The Saturday Slash

Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.

I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.

If the Saturday Slash has been helpful to you in the past, or if you’d like for me to take a look at your query please consider making a donation, if you are able.

If you’re ready to take the next step, I also offer editing services.

My thoughts are in blue, words to delete are in red, suggested rephrasing is in orange.

Thank you for your consideration of my manuscript, THE WOMEN WHO RESCUED THEMSELVES, a work of fiction complete at about 120,000 words. That word count is very high, especially if you are submitting to a small press, which is the feeling I am getting here. I chose your press because you are willing to accept unagented, unsolicted submissions, and per your description, you are open to the kind of book I've written. What kind of book have you written? There's no genre here, you just say that it's fiction.

There are three women. The stakes are high for each one of them. You definitely need a better hook. Saying there are three women is not interesting, it's just a cast list. Don't say the stakes are high - anyone can type that. Illustrate that the stakes are high. A disabled, suicidal lesbian stands to lose her life. The woman in love with her stands to lose her love. A battered woman stands to live a life imprisoned by violence and denigration. Their separate paths cross on Bluerock Farm, a place of refuge where each one breaks out of their own self-imposed prison, where they become more powerful than they could possibly have imagined. This is well written, but it's not telling us anything about the plot. Why do each of them stand to lose these things? How do these plots intersect? The query needs to establish these things -- What does the main character(s) want? What stands in the way of them getting it? What will they need to do to overcome the obstacles, and what is at stake if they don't? Your query needs to convey the plot, this does not. Also, this sounds like it's a "quieter" novel, character driven as opposed to plot driven, and if that's the case a 120k is quite likely an inflated word count.

I am a 73 year old disabled, retired nurse practitioner. I broke my back after a fall from a horse. Though lucky enough to avoid paralysis, I was confined to a wheelchair, and then a walker. Now I walk with sticks, and sometimes I don’t need those. I’m married for 43 years to the same woman, have grown children and two cats. I can infer that your bio relates to the content of the novel in certain ways, but this is still a lot of extraneous info taking up space that would be better spent on conveying your plot.

This is my first novel. Other publications include: Author, “What Barbara Taught Me.” 1989. short story in California Nursing Review (out of print, clips available). Author, poetry. 1996. Women’s Voices, Sonoma County Women’s Resource Network. Author, poetry, Assisi:An Online Journal of Arts and Letters, St. Francis College, Brooklyn, NY Fall 2011-Spring 2012."Come Through" and "I heard morning opening". Same here, taking up too much space. I would instead use a generic line such as, "I've had multiple articles and poems published in journals such as... The mystery of fiction is that the story tells itself. I didn’t set out to write stories of representation, but my characters said otherwise. Perhaps lesbians with disabilities will become more visible in the literature. And if even one woman understands that she is worth more than what society says she is, this novel will have been worth all the trouble. This isn't useful to the query. You need to collapse your bio and publishing history into each other and shorten both considerably, and leave much, much more room for your plot in order to convey the answers to the questions I laid out above.

The Saturday Slash

Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.

I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.

If the Saturday Slash has been helpful to you in the past, or if you’d like for me to take a look at your query please consider making a donation, if you are able.

If you’re ready to take the next step, I also offer editing services.

My thoughts are in blue, words to delete are in red, suggested rephrasing is in orange.

TAKE THE POWER BACK (93,000 words, speculative) is an adult speculative heist novel pitting a Lupin style thief against tech billionaires. I am a traditionally-published speculative fiction author with a Master’s degree in English literature. I am querying you because this novel resonates with [YOUR MSWL]

Really strong going in. The Lupin reference might be lost on those who aren't knowledgeable about the genre.

Shelby is a security professional struggling with catastrophizing OCD. It is a gift in her line of work – helping her hyper-focus on flaws in security systems – but a torment to her mental health. Great setup! When catastrophe hits close to home and her brother begins suffering an illness that conventional medicine can’t cure, Shelby falls down the rabbit hole and becomes convinced the only treatment for her brother is a drug invented by a genius billionaire named Leader Zenden – the creator of a hyper-capitalist island utopia. So far, really good. If you can find a way to indicate in some way what her brother's illness consists of, that would be good. Because OCD and metnal illness have been mentioned already, my brain goes that direction. If that's not the case, I'd find a way to clarify.

