The report on my book.
  At the risk of sounding like I am doing the equivalent of
  someone tripping over and then trying to pretend they always
  meant to do that, my first reaction is that the negative points
  they raise are the ones that had occurred to me also.
  Of course, being me I have already re-written the first
  chapter, and I hope that it addresses some of them, but I don’t
  want to appear that I am simply saying ‘oh well, I knew that’,
  far from it; I hope that I am trying to give lots of thought and
  consideration to their advice.
  The report itself is a game of two halves; the first section
  is by the editor, the second by the agent. I have included my
  comments/reactions also, for your own amusement!
  Of course, you haven’t read the synopsis and the first
  chapter, but hey, if you want to all you have to do is ask!
  AT NIGHT, ALL CATS ARE GREY
  Your short and long synopsises were both very clear, and covered
  all the plot developments which is excellent, but they did lead
  me to expect a different kind of book.  The
  agent has discussed this more fully below, but it’s worth really
  thinking about how you would define your work and whether the
  writing is working with that definition or against it.
  Just a minor point, your spelling, grammar and presentation were
  all excellent, but in your short synopsis, you have ‘Danko’s was
  involved’…  I suspect a typo rather than
  choosing to add a possessive when not needed.
  Can I just say at this point, and those of you know me will
  agree, the fact they only found one type ‘o’ and said my
  presentation was excellent otherwise, has pretty much made my
  day!
  Your writing is very evocative, and you use language well and
  descriptively.  Agents and publishers often
  talk about a ‘voice’, that almost indescribable quality that sets
  each author apart from another, and you have a strong voice and
  I’d like to read more. Your use of dialogue is especially
  convincing, as is your sense of place.
  That has to be a good point, pleased with that.
  The plot is well constructed with a good blend of past and
  present events, and a range of different characters and
  events.  It’s important to end a novel with
  some resolution, and in your case, not only do Saskia and Danko
  get to be together, but he re-establishes his relationship with
  his daughters so there is an extra element.
  Good also, it’s probably the first time I’ve managed to get a
  book to end!
  I wasn’t sure about Geoff as a character – why would he be making
  a pass at Saskia after having left her for another
  man?  I know people are complex and he could be
  a bi-sexual but when men come out as gay and move into a
  committed relationship, they are less likely to come back to
  their former lives in this way – at least in fiction.
  This is the only remark that annoyed me – what does she mean,
  that something which might happen in real life can’t happen in a
  book? However, I think that this confusion is down to my
  synopsis, in my book I have his motivations very clearly defined,
  so I need to get them across more clearly in the synopsis. Geoff
  is generally a spoilt brat - fatherhood dissapointed him as it
  turned out to be all sticky fingers and hetrosexuality - but now
  he's made a big fuss and decided he's gay and the shine has worn
  of that new toy and he's not so sure either.
  Geoff’s motivation could simply be that he doesn’t want Saskia to
  start another relationship as this threatens the chance that she
  will be a surrogate for him and Michael, and he also doesn’t want
  his daughter around someone he identifies as a dangerous Russian
  criminal.  The synopsis doesn’t make it clear,
  but I assume Saskia decides not to have a surrogate
  baby?  Does she still feel like another
  child? 
  I think she means ‘does she still want another child?’ Again,
  for me this fault is corrected by looking at the synopsis,
  because she doesn’t really want a baby, certainly not Geoff’s as
  soon as she meets Danko.
  Re-reading the synopsis it looks as if Geoff threatens Saskia in
  some persistent way, is he emotionally
  abusive?  That would explain her low-level
  depression and sense of confusion about her life
  generally.  I can imagine him having blamed her
  for a lot of what went wrong in their marriage before finally
  coming out as gay.  If she is used to doubting
  her instincts and second-guessing herself, this will complicate
  her budding relationship with Danko in an interesting way.
  This is exactly what is hinted at throughout the book – there
  are several references to Geoff controlling what she ate and
  wore, and mocking her appearance, and now that they’re divorced,
  he still controls her financially and ‘likes’ it when she asks
  him for help and money, so I think that I have covered this
  exactly as she suggests.
  How is the novel structured in terms of
  viewpoints?  Saskia and Danko are your main
  characters and I would like to hear from both of them, perhaps
  alternately.  Looking at how the plot develops,
  there shouldn’t be a problem just writing from their
  perspectives, and that would keep it close to the reader.
  Again, exactly what I do – the book moves between his and her
  viewpoint as the story dictates, so that the reader has greater
  insight into the situation than either character. There is only
  one moment when the POV moves away from them, which works for me
  as it forms the basis of an eye witness account which eventually
  allows him to prove self defense.
  By giving us the entire back story to Danko’s life in the first
  chapter, you remove a lot of the suspense for the reader as to
  why and how he has become the person he is. 
  The only issue I have here is that I don’t give the whole
  back story of his life, it’s only two, but the issue here I think
  is that I have over complicated it – and not made it clear that
  there is a greater threat coming for him. This seems to be the
  main problem with the first chapter, and what I think I’ve been
  working to put right since. I have clearly made them think this
  is what I have done, so that needs to be addressed.
  Although you don’t fall into the trap of telling not showing,
  which is very common amongst authors, you start with a very
  information packed chapter that answers a lot of questions you’ve
  not yet had a chance to let your reader ask.
  This is now from the agent –
  From an agent’s perspective, this project needs a clearer
  identity. From the synopsis and character list, as well as the
  list of comparable works, I thought it would be either along the
  lines of a crime thriller/suspense novel or an upmarket
  mainstream novel, both of which are covered by a wide selection
  of imprints at publishers large and small. Female crime writers
  are particularly sought after in the editorial marketplace at the
  moment, so this would potentially be an intriguing prospect for
  agents and publishers.
