tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11209022.post-1112656369201055682005-04-04T19:12:00.000-07:002005-04-04T16:12:49.203-07:00No DiceI had a noteworthy email exchange with a literary agent today. I found the posting for the book/author he's representing on Publishers Marketplace interesting and emailed him to find out more. It wasn't until he wrote back that I realized that I'd been in contact with him before - he had previously sent me a proposal, which Barricade ultimately turned down.<br /><br />Anyway, the gist of his email was this: whereas the author of the book we had turned down previously was seeking a publisher, any publisher, for his book, this new author was seeking a publisher who can pony up a considerable advance. I believe his exact words were "she's not going to write a book for the same amount of money she would get for writing a magazine piece."<br /><br />Ouch.<br /><br />I swiftly wrote back that I understood but that I hoped he and his client realized that the energy, enthusiasm, and effort (I coined them the three E's right then and there) that I could bring to this project was no small thing. Neither is hearing from your publicist every day as many of my authors do. He wrote back that he liked that - the three E's.<br /><br />But he's still not sending me the proposal.<br /><br />- Jen Itskevich<br />Publicity DirectorBarricade Books Inc.http://www.blogger.com/profile/13390359344172929634noreply@blogger.com