Thursday, May 15, 2008

The short synopses

The last few weeks have been a whirlwind with trips to Arizona and Cancun, and a weekend in Colorado Springs to attend the 2008 Pikes Peak Writers Conference. The trips away were both fun and restful, and I think these breaks from writing help stir the creative juices when you return. The PPW conference was fabulous, as always, with a good mix of speakers and hands-on writing exercises. Carol Berg, Vicki Lewis Thompson and David Liss all gave wonderful keynote presentations. I love the mix with agents and editors during meals. Few conferences that I've attended give you the opportunity for these social encounters. I pitched to Cecile Goyette and was fortunate to sit next to her at dinner Saturday night. She's direct and helpful during the pitch, and delightful and fun socially. She said I could send her a few chapters of my manuscript as well as a one page synopsis, leaving me with two strong suggestions: 1) make sure the first 3 pages of the manuscript are tight and make we want to keep reading, and 2) don't leave me hanging in the synopsis. I want to know how it ends.

I think the vast majority of agents and editors would agree with Cecile. The one-page synopsis is tricky to write. I believe the key is to think general, the way you have to do when you write your log line. In fact, to me it's almost an extension of the log line, leaving out many secondary characters, subplots and situations you'd love to include because they involve your favorite scene or scenes. It's tempting for beginning writers to leave out the ending, hoping it will make the reader want to read the whole manuscript, but as Cecile indicated, it doesn't work that way in synopses. Don't leave them hanging!