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What NOT to do as an author
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But, even beyond that, I learned that even an author I like may have differing tastes from my own. I learned this after I picked up a book blurbed by Neil Gaiman which I was then disappointed in.
So a blurb or rec from an author I like might get me to look at a book, but I certainly don't take it as a prompting to pick up something I might've otherwise passed up anymore.
~Li'l Ms. Non-Generic ;)

Strictly from the POV of a reader, blurbs doesn't add any meaningful allure to me. What will allure me is a good-looking book cover and a well-written synopsis.

I often refer people to the blurb I got from one well-known author, which described my book better than the back cover did. Both that and the cover were done by the same person, so you would never have gotten that book! (Provided that the back-cover description is what you meant by a synopsis.)



I spent years trying to come up with a synopsis for a query letter for my latest novel. I never succeeded in writing one, but after all that work I did have a decent tagline, logline, and back-cover description.

L. E. Modesitt, Jr.


Jacket copy is such a crapshoot. It can make a book sound terrible or awesome, but it may have nothing whatsoever to do with the book.



I call the back-cover description the blurb too, and then make it worse by calling cover-quotes from other authors blurbs as well! Now I try to call them quotes, rather than blurbs.
I started writing my own in self-defense, so now they have something to do with the story. My publisher adopted the practice and now asks the authors for some kind of text for all the books.

Don't make grammatical errors in your inquiry letter to a publisher or agent. If you do, s/he'll assume you can't write and won't even look any further.
Polish your first chapter until it shines, even if you have to rewrite it 20 times. For fiction, your first chapter is going to either turn the editor "on" or "off". And as we've seen from other posts here, it'll do the same for customers. NO "INFO DUMPS"! Haul the reader into the story line in such a way that they "have" to keep reading.
Now, do the same for the rest of the book and make sure you tie up all the loose threads at the end (unless it's a series). Remember, some of the folks here have indicated they judge a book by a random sample out of the middle.
For your back-cover (promotional material) you can be coy about the story line. But if the publisher wants a synopsis of the plot, include the ending. They want to know if you can tie it all together.

End of my rant, but I have to agree that writing expository rather than narrative gets annoying. Writers need to to work in the description through well-used details.

Agree. I reworked my own first chapter about one hundred times, so much so that I can feel my blood pressure rise if I look at it.
Typically, as an impatient reader, I find it hard to give a book more than 50 pages for it to hook me in. The first pages have to be good, but the standard can't drop off afterwards otherwise I'll abandon the read.
@Julie That does sound irritating. Reminds me of why I stopped reading Harry Potter and decided to settle for the movies; the whole retelling of his living arrangements with his aunt and uncle at the beginning of each book became very ordinary.

Solid advice too, because I wound up throwing away the first five chapters of that particular manuscript.

Because while the author might have rewritten the first chapter dozens or hundreds of times, the reader has to *get* it at first read, so easy on concepts introduced. I just tried the first book by a new highly praised author and could not make it past the first 3 chapters. I did not like the writing itself, but a major problem was her worlbuilding, she just dropped too many stupid madeup words and concepts along with geographical names, without an index or anything actually explained about that worldbuilding. A well done infodump would have improved the readability (for me at least). Instead I will never try a book by hers again.
Or then there is that very very skilled thing some authors do which is to bring up the relevant details or clues to what happened before all scattered in the first pages of a certain PoV without it being an infodump. GRRM did it very well in the first ASOIAF sequels, not sure if his series is not now too long for it, and has to have one of those synopsis right at beginning.

The response (from Dean, I believe) - a polite but truthful "Then you're doing it wrong."
And Hirondelle, I'm with you on the made-up words. I've tossed many o' Fantasy novel because there was too much faux-foreign language gibberish. I hates it, I do. XKCD said it best: http://xkcd.com/483/
This is why the British are not missed in their former colonies.

A corollary: Don't write about stuff you don't understand.
I'm looking at YOU Lee Child, British guy who's never been in the US military. (OMG the stuff he got WRONG.)
Oh and romance novelists, make sure things are anatomically possible before writing your love scenes.

who would want to take her on

That made me laugh so hard - it's almost heading into "so bad it's good" territory if you have to start disconnecting body parts :)
L. E. Modesitt, Jr.