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.

THE POWERS THAT CAME BEFORE US is a multi-POV adult fantasy that explores the power of love for oneself and others, the importance of friendship, facing one's own trauma, and that freedom should not end at the border of one’s own country. This is well written, but it has a lot of echoes with "one's" and also the themes you're highlighting here are quite vague. It's not "bad" per se, but I think you can find a stronger hook to lead with.

Growing up with myths about dragons and powerful magic, Alisae dreamed of adventures beyond the sequestered life her overprotective father, the Earl of Darholm, had dictated for her. And although he promised her autonomy now that she's an adult, when he receives a mysterious missive, his paranoia resurfaces. He forces Alisae to flee and go into hiding with Cal, his most trusted Sentinel. A little confusing here, because you state that she's always dreamed of leaving her situation... and that's exactly what she gets at the end of the paragraph - but it says she's forced which feels contradictory.

Tortured by his traumatic past, Cal maintains the somber facade of a lone wolf. However, Alisae’s sardonic, flamboyant nature and her constant inquisitive chatter and vivacious personality make Cal's sturdy walls crack, and a friendship blossoms. lots and lots of adjectives here. In a paragraph that starts with Cal, we havr 6 references to her nature, not his.

When they arrive at the cottage hideout, Alisae discovers that the reason for her isolated life was that the Antasanari King tricked her father into her betrothal and is finally coming for his bride. She discovers this at the hideout? You say she's super inquisitive, but her life is turned upside down and the way this reads, she didn't ask many questions about it, only to stumble onto answers later. Right now she's not reading with a lot of agency. The blows continue when, despite all the efforts, Alisae is kidnapped and brought before the king, who not only asserts she possesses magical powers he intends to weaponize but also presents Cal as his son and spy. Again, things are happening to her, but she's not really doing anything. It's also confusing to say that the King "presents" Cal, b/c that word is usually a first meeting kind of descriptor - so when I first read it I thought it was saying Cal didn't even know. But Cal despises his cruel, mad father and secretly offers Alisae help. Confused - so Cal was a spy all along... so why didn't he just take her straight to his father? You say she is kidnapped but if Cal was on the other side all along, that doesn't make much sense. Alisae, fed up with being the pawn well I'm glad she finally got there, but your description of her above is contrary to her lack of action so far. in the machinations of others, now has to figure out how to prevent the brewing war over her, uncover the political conspiracy, and discover the ancient magic that supposedly courses through her veins. And most importantly, find her voice not only for herself but also for the ordinary citizens who are perceived as voiceless. Again, these are pretty vague references that aren't doing a lot to distinguish this from any other fantasy query the agent got in their inbox that day. There's a chosen one, a Romeo and Juliet kind of feeling, and a war, and a princess and a spy prince. Definitely find what it is that only your story has that distinguishes it from all the rest. Right now, that's not here.

Completed at 139,000 words, THE POWERS THAT CAME BEFORE US would appeal to the readers of The Bridge Kingdom series by Danielle L. Jensen with its secret identity, complex traumatic past, and slow-burn romance, and those who enjoyed Cassandra Clare’s The Chronicles of Castellane with its diverse cast, courtly drama, unearthing of ancient magic, and both abuse and beauty of religion. Really good comp titles here. Word count is high for a debut. Fantasy gets room for worldbuiling, but not that much. You need to lop off 40k or so. Also, you reference Cal's trauma twice, but we have no idea what it is, or how it fits into the story. You'll need to streamline this and clarify plot points. Every query needs to answer these questions - what does the main character want? What stands in the way of them getting it? How will they overcome these obstacles? And what's at stake if they don't?

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.

I am querying TECHNADA, a 97,000-word adult sci-fi thriller with biohorror elements, featuring a Latina single mother who becomes the face of a “biological internet,” until the launch causes a global crisis and she is blamed as the culprit. This novel combines the spectacle-driven social critique of Chain-Gang All-Stars with the paranoia and near-future dread of The Extractionist. Couple of things. Your word count is a bit high. Yes, SF/F get more room for world building, but as a debut looking for an agent, you don't want to present any reason at all for them to consider passing. I'd try to knock 15k off. Also, the term "biological internet" definitely intrigues me, but I don't have any idea what it actually means, and therefore when you say the launch causes a global crisis, it just makes me more confused about what that would look like. Your opener has good comp titles, but I'd settle for putting less detail into this opener, and focus on getting that information into the body, not the introduction.

