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Elizabeth's avatar

I always tell people not to waste time on perfecting query letters. I have sat around with writers talking about this issue and I have never been able to believe just how much thinking goes into a query letter! Think about your opening paragraph.

Like Erik said, a bad cover letter does NOT stop a great story from getting published, and a great cover letter doesn't get a story in the door. Make it brief (Dear E., this is who I am, this is my story at X number words, it explores X themes which I've noticed in other stories you've published. X story in your last issue really resonated with me...BRIEF BIO...Yours Truly, Most Excellent Writer Friend.)

I do find the very short blips where the query says nothing but "Please see attached story" sort of annoying, perhaps because that seems so unprofessional.

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Laine Cunningham's avatar

This is all excellent advice. I'm on the board of an international magazine, and am editor of a different international lit mag called Sunspot Lit. I would add that one thing I've been seeing lately is a line about having written the work the week before. I always wonder why it's included, because it makes me think the writer is sending work out before they've really put a lot of attention into it. Perhaps it's supposed to wow me with how prolific the writer is, but it always comes off in a less than positive way. So, I'd add that to the list.

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