Shelby spends all her money to journey to Zenden’s island to buy the drug – only to learn it is a scam. She swears to take revenge, and what better way to do so than by stealing Zenden’s greatest invention yet and prove to the world that it’s a fake. What's the invention? How would she steal it? How would she prove it's a fake? Her revenge plot soon throws her into the middle of a power struggle for Zenden’s island. Shelby encounters a tantalizing thief, an old flame with ulterior motives, and Zenden’s most ardent zealot, while fighting the pull of Zenden’s cult upon her psyche. As her heist barrels toward its own catastrophe, Shelby must decide who she trusts – and maybe even learn whether her brother is truly beyond saving. There's a power struggle for the island? In what way? Are these people all there, physically present and this is going own like guerrilla warfare? Why would all these people end up there at the same time? What is this cult, and why is she being pulled toward them? Another mention of her brother and the question of if he can be saved means that we definitely need to know more about his illness.

TAKE THE POWER BACK is a recipe for activism about how an everywoman can beat the 1%. It asks big questions about who we really can rely on in times of catastrophe, saving the biggest for its audacious finale. I'm not sure this is coming across in the query The novel blends the timely satire of Alderman’s The Future with the mysterious, utopia-hiding-dystopia of The Last Murder at the End of the World by Stuart Turton (May 2024, Sourcebooks Landmark).

This is my second novel picking apart corporate power and oppressive tech through a speculative lens; my first [NOVEL] I have spoken as an author panelist at [LITERARY CONFERENCES] and have forthcoming pieces in [LITERARY MAGAZINES].

Really great bio and intro. The first para of the query is good, the second wanders into generic pretty quickly. I don't really understand a few things - what is this invention? Is it related to her brother's illness, is it the drug itself? Is everyone there after the same thing, or are they all after something that's privately important to them? What does who she trust have to do with anything? She already doesn't trust Zenden, so what's the decision involving trust? If it's connected to the supporting characters, their roles need to be fleshed out more.

The Saturday Slash

Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.

I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.

If the Saturday Slash has been helpful to you in the past, or if you’d like for me to take a look at your query please consider making a donation, if you are able.

If you’re ready to take the next step, I also offer editing services.

My thoughts are in blue, words to delete are in red, suggested rephrasing is in orange.

Like all of Notowi’s pilot cadets, seventeen-year-old Mokwin Gallworm is looking forward to a simple but exciting life flying on the backs of the island nation’s huge birds. Okay cool, but doing what? Is this like a special aerial soldier status, or are they releaseing weather balloons? Mokwin’s expectations, however, are shattered when he receives the startling news that he's been named as the next Wingmaster Chief and ruler of the Notowi — a role he didn't know he was under consideration for. Why would this shatter his expectations? Does this mean he can't be a pilot now? The reader doesn't know what the worldbuilding is here, so we don't see the problem. The way it reads, it sounds like he'll be in charge of the whole venture, which surely would be attractive to him.

As he tries to determine how and why he even became a candidate, doubt creeps into Mokwin's mind over whether he can step up. Does he even want to? But he’ll have to rise to the occasion and fast when hostile Bargasia declares war, sending its Grand Armada in an invasion force to overrun his homeland. Why does he have to make this decision fast? Is there currently no leader? Did someone die? Mokwin and the other young pilots move out to the front lines in a desperate attempt to halt the inexorable Bargasian advance.

Mokwin is determined to do the best he can with his situation and ensure the survival of his people, but he can’t protect everyone. As casualties mount and he’s forced to watch as friends and comrades die around him, the reality of war weighs heavily on his mind and he struggles with feelings of inadequacy and incompetency. As if all of this weren’t enough, exposed enemy secrets and increasingly bizarre behavior by the Bargasian royalty reveal that dark powers may be at work behind the scenes of the war and his unexpected election — unnatural, unholy powers thought to be the stuff of ancient myth. This sounds like the actual plot, all the way down here.

With enemy forces closing in on his homeland, Mokwin is thrust into a race against time to discover the truth behind the war and his unwanted position of responsibility before all he has ever known collapses before his eyes. Right now this is pretty vague and cliched. There's a young male character tasked with stepping into power at a young age, who then sees bad things at war and struggles with his ability to lead his people. That's not a new story. Enemy secrets and bizarre behavior by Bargasian royalty sounds like the point where your plot actually diverges into something possibly original, but you already used up all your space outlining a trope.

A standalone novel, WINGMASTER is a glimpse into the trials of transitioning from adolescence to the reality of adulthood, combining the mystery of MURTAGH with the action and character struggles found in THE WAY OF THE DROW.

I live in South Dakota, where I am pursuing a Master’s in Paleontology at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. My nonfiction work on issued SP - "Issues" affecting young adults has been recognized and awarded by the DSU Heritage Foundation in North Dakota, while my short story The Temptation of Christ was praised by Mysterion Online as “well written and containing good theological insight.” WINGMASTER is my debut novel.

This is a good bio. You're illustrating that you have an understanding of human cultures, that you're connected with the YA audience, and that you have writing creds. That's solid. What you need to do is work on getting your query focused on the elements of the story that differentiate it, not explaining the ones that follow a known path.