Exhausted single mom and freelance bounty hunter Veronica Verduzco is one missed payment from homelessness. Then a takedown goes horribly wrong when the fugitive she is chasing mutates mid-fight, and the viral footage of their battle turns Veronica into America’s newest obsession. I think we need more world building here. Is this just a normal thing in this world, for someone to mutate? And... what did they mutate into? Why would her fighting with it make her the newest obsession? I ask b/c if it's pretty common for people / things to just mutate, then it's the fight that makes her special, and I want to know what she did in this situation that was meaningful. If it's the mutation that makes it memorable (like this isn't just a normal thing in this world) then I don't understand why the focus would be on her, rather than the mutant. In general, there's just a lot of assumed knowledge here that the reader doesn't have In a 2076 California long warped by content saturation and manufactured outrage, she is memed, monetized, and recast as a hero by a public desperate for something to consume.

The attention draws healthtech mogul Jack Cygan, who offers Veronica enough money to change her daughter’s life if she will become the public face of his new neural network, a xenobot-powered system designed to link human minds. I understand this sentence, but I don't know what it actually means if that makes sense. I need an explanaion of what this actually is. Veronica knows the deal is dangerous, but she takes it anyway, believing one bad choice of her own might buy her child freedom from poverty. Launch night goes less than planned, with Cygan assassinated onstage and cannibalistic mutants erupting worldwide. Again, not understanding the mutants and how they fit into this world... also, now they're cannibals? In the ensuing chaos, his company claims the crisis can be stopped only by killing Veronica and her daughter, whose DNA has been keyed to the network’s control mechanism. Suddenly hunted by government operatives, the media, and the same public that made her famous, Veronica must uncover what Cygan built and why her child is bound to it before the world decides their deaths are an acceptable price to for a cure. I like the ending here, it puts forward what's stake, etc. But the worldbuilding needs to be more clear, as right now it's just causing me confusion. I think the premise sounds cool, but there needs to be more clarity here.

I am a final-year medical student earning my MD in May 2026, and have a master’s degree in human physiology, both of which informed the biotech/global disaster elements of TECHNADA. My short fiction has appeared in California’s Emerging Writers. Thank you for your time and consideration. Perfect bio!

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.

I am seeking representation for my contemporary YA fantasy, THE WITCHES OF DENHOLM, complete at 78,000 words. This witchy fall read blends the high school drama of These Witches Don’t Burn by Isabel Sterling with the cozy fantasy of Practical Rules for Cursed Witches by Kayla Cottingham. Good work. You're showing that you know your audience and the market

Sixteen-year-old Melinda Hawthorne lives a carefully balanced double life in the quaint New England town of Denholm. She’s a typical teenager who sleeps in on weekends and goes thrifting with friends, while also keeping a big secret—the women in her family, going back for generations, are witches. While her grandmother could bend air, and her mother commands light, Melinda is a psychometrist, someone who can read the history of objects with a single touch. This is great - you've got the setup and the worldbuilding all right here in one paragraph.

When she’s lured from the classroom to the forest by an unknown force, her magic ignites, surging into newfound powers. Tracing a doorway in the air, she unwittingly steps into another Denholm—one not founded by Puritans, but by witches.

In this new world, a mysterious athenaeum, spellbound harvest festival, and an uncanny bond with the ravens draw Melinda deeper into the wonders of a town she thought she knew every inch of. Meeting Lucien Blackwood, a charming witch isn't he technically a warlock? Genuine question. with a wicked grin and a dark family history, sparks a romantic connection she can’t ignore. But Melinda can’t disappear into “witch city” forever—her parents still expect her home for dinner. This does make it sound like she's spending quite a bit of time in this otherworld, I think you need to clarify if she's just there once, or if this is a recurring visit.

As Melinda slips between two worlds, balancing normal high school pressures with growing abilities, she discovers that her Denholm may be harboring magical secrets of its own. And the new Denholm is not the fairytale she imagined. A shadowy sect rules through fear, and when they witness Melinda harnessing long-dormant witchcraft to awaken the community’s suppressed magic, they mark her as a threat. This is getting a little bit into the weeds, and reading more like a synopsis right now, while also being vague. It's got a "there's trouble, right here in River City" vibe, but the reader doesn't really know what the trouble is, specifically. What are the secrets of "her" Denholm pointing at? Why would the "new" Denholm sect mark her as a threat? You say why technically, but as a reader I don't see how her awakening the community's suppressed magic is threatening to them.

Now Melinda must unravel the clues linking both worlds, unite a fractured witching community using the magic of its ancestors, and fight for the future of the new Denholm, before its enchanted legacy fades forever. Not a bad ending but again, I think we need more of an idea of what the real, actual threat is here. What is the magic in Denholm 1? What is the threat from Denholm 2? Why would she feel like it's her responsibility to fight for Denholm 2, anyway? And where did the love interest go? He got a little shout out, but then disappeared. Get a little more clear on what's at stake, and what the consequneces are if she fails.