I will say, I do try and keep an open mind to submissions. I will never immediately say no to a project without reading the proposal. With that said, however, I do find that time and time again, there are projects that I will run from faster than Forrest Gump can run. And this is that subjective nature of the business. Let me explain that piece of the puzzle first.
As you know as readers, there are some genres you like and some that you don't like. When you get that great treat of going into a bookstore, you know the section you are going straight toward. You also know the sections that you have probably never been into your entire life. Sure, you might say you read everything, but the reality is, you don't. You also know that there have been times when your friend gives you a book they have totally loved and within the first few pages, you started to rethink that friendship wondering what was going through their head. As an agent, we too have our likes and dislikes. Not only are we looking for projects that are marketable and have quality writing, we have to connect with these projects just like readers do. We have to love the projects.
I remember sitting on a panel with an editor who described this the best. She stated, she has to love that project so much because she will be reading it easily 5-8 times and will be talking about it to everyone. As an agent, you want it so much on my mind, when I am talking to an editor, your book is the first thing that comes to my mind and I am gushing about it.
So, with that said, what are those projects that I just tend to say "not for me" more often than not.
- Band Romances - I am sorry to say this, but these tend to be so trope heavy 9 times out of 10. The band member has issues, the other person is a follower or is someone shy and the author is simply trying to put together two people who are polar opposites. Lately, when these come across my desk, the comps I always see are Daisy and the Six or A Star is Born. Can't get any stereotypical than that.
- Road trips after divorces - Hello women's fiction. Main character has a rough time so runs off and wants to find herself on the road. Why does this fall apart? It is now episodic. This was somewhat of the same problem Eat, Pray Love had. Italy was great, but when she left Italy, it was the same story 2 more times. Boring.
- First Person Stories - Look, don't get me wrong. There is nothing wrong with first person stories, if written well. The problem is, people don't know how to write the darn things. The majority of the time, These stories lack depth of character and plot development. These stories are simply dialogue.
- Duel Narratives - This is the new "In Thing" but it is just not "My In Thing." So, let me explain. many stories have already had duel POV approaches, especially in romance. We saw things from the hero's side and we saw things for the heroine's side. Not a problem. Many authors used this approach within chapters. Sometimes they used individual chapters. Again, not a problem. Where this has become an issue is when authors are telling TWO stories at the same time and attempting to show that the two storylines really do connect. The author may see the connection, but it is never spelled out enough for the readers. In the end, these are two ships passing in the night.
- Parallel Timelines - This is generally when present day character finds a journal or a box papers and then the author goes back in time and we see that other story. The goal is "theoretically," that the present day person learns something from the person in the past. Let me just say, see my comment on Duel Narratives.
- Corporate life to Bakery Owner - Honestly, I have never understood this one. Why would someone decide to give up a job, and move to Podunk, Nowhere to open a shop doing something they do not know how to do? Or, for that matter, why would someone leave a bakery to someone who has no clue how to bake in their will. Stop the insanity!!!!!!!