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The query gets *my* attention! -- debikm, 21:27:07 05/09/10 Sun
It sounds like something right up my alley. I'd buy a book based on that premise.
Before I started writing Old Dogs my main fictional world was a character-driven fantasy setting. I still read rayne's adventures with a smile, though the writing has paused for now.
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Re: The query gets *my* attention! -- Paige2, 21:35:33 05/09/10 Sun
Thank you Deb! Hopefully it will grab an agents attention. :-)
JPage (hee hee had to do it). I figured the query was as good place to start and since I was having posting issues..grrrrrr I didn't want to throw up the prologue and lose it.
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Re: Testing out 1st Post -- Promise, 09:24:43 05/11/10 Tue
I am intrigued!
1 question. How do you pronounce Arienh? The 'h' seems superfulous, but I'm guessing it's there for a reason? I just ran it through Behind The Name (which isn't a complete name resource to be sure) and it didn't show up in the database...could you give more info about how you came up w/ this name? (Not a suggestion for an addition to your query...just my own personal curiousity).
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Re: Testing out 1st Post -- Paige2, 14:02:13 05/11/10 Tue
Thank you Promise. Glad it intrigued.
For me, the naming of my character’s was just like naming my own children. I wanted just the right names to represent them and who they were. So with Arianwen/Arienh, I started with who she was named after: Arianrhod – A Cymric Goddess. She was the Goddess of the Silver Wheel, and her name in Welsh meant Silver (arian) wheel (rhod). She was considered the goddess of death, rebirth, childbirth, and bardic knowledge. Goddess of the Otherworld tower of Initiation, (Caer Sidi), where each bard went to learn the great wisdom, (understanding) and where the dead go between their incarnations. She is the Goddess of childbirth, the moon, fertility, and fate. Her home is Caer Arianrhod, where the spirits of the dead souls go to await reincarnation, ferried there by Rhwyfrod, the spectral ship known as ‘oar-wheel’. She has become associated with both the spider, the wheel of life, and the wheel of the year.
Based off that, I found the name Arianwen = (ah-ree-AHN-wen), From the Welsh word arian which means silver and (g)wen meaning white, fair, blessed, shining, holy. It’s was used quite frequently from the 5 to 11th centuries.
From there I went to the present. I wanted something similar to her past name (Arianwen), so that the men could still call her by her old nickname (Ari). After googling for Welsh/Celtic baby female names. I saw the name Arienh. How perfect huh?
The name Arienh is a baby girl name and comes from Celtic origin. Its Celtic’s meaning: Oath. The Pronunciation: AR-ee-en - ['É‘rjÉ‘n]
This was probably more than you wanted to know but I do hope it was interesting and gave you some insight to my main character. The men’s names were picked for meaning and how I mentally saw them in the past and present.
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Re: Testing out 1st Post -- Promise, 19:02:54 05/11/10 Tue
Thank you! That was very interesting. I have always found the meaning of names to be of interest. I was sure you had selected the names with care. Since your modern character has a Celtic name, I'm guessing she is of a Welsh family?
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Re: Testing out 1st Post -- Paige2, 19:17:42 05/11/10 Tue
Yes she is (in my mind). The whole story pretty much takes place in Wales. Arienh grew up in an orphanage and this story doesn't talk much about her current life - there is some - but not alot.
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Hey Paige! Finally made it to your test post! And I'm glad you were so persistant! This way >>> -- Esther, 11:59:15 05/18/10 Tue
Now I have an idea about what your story is about, and it will make it easier for me to jump in and enjoy it. I do, however, have some comments if you're interested. The hazard of asking what I think. *G*
This is something I'd read. I like the whole justice concept, and the spell before she died, a spell that took the auld ones 600 years to grant. I devour anything that has to do with time. The potential for 'flashbacks' has me just about green with envy and I can't wait to see how you incorporate them into your story.
But I’m not a literary agent getting dozens, if not more, of these on a daily basis. So if this was a first impression of your book that I saw (and it is since I haven't read your next post yet) it might not be enough to keep me from adding this to the slush pile. Here are some things I’d like to see. Remember to use what you can and to toss the rest.
Your hook. You need to catch their attention and catch it fast. After reading this, I’m thinking that your first paragraph about revenge and justice resembles backstory. It starts out with Arianwen, but the book is about Arienh. It doesn’t matter that Arienh is the reincarnation of Arianwen. Arianwen is dead. For whatever reason, she wasn’t strong enough to survive. Arienh is the one who has to battle the newest version of Camalus. Make it about her.
Mention the title of your book right from the get go. The title shouldn’t be a surprise at the end. The title represents your hard work and I think it needs to be important enough to be flaunted as soon as you can. Same for word count. If it’s an important enough criterion to be the cause for frustration if you have to cut words, then it’s important enough to mention that you managed to write a complete story within those parameters. I’m sure the word count issue will arise at some point, probably right away. Deal with it and move on to the good stuff.
What the story is about. I think this needs to be condensed, made more concise and to the point. I don’t have a clear concept of the conflict. All I get from this is a couple musicians, whom look like the men in her ‘memories’ show up at the castle she purchased. The antagonist isn’t mentioned by name. He’s lumped in the same sentence as the three, as not worth mentioning by himself. He’s an important character because he is the one that forces the protagonist to become all she can be. We already know, because you have her learn the legend from the caretaker that her remembrances match the legend, that she’s the reincarnation, but then you mention a past-life regression. You’re concentrating on the how she got to the castle, but not what happens at it. Is it important to know the two men from her ‘memories’ resemble current day musicians? Does their occupation play an important role in the battle between the three and the one? What is the legend of the three? Be specific. Is the conflict resolved? In the fight that took 600 years to mastermind/transpire, do the auld ones suspect how it will affect the future? What's the consequence of failure?
In addition to the consideration, thank the agent for their time and mention a full manuscript is available upon request. Or whatever the individual guidelines are.
Remember this is your chance to speak up about something you have passion for, it’s your voice, and at this point, only you are your books advocate. You want what’s best, so put the best forward. A good strong voice here will demonstrate you can write and give them reason to believe your book will be even better.
And there. You have some unsolicited advice from someone who has never written a query letter in her life. Take everything with a grain of salt.
Hugs
Esther
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