In my last post I compared using the tool of the Synopsis in
writing the first draft of a manuscript to the way that a tattoo artist lays
down a stencil before they start applying the ink. And I don't know why these metaphors are necessary for me,
but for some reason I enjoy making these real-life comparisons to the process
of getting published, probably because in no way is trying to get published
really a part of anything comparable in the real world. The only exception to this statement
would be the basic structure of the very-real business, with a protocol that
exists even to this day, and this formality does demand respect.
Which is why I have a new metaphor, this time, one that
inspires me as I try to land the elusive Literary Agent.
When I was a kid I used to love the movie "All the
President's Men" with Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman. The story of Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the
movie follows the reporters' every move as they take the notes and make the
rotary-phone calls to chase the leads, and ends as they blow apart the Watergate
scandal that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon in 1974. It's exhilarating filmmaking, and it's
amazing that I don't have such a soft spot for all of the nine hundred
"Law and Order" and "NCIS" shows that are on television right
now, but I do not.
But what I do have
is an appreciation for the meticulousness that these characters portray, and I
think that landing an agent from the pages and pages of listings and specifics
that agents want and require is kind of like finding that break in the story,
that one lead that's going to give us the prize. In a reporter's case, it's the confirmation from a source
that a story can go to print, but for the novelist it's the agreement that the
agent will take them on as a client.
Either way the process of examining every lead, so to speak, is very similar.
And so it is helping me at this stage to imagine that I'm at
least one of those Washington Post reporters (I guess I
would prefer to be Dustin Hoffman) in a version of "All the President's
Men" that would resemble something a little more modern, like the
aforementioned cop shows where they sit in front of a computer data base as a
flickering list of suspects flow by for their consideration. Truth is, the same task-oriented
attention to detail that writers have is the same skill that is needed, which
is strange when one thinks of how artists make terrible business people. But research we can do, like Dr. Walter Bishop in his lab on "Fringe,"
but that's a metaphor for another post.
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