slush.jpg I check out blogs. I read comments. And do you know what I seem to see over and over, despite the evidence to the contrary? New writers still seem to believe it’s who you know that will land you that agent or that publishing deal.

Over at The Debutante Ball, they are talking about myths (biz, writing, etc.) and this got me thinking about this fallacy that you will never get picked out of the slush. Who started this rumour? They truly should be strapped to their chair and forced to write queries until they get it right and an agent snags their brilliant writing out of the pile.

I know a fair number of writers, and I personally don’t know a single writer who got their agent through a “connection”. In fact, I’ve heard a lot more stories that go like this: “So and so recommended me and the agent was really nice but in the end, we didn’t click.” That I’ve heard of.

I just read an interview with Sara Zarr: slush. My agent found me: slush. Eileen Cook: slush. Kim Thacker: slush. Any of you reading this who got picked out of the slush, please leave a comment!

Today, on Twitter, agent, Elana Roth got very excited about…yep…something she found in the slush. Janet Reid is constantly going on about the number of queries she reads. Why do you think she’s reading them instead of enjoying herself with whiskey and recreational reading (well, maybe she’s having the whiskey)? Because she’s looking for YOU. Nathan Bransford goes on and on about querying in hopes that you’ll send him something great.

I queried around 40 agents over two years. I received requests for partials/fulls about 10 times. I got multiple offers. Two of these agents were referrals. The others had never heard of me and I had never heard of them until I started doing research.

If you are one of those writers who think you’ll never get picked out of the slush, I want you to just stop thinking that right now! Work on your query. Work on your writing. Stay after it. Have FUN with this. It’s part of the process! And let me know when you sign with your agent. I want to congratulate you.