Mar 13, 2009

Query- The Stolen Moon of Londor

Dear Mr. Blank:

My name is Aaron Stephens, and I would like to submit my fantasy novel The Stolen Moon of Londor (93,200 words) for representation by your agency.

The era of peace among the elves, men, and dwarves comes to an end when one of Londor's twin moons disappears from the heavens. Without the moon's balancing effect, evil forces grow bold, and warfare, sickness, and chaos threaten life itself.

Hearing the prayers of desperation that ride on the violent winds, the ancient wizard Randor Miithra, servant to the elf-gods, takes it upon himself to mend the world he has sworn to protect. The task will not be an easy one, though, for the wizard, too, has begun to feel the effects of the world's imbalance. As Randor struggles to maintain some semblance of his powers, he meets a secretive band of colorful characters from all walks of life, drawn together by a common goal: to find the stolen moon, whatever the cost. It does not take Randor and his motley company long to see that someone or something does not want the moon returned to the heavens. After encountering werewolves and magical monks along the perilous journey, they learn that the warlock Lord Adian has used his dark powers to pull the moon from the sky, only to give it as a bauble to a beautiful enchantress. Randor and company must hasten to Adian's stronghold, which is protected by legions of soldiers, and reclaim the moon before it is too late.

My extensive background in theater and martial arts has also aided me in fleshing out action sequences and building compelling, diverse characters. You can find a sample chapter, an audio excerpt, and artwork for The Stolen Moon of Londor at my website, www.apstephens.com. I have been writing for seven years.

The Stolen Moon of Londor is the first book of my WHITE SHADOW SAGA trilogy, and would appeal to readers of Terry Brooks as well as other fantasy readers. I would be happy to send you sample chapters or the entire manuscript at your request.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

Sincerely,

Me

Chapter One: A Great Downfall

Chapter One: A Troubled World

In the dawn of Londor’s greatest tragedy, the elf-mercenary, Gildan, sat near his campfire—pondering the fate of the world. The summer night was bitter, yet calm in this mysterious time. Gildan was accompanied closely by two fellow elves, Faragen and Telsar, as they rested uncomfortably underneath a large oak tree before their soldiers of the Obinoth Kingdom. The elves took refuge from their travels at the edge of the Plains of Erogd, a place which was all too familiar to them.

Many other campfires laid a short distance behind Gildan and the two Obinoth officers as the mercenary granted the soldiers under his authority short respite after two strenuous days of marching back into the west. Soft songs and inaudible conversations hazed the night air.

Gildan looked over to the trunk of the tree where the famed wizard, Randor Miithra, rested peacefully, sitting propped up with his wide-brimmed hat of blue felt covering his face. His cloak lay motionless in the weak breeze from the vast fields. Gildan smiled slightly as he brushed his tall, green hair back, forever grateful to the wizard’s role in the recent victory of the mercenary and the elves of Obinoth.

As Gildan led the remainder of his army towards the Obinoth Kingdom, his thoughts were consumed with many items of business—with no apparent answers thus far.

“Is there anything either of us can do for you, sir?” Telsar asked.

“No,” Gildan replied, looking at Telsar, a sturdy young elf, who reminded Gildan of himself in his younger days. “Just try and rest. We will be on the move again shortly.”

Telsar nodded and shifted his silver armor before leaning back on his elbows. “I hope Obinoth is safe. I have much to attend to once we are returned.”

“As do I,” said Gildan. “Though I will no longer be able to assist you or your king, my future days are now certain to be full of work from those wishing to solve this mystery.”

“Indeed, sir.”

Gildan laid back in the soft grass and looked into the heavens. The memories of the recent night of catastrophe charged to the forefront of his mind, and he embraced the details of his victory, once again.

Two nights ago, Gildan and his elf-knights drew up at the edge of a dark, wooded valley—once again on the heels of the Obinoth’s ancient foes. The twin moons rode high in the clear night sky, casting muted double shadows beneath the trees. For forty miles the army had crossed the Plains of Erogd, a region once known for its placid rivers and lush fields. But now the beauty of this land was tainted, its rivers polluted with blood and its fields heaped with the bodies of the slain enemy. None of the Obinoth had ever traveled this far east, and now fatigue weighed heavier on them even more than even their pierced and dented armor.

Gildan paced alone before the awaiting ranks, his finely crafted, short yellow cape billowing in the constant breeze. The cape was the only personal clothing effect he kept with him, leaving his usual wardrobe of extravagant jackets, pants, and boots behind. These were set aside for uniformity of Obinoth’s black clothing and silver armor, not very pleasing to Gildan’s taste. His green eyes scanned the valley below, seeking out his next move, as his fingers tapped the silver buckle on his precious leather belt.

Telsar and Faragen approached quietly and stood at attention.
“We await your command, Gildan,” said Faragen.

