query writing. This is not to say that I’m an expert or that I can’t learn any more. I’ve lived long enough to know that you never know everything about even one subject. More on queries later this week…

1. School is in.
2. Yesterday I noticed three blooms on my flower. Normally it only has two, and when I see another about to bloom I know that one flower will fall off before it gets a chance to open. This is the first time there have been three blooms all at once actually attached to the plant. I was pondering the reason why this made me so happy. It has to be that it was unexpected and it involved a pretty lilac colored flower that has a perfect yellow circle in the middle.
7. The forget-me-nots have grown, but why aren’t they flowering?
too. There was definitely more action than in the Dessen novel (did I just compare YA fic with a western?) but it wasn’t up to McMurtry’s normal heart-pounding and gut-wrenching abilities. It wasn’t nearly as serious as the Lonesome Dove series but not as comedic as Sin Killer either. I get the feeling it was written for fun–as an easy-going western. That said, it was still superbly written with McMurtry’s trademark realistic almost lyrical back woodsy prose.

