AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,126
- Location
- Nebraska
Hi all -
Question for you. I've been shopping my WW2-set novel around to agents and publishing houses and while I've had a few bites for "partials" (i.e. the first three chapters and a synopsis), I've only had one agent request the full. This is par for the writing course, I know.
But this is one thing I've consistently run into on my rejection letters:
"World War II is a hard sell."
???
This baffles me. There are lots of WW2 books released every year, fiction and nonfiction. I can't figure out why they're not selling like hot cakes. There's quite a variety, too - espionage (like Ken Follett) the battlefield (W.E.B. Griffin springs to mind, who also has the OSS books out), the homefront (Elizabeth Berg's new one), etc. I just finished reading The Wedding Officer - WW2 Naples. Great read.
Your thoughts? My novel is definitely women's fiction. I wonder if that has something to do with it???
Thanks in advance...
Question for you. I've been shopping my WW2-set novel around to agents and publishing houses and while I've had a few bites for "partials" (i.e. the first three chapters and a synopsis), I've only had one agent request the full. This is par for the writing course, I know.
But this is one thing I've consistently run into on my rejection letters:
"World War II is a hard sell."
???
This baffles me. There are lots of WW2 books released every year, fiction and nonfiction. I can't figure out why they're not selling like hot cakes. There's quite a variety, too - espionage (like Ken Follett) the battlefield (W.E.B. Griffin springs to mind, who also has the OSS books out), the homefront (Elizabeth Berg's new one), etc. I just finished reading The Wedding Officer - WW2 Naples. Great read.
Your thoughts? My novel is definitely women's fiction. I wonder if that has something to do with it???
Thanks in advance...