Gildan turned, looking beyond them to the gathered troops, seeing the fading morale written on every face. “We need to end this tonight,” he said at last. “Send a small squad of scouts to get the lay of the land. I do not know much about this place. Have them search out the Rhingar forces, but tread with caution—the scouts must not be seen.”

“Yes, sir,” replied Faragen.

“Report to me once the sweep is complete.” Gildan paused. “Now I must speak with our advisor.”

The two lieutenants saluted and returned to the ranks.

As Gildan strode to the boulder at the dark wood’s edge, he looked uneasily up at the mountains that surrounded the small valley on three sides.

For centuries the Rhingar had attempted to overthrow their neighboring country, the Obinoth Kingdom, yet had never been successful. The Rhingar wished nothing more than to seize the Obinoth capitol, Handefel, and destroy it—for it was in Handefel that the founding fathers of the Rhingar Kingdom perished during the Dark War. For the past two hundred years the Rhingar burdened the Obinoth, bent on vengeance for the spirits of their ancient heroes.

For months on end both armies
waged war at the edges of the Obinoth Kingdom until, at last, the Obinoth drove their enemies outside its borders. Yet they pursued the Rhingar into the east with orders from their king to eliminate them—no matter the distance traveled. The Obinoth were determined more than ever to convey to the Rhingar that they would never yield to them.

There, standing alone upon one of the many boulders and puffing a long-stemmed pipe, was Randor Miithra, the eldest servant of the elven god, Ethindar. Randor, as he was simply called, was invested with all the magic and arcane wisdom of his famed order of wizards. He stood tall, shrouded in his deep-blue cloak, uncowed by the continuous battles and lack of rest. Though he had seen eight thousand winters, he looked like a human of thirty. His face was shadowed from the moonlight by his ever-present hat.

This campaign was not the first encounter for Gildan and Randor, befriending one another many decades ago. Gildan always welcomed the opportunity to fight alongside his oldest friend and closest confidant.

Gildan stepped up onto the boulder and held silent.

“I see you have finally sent scouts about the perimeter, my old friend.”

“Indeed. You have tracked the Rhingar for me across Erogd, but I will let these elves survey this instance,” Gildan replied. “But…what do you make of this, Randor?”

“That is a good question,” the wizard replied. He slid his dark-tinted spectacles up his narrow nose and puffed again at his pipe. “Do you know where you find yourself?” Randor grinned slightly.

“No. I have traveled far and wide, but this place has no particular memory for me.”

“Before you lies the Valley of Siln.”

“Siln,” whispered Gildan. “What can you tell me of this place?”

“A featureless, barren place, with neither inhabitants nor wildlife—unless you love the company of scorpions.” Randor paused to savor the pipe’s comforting taste. “Only one road leads into and out of the valley…” Gildan turned his head and looked at the wizard. “This lonesome road is the one that you and the Obinoth now control.”

“Are you certain of this?”

“Although many years have passed since last I was here, I doubt anyone has altered this land.”
Before the elf-mercenary could reply, Randor raised his hand and added, “I cannot be certain of their strategy here, but nevertheless, we must not falter now. You hold the advantage, Gildan, and you must keep it this time. I grow weary of all this cat-and-mouse.”

“Trust me, Randor, when I say that I will hold true to my vow and see this to its end. The Rhingar are fools, and we shall slaughter every foul one of them. Besides, the gold I was paid is wearing thin to my terms of this job.” Gildan scanned the forest, looking for some clue to evil’s whereabouts. Even aided by the light of the two moons, his green eyes picked up nothing helpful. “They are unpredictable this night,” the elf observed. “Not one campfire, nor a single piercing shriek. Yes, the Rhingar are behaving most strangely.”

5 comments:

Hayley E. Lavik said...

I think your premise is intriguing, but I'd suggest giving us a character to latch on to sooner. Give the premise ("the era of peace...") and then introduce your protagonist, who I assume is the ancient wizard Randor Miithra. I would also suggest cutting the summary off at an earlier cliffhanger.

Maybe explain the effects he feels and why that's something for us to worry about, and then cut to your marketing info. The rest of the info on the plot feels like it's getting farther into the plot than you want for a pitch. (If the agent wants a synopsis, that's another thing of course :)

I would also suggest (and this is a personal thought, as I can't speak from experience) that you would be better off letting your chapter samples speak for your compelling characters and action sequences. I wonder if an agent will consider your theater and martial arts background relevant info at this stage.

I hope this is helpful. All the best in your query process!

Anonymous said...

Your query reads more like a synopsis, an incomplete synopsis since a synopsis tells the entire story.

There are a lot of fantasy novels being queried, and you need to focus on how your novel is different. You need to find your hook.

Also you do need to give us a sense of plot, what is the main conflict and the stakes, but we also need a feel for your main character for us to sympathize with.

