
By Emily H. Jeffries, @emilyhjeffries
At age 28, I quit my job as an upper school theology teacher to write books. For a decade, I had studied theology and gained teaching experience. After graduate school, I had landed the perfect teaching job with a small private school in my hometown. Then suddenly my heart was leading me elsewhere, to a profession I knew nothing about.
For months, I was a writing infant, just trying to string words together that made sense in an imagined world that could hold together. When the draft was finished, I toddled into the vast world of editing and story analysis. I’d hardly got my balance before the strain of platform building and query crafting completely overwhelmed me. I was frustrated with my lack of progress. I knew there was only so much I could teach myself, no matter how many Stephen King memoirs I read.
I needed professional guidance.
Attending the 2017 Blue Ridge Mountain Christian Writers Conference terrified me. First, because I couldn’t shake my high expectations for it. What if I returned home with nothing exciting to report? I’d have nothing to show for all the months I spent preparing, all the hours I holed up in the house memorizing pitches and scrutinizing first pages. I wanted to come home with a grand announcement or nothing at all. Most of all, I wanted to say, ‘An agent offered me representation.’
A large, well-oiled conference like BRMCWC certainly merits high expectations. But here’s what I wish I had understood: the most successful BRMCWC attendee is not the most determined. Determination often involves gritted teeth, clenched fists … a stubbornness that can frequently lead to deafness. Rather, God blesses abundantly those who are open to every gift, no matter how small.
[tweet_box design=”default” float=”none” inject=”@emilyhjeffries @BRMCWC #mentor”]The Mentor Effect: BRMCWC And Finding My Literary #Agent[/tweet_box]
Three simple, seemingly minor encounters fell into my lap at last year’s conference like the sower’s seeds, poised to grow and bear fruit:
These three encounters helped me immeasurably in securing a literary agent.
It would be another four months before I was ready to re-submit my edited manuscript to an agent, and another two months before that agent would respond with a ‘Yes.’
We all could use a guiding hand. I’m grateful for BRMCWC, where I found that guidance in many forms. Now I have the great honor of working with yet another mentor, who I know will continue the work BRMCWC has begun in me. So always be on the lookout, and take advantage when your mentorship moments arise! You never know where the Holy Spirit is leading you.
*A good article on the controversy over prologues can be found here.
Emily H. Jeffries was once a middle school teacher until a handsome prince rescued her from boy farts and parent-teacher conferences so she could tend to their castle and weave tales. Her secret magical abilities are improv comedy, evading cardiovascular activity, and singing all of Les Miserables from memory. She is now represented by Julie Gwinn of The Seymour Agency. Follow her adventures at www.emilyhjeffries.com. Or, connect with Emily via Instagram, Twitter, and Pinterest.