This past Monday I read on Lori Perkins’ Agent In The Middle blog she is a liberal democrat, and a card carrying feminist. I must confess to some ignorance, possibly due to my advanced age, about this feminist realm. I didn’t know they carried cards. What happens if you don’t have your card, and secondly, who checks them? :) Ms. Perkins blog is very informative; and her admission, echoed by Jenny Rappaport from the same agency, about not handling anything Republican-ish (whatever that is) confirms a suspicion I’ve had about the dearth of conservative leaning pulp fiction. I have women customers living in nearby
Although I understand how odorous it would be for a card carrying feminist to read and represent a fiction manuscript which might have conservative leanings, wouldn’t the possible money gain make up for having to wear a mask while selling it? Murphy and Sapir are my favorite example of authors espousing some right wing political satire with fantasy adventure. They’ve been doing the incredibly popular Destroyer series since the seventies and have sold multi-millions of them to a mostly male audience. Each new book in their series is scooped up by a loyal fan base, including me. The agent representing them, if they even bother with one, could probably live on just their percentage from the Destroyer series alone. I do know it still takes good writing; but perhaps a couple of us Republican-ish fiction writers could make a few liberal agents some money, if they can look past their political indoctrination. :)
4 comments:
I left a really long comment and blogger ate it. :(
The summary was that not all agents are liberal. They are as varied as the writers who submit work. You just have to find the one who is interested in your type of story. :)
Actually, I was just having a little fun with the term 'card carrying' feminist and the word Republican-ism. :) In reply to your point, I will retract my axiom if you can name one agent or one publishing house with conservative leanings. I found one called Emperor's New Clothes, and one other that publishes conservative non-fiction. Ms. Perkins is the first agent to actually be nice enough to state the obvious. Her employee and co-worker Jenny confirmed her own bias later. I wish the rest of the agents out there would list their political bias along with the genre preferences they have as Ms. Perkins, and Ms. Rappaport did. It was refreshing. :) I hope you at least got a laugh out my bit, Jordan. Thanks for commenting. It's always appreciated.
I would consider my old agent fairly conservative, but we never talked politics. He's also a very good agent. :)
As compelling as I find your evidence, Jordan, I remain unconvinced. :)
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