Check out agent Nathan Bransford's blog. He has a lot of posts discussing the elements of a good query letter.

Good luck!!

The Screaming Guppy said...

My name is Aaron Stephens, and I would like to submit my fantasy novel The Stolen Moon of Londor (93,200 words) for representation by your agency.

This is kind of a boring opening sentence. We’ll find out about your name and info later. You need to dive right into the starting to sell your book.

The era of peace among the elves, men, and dwarves comes to an end when one of Londor's twin moons disappears from the heavens. Without the moon's balancing effect, evil forces grow bold, and warfare, sickness, and chaos threaten life itself.

I think you’ll lose 99% of the agents here. A lot of them complain about not seeing fantasy that branches away from the norm – elves, men and dwarves. Londor sounds like Gundor, which makes this whole thing sound like a copy of Lord of the Rings – exactly what agents don’t want to see. While the idea of the vanishing moon is kind of cool, the rest “evil grows bold, warfare, sickness and chaos threaten life” sounds like it came from a cookie cutter.

Hearing the prayers of desperation that ride on the violent winds, the ancient wizard Randor Miithra, servant to the elf-gods, takes it upon himself to mend the world he has sworn to protect. The task will not be an easy one, though, for the wizard, too, has begun to feel the effects of the world's imbalance. As Randor struggles to maintain some semblance of his powers, he meets a secretive band of colorful characters from all walks of life, drawn together by a common goal: to find the stolen moon, whatever the cost. It does not take Randor and his motley company long to see that someone or something does not want the moon returned to the heavens. After encountering werewolves and magical monks along the perilous journey, they learn that the warlock Lord Adian has used his dark powers to pull the moon from the sky, only to give it as a bauble to a beautiful enchantress. Randor and company must hasten to Adian's stronghold, which is protected by legions of soldiers, and reclaim the moon before it is too late.

Small FYI (and I don’t know that this matters at all) but Mithra is a race from a popular online RPG game.

“Secretive band of colorful characters” is vague. Your main character is fitting right into the rest of the Lord of the Rings feelings being a wizard, so these other characters are your change to bring something more original to the table.

As the above poster said, this reads like a very vague synopsis. Again, I think the moon idea is a cool, and the fact that someone now holds it as a bauble is neat. But I have no interest in your character or your world as they are presented here.

My extensive background in theater and martial arts has also aided me in fleshing out action sequences and building compelling, diverse characters. You can find a sample chapter, an audio excerpt, and artwork for The Stolen Moon of Londor at my website, www.apstephens.com. I have been writing for seven years.

This entire paragraph is irrelevant. If you don’t have real credentials – aka published writing or a career that relates to your project – you don’t put in stuff about yourself and your hobbies, or how long you've loved writing. You can, however, leave the reference for your blog so that the agent can go and read more of your work if they feel so inclined.

The Stolen Moon of Londor is the first book of my WHITE SHADOW SAGA trilogy, and would appeal to readers of Terry Brooks as well as other fantasy readers. I would be happy to send you sample chapters or the entire manuscript at your request.

Good to mention the potential for a trilogy, but it also might be good to hint if the book can stand alone. Personally, I don’t like making a comparison to other authors, but you approach it in a way here that isn’t egotistical. You don’t say “I AM the next Terry Brooks” just that your writing might appear to the same audience.

I agree that you should take a visit to http://nathanbransford.blogspot.com/, http://theswivet.blogspot.com/ or other agent sites for tips on query writing.

I think the biggest hurdle you have to overcome is pitching your novel in a way that doesn't talk about the overused fantasy staples, but about how you take the genre and do something different with it.

Good luck.

Rick Daley said...

Hi Aaron,

I think the foundation of the story is solid. I agree with The Screaming Guppy that the first sentence should not include your name and word count. Your name is going to be in your signature, so it's redundant to lead with it. Many agents prefer the title and word count at the end of the query, so you can start with a hook.

You do seem to have a few LOTR similarities. Miithra is remiinscent of Gandalf (AKA Mithrander, at least I think that's how you spell it). The plot is unique compared to LOTR, make sure you demonstrate why your characters are unique.

I don't think you need to talk about your background in martial arts or theater. You manuscript will show that your characters are compelling and that your action is staged well. Also, unless your writing was published, I wouldn't mention that you have been writing for seven years. List straight credentials (my piece TITLE was published in XYZ).

Anette J Kres said...

They’ll get your name at the end, so you don’t need it at the beginning. Round word counts to the nearest thousand. You could take the info in the first paragraph and put it with the second to last paragraph. “The Stolen Moon of Londor (93,000 words) is a fantasy novel and is the first in the White Shadow Saga trilogy.” Your second paragraph is premise, where it needs to be hook. We need to meet Randor there and find out what his biggest conflict is and why we should care about him.