KV: How long have you been agenting, and how did you get
into it?
DS: It’s such a long, twisty story, but here goes: I
graduated from college in 1995 with a journalism degree; for about six years I
worked as a freelance writer for magazines and newspapers; I got tired of
selling (without an agent); and I wanted to become a better writer. So, I got
an MFA in fiction, which turned me into the sort of writer who didn’t want to
sell anything of my own and who preferred to sit in a dark room and write short
stories that only I could enjoy.
But I didn’t want to become irrelevant, and I was still a
news junkie, and I had (and continue to have) a streak of “must fix that
problem now” which needed regular exercising. And so, on a whim, I replied to a
help-wanted ad on Craiglist in 2001 or 2002; an agent with Levine Greenberg
Literary was seeking a part-time assistant; the agent’s name was Arielle
Eckstut; she’d moved out to California
to establish the agency’s West Coast office. She hired me while we were sitting
in her kitchen looking at her cookbook collection, drinking Constant Comment
tea. I remember thinking: I like the way her life looks. She worked alongside
her husband, a client turned spouse. Each book was a new adventure. So I joined
up.
I started off drafting letters, reading manuscripts, and
book doctoring. First it was five hours a week; then ten, then twenty. Then I
began doing the same for the agents in the NY office. I was still writing my
fiction; I was even working at an improv theatre part time, because I was so
unsure of where to commit myself. I knew I wanted to be around creatives; I
knew I knew more about media than most; I felt I could make writers into better
writers. But could I make myself a better writer?
I remained on the fence for some time. The agency urged me to start selling books.
“But I’m not in NY,” I argued. “But I don’t know if I’m cut for this.” They
ignored my arguments and kept egging me on. They are tremendous cheerleaders.
It’s in their DNA and it’s part of a successful agent’s working model. So, I
began. Hesitantly. My second sale was a hilarious book called Skymaul: Happy
Crap You Can Buy From a Plane, a parody of Skymall magazine. I met the
authors, Kasper Hauser Comedy Troupe, while working at the improv. I thought,
“If I get to laugh this hard and get paid, I should do this.” I also get to
cheer writers on, steer their careers, talk about books all day, and exercise
that “fix it” muscle, daily. The job is
actually good for my health.
KV: How would you summarize your personal agenting
philosophy? What do you expect from an agent-author relationship?
DS: This is a good question; I don’t think I’ve ever
addressed it in writing before…or in my head, in this fashion. Here goes: when
I like a person or believe they’re talented, I immediately begin thinking of
ways to assist that goodness or talent. This isn’t just publishing related. I
am that meddling lady who fixes friends and clients up on blind dates, sends
them want-ads for jobs I believe they’d be great at, cuts articles out of the
paper they must read, finds them better apartments to live in. This instinct is
genetic, I think, and I’m so lucky and pleased to have found a career that’s allowed
it to flourish (legally).
Also at play in everything I do: my Midwest
journalism training (“if your mother says she loves you, check it out”) and my
political stance toward the world (“if we all lived a little smaller, there’d
be a lot more stuff to go around”). Said another way, I ask lots of questions,
I’m a word economist, and I’m constantly questioning “the norm.” When I take on
new clients, one of the first questions I ask is: “Why do you want to write and
sell a book?” Another is, “What do you know about the publishing process?” And
another, “What are your expectations of this experience? Money, fame, pain?”
I don’t feel good about taking on a client until I’ve asked
these questions and heard answers that make it sufficiently clear to me that
the author knows what he/she is getting into and is really in it for the right
reasons and the long-haul. I want to know that they’ve done their research or
plan to, PDQ. If I get a whiff of fly-by-night-ism, I’m out the back door.
Books are just too hard to make and sell. And life is too short and crazy.
Rereading this, I fear I sound a little cuckoo. I’m not. I’m
just passionately rational and expect the same from my authors.
KV: What client work do you have coming out soon? What drew
you to those writers and/or projects?
DS: I have a few humorous political projects coming out in
time for the election; one is called 365
Wrongs from the Right: A Conservative Delusion-a-Day Calendar; the
other is called Don’t Let the Republican Drive the Bus,
a parody of Mo Willem’s Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus. I love funny
authors. I love anyone who wants to take the piss out of dogma. And I
particularly like it when an author wants to take the piss out of the dogma
they find themselves wrapped up in. I call these my irreverent reverents, i.e.
the authors of Yoga Bitch, Bike Snob, etc.
I’m also very excited about a book called It’s Not
You, It’s Brie, by a cheese obsessive named Kirstin Jackson. I have a
lot of food and cookbook clients. I know my way around a roux.
KV: What genres do you represent? What genres do you
definitely NOT represent?
DS: I represent mostly nonfiction (minus self-help,
spirituality and diet); I am particularly fond of narrative nonfiction, those
true stories that operate like novels--i.e. dramatic tension, great character
development, an arc; all built on the back of research and the reportage that’s
woven out of it. Amazing.
I also rep fiction, though not much right now. I want to rep
more. I’m giving myself time. Lots of time. I want to build the right fiction
list, not just any fiction list. When it’s done (twenty to a hundred years from
now), it’ll have quirky but grave mysteries set in England, Roman à clefs by
Midwestern farmer-poets, and modern day’s Laurie Colwin.
KV: What query pet peeves and/or pitfalls should writers
avoid when querying you?
DS: Oh, I dunno. Don’t follow too closely a manual’s
instructions on how to query. Be human. That’ll serve you the best. Know
something about who you’re querying. Engage me in conversation.
KV: What are you looking for in a manuscript right now? What
are you tired of seeing at the moment?
DS: I’m looking for the author to be an expert at whatever
is being discussed, to know the subject and the marketplace, and to know how to
sell whatever he/she is hoping to write. Don’t come knocking ‘til you’ve
figured out how to bring your idea to market, even fiction. I may have an idea
or two, but you should have a dozen.
KV: What’s the best way to query you?
DS: By e-mail. Phone messages disappear. E-mail does not: dsvetcov@levinegreenberg.com
Thank you, Ms. Svetcov, for these thoughtful responses. And
good luck to everyone who decides to query. If you know your way around a roux,
you should give her a try:)
P.S. If you’re looking for feedback on your MG, YA, or new
adult manuscript and missed yesterday’s
post about next week’s contest with Teen Eyes Editorial, definitely check
that out!
8 comments:
What a lovely piece. I can picture the interview in the senior agent's kitchen, over tea and cookbooks. Thanks for sharing!
Awesome interview! I love the meddling! :)
Great interview! I love her answers!
Susan, I liked that image, too:)
I agree, Jemi. I think it's sweet that she's a matchmaker in every aspect of her life. Agenting is a great job for someone like Ms. Svetcov!
Kimberly, I thought her answers were really great, too. So thoughtful and informative.
I don't think that insisting her clients are rational makes her sound "cuckoo" at all. :o)
Thanks for the great interview!
"Passionately rational." Love it! Thanks for another great interview, Krista!
What a trippy road to agenting. Fun interview.
I didn't think so, either, Myrna:)
You're welcome, Jodi! And I loved that line, too.
Leslie, I always like hearing how an agent got into the business. Every agent seems to take a different road.
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