  However, the writing in the sample chapter, with its emphasis on
  memory and the frequent flashbacks, is quite literary. If you
  examine it in terms of the action that takes place in the 2,700
  words of this sample, very little actually happens in the present
  day: a man fobs off a junkie on the subway to protect a woman,
  exits the subway and arrives in a cemetery to visit his dead
  lover’s grave. This doesn’t suggest to me that the book is a
  mainstream novel or a thriller, both of which tend to feature a
  strong narrative drive, at least in the opening scenes; rather,
  it immediately positions the book at the literary end of the
  spectrum. This means a smaller potential market, but also a more
  competitive one as the readers of literary novels (and the
  editors who commission them, even at small publishers) are
  extremely discerning.
  I can see what she is saying here – and I have to agree with
  her – I do take some small pleasure that she thinks the idea is
  sound, and that the writing is good, but I would also agree that
  the chapter she read was not right for the genre as it stands –
  she’s the expert after all!
  At the moment—bearing in mind of course that the project may
  still be in its infancy—I don’t feel the sample material quite
  reaches the required editorial standard for a literary novel.
  It’s all rather frenetic and disorienting considering how little
  present-tense action takes place, flipping between Danko’s
  childhood, two stages of his adolescence, the time of his hearing
  of Irena’s death seven years before the present day and the
  present day itself plus introducing his mother, his lover, his
  wife and his uncle. I wonder whether perhaps you’re just trying
  to fit in too much backstory too soon in the novel. Particularly
  if you are thinking of this as more of a mainstream novel rather
  than a literary one, I think it might be a worthwhile exercise to
  write these passages of Danko’s history in longer sections and
  then weave them together instead of these very brief snippets.
  Ironically, these snippets that she talks about were boiled
  down from longer sections, maybe I’m getting too ‘cut happy!’ –
  Again, I have been working on this and how they are presented in
  this section – but it’s all food for thought.I have since cut out
  references to his wife, cut down the length of each flashback and
  have given each a present day trigger to more clearly explain why
  he has a flash back. I have also added in more present day
  thoughts and events, and more references to the threat which is
  coming for him now.
  That said, I do feel you have writing talent and I wanted to
  continue reading. Your setting and character sketches are
  compelling (though when one thinks about multiplying that many
  flashbacks by that number of characters by perhaps 40 or more
  chapters, the book starts seeming a little daunting).
  Well, can’t moan about that line can I! Though I don’t know
  why she would think I would have flash backs for all the
  characters, I don’t, I only have them for Danko and Saskia when
  they are essential to show where their motivation comes from. But
  I guess this really is her saying yes to what I have done, and
  warning me not to try and do this for every character in the
  book, which is a good point.
  I would encourage you to pursue this project, but to be clear in
  your mind what you want to be writing. If it is a thriller or
  suspense novel, what are readers waiting to find out at the end,
  what happens in the first chapter to make them desperate to keep
  reading, and where are the thrills? If it is a mainstream novel,
  I would advise a slightly less convoluted narrative style in
  order to help hook the reader’s attention and make him or her
  care about the relationships in the novel. If it is a literary
  novel, I’d advise further work on your structure and technique
  and further thinking about how best to integrate these with your
  themes.
  I can get with this – and what I take from it is that the
  chapter they have read doesn’t have enough of the present day
  threat in it – and I would agree, and with my re-write I have
  tried to get a much greater sense of that into it. I don’t think
  either of them are saying ‘don’t set this chapter in a grave yard
  with flash backs’ I take from this that they are saying ‘ use the
  flash back to show us why he is in the grave yard, and what he
  fears, and a rising sense of threat - show us the threat in the
  present day more being key.
  I think the book and you as a writer could have potential in any
  of these areas. Where you decide you want to take it from here is
  up to you.
  Well, that’s nice to hear – I think I’ve got to take that as
  a positive that she feels I have the ability to make this work in
  any genre, but I need to get the focus right – that’s a question
  of time rather than something unobtainable.
  The last section is written by the editor.
  In summary, you’ve written well and you have a strong story to
  tell.  Currently it’s straddling genres which
  will mean it falls between the cracks when submitting, and that
  would be a shame.
  It’s harder to place literary novels so I would suggest you
  consider mainstream or crime as the directions to go in. Don’t be
  misled into thinking that a mainstream or crime novel can’t have
  depth of character, or emotional development. 
  Both those genres would give you a lot of potential for writing
  the sort of novel you are clearly capable of.
  Once you’ve decided conclusively on your genre, make sure all
  your characters’ motivations are clear in your mind, and they
  therefore take the plot forward plausibly within the parameters
  of how you want it to progress.
  In terms of working on your style, as the agent has mentioned,
  beware of cramming in too many flashbacks and forwards, and try
  to stay longer in the present.  If you do want
  to concentrate further on the characters’ pasts, then consider
  allowing full space to do so – you may find that actually it’s
  their pasts and then their collision in the future that interest
  you more than a murder and threatened kidnap plot.
  Thank you for giving us the chance to read your work, and we wish
  you luck with your future writing projects.
  (The last line is what they’re all taught to say in agent
  school!!!)
  So, I am cheered by that, even though there are issues to
  address, I feel that they feel I am able to get there with the
  skills they have seen on display. As I didn’t really expect them
  to crown me as the next literary genius, I feel that I have done
  as well as can be expected; and as they have flagged up all the
  elements that I also felt needed work, I hope that I can learn to
  trust my judgment and get it right.
 
 
