What
are non-fiction books?
When we speak of non-fiction, we are really talking about
factual works. They may report on current issues or recount history, explore
the latest avenues of scientific research or provide an in-depth examination
of people, places, or events, or simply provide a great deal of useful information.
But in every case, non-fiction works talk about what is, was, or may become
real. Every "character" who may appear in such a book will be
a real person, identified by a real name. If dialogue figures in the work,
the "speakers" will actually have uttered the quotations.
Of course, facts don't have to be boring, and some of today's best non-fiction
writing incorporates intensity and first-rate characterizations of actual
people. Notable recent works like Anthony Shadid's Night Draws Near
and Stefan Fatsis's Word Freak on the Agency's own list are examples:
scrupulously accurate narratives, one deeply serious, the other darkly comic,
that are written with such style and accomplishment that they might have
been novels. It's probably safe to say that the best literary non-fiction
is written by those who are not only experts but also passionate about their
work: able to make both qualities shine through without alienating their
readers.
The Robert E. Shepard Agency often receives queries for novels, collections
of short stories, and fictionalized treatments of real-life events (frequently
autobiographical). Unfortunately, we must always reject these works, because
all of them fall under the heading of "fiction." We have nothing
against fiction--far from it--but in many ways the fiction and non-fiction
worlds are very different, and the techniques agents use to sell each type
of book are very different, too. We've chosen to specialize so that we can
give authors of non-fiction all the attention they deserve!
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