Slushpile
Querying

Choosing comp titles

A comparable title — "comp" — is a published book you name in your query to tell an agent where your novel lives on a shelf. Good comps answer a commercial question that a pitch cannot: who has bought this kind of book before, and can we sell another one?

What a comp actually signals

Agents work in a commercial ecosystem. When they pitch your book to editors, they will use comps to establish the kind of reader your book has and the kind of publishing precedent that makes it sellable. Your query comps are a test run. An agent reading "RECENT LITERARY THRILLER by A and RECENT LITERARY THRILLER by B" gets three things immediately: the genre, the market position, and proof that you read in your category. Comps that fail on any of those three don't do their job.

Comps are not a claim that your book is as good as the comp. They are a claim that your book lives near the comp on a shelf. Plenty of writers cringe at naming a bestseller they admire, as if that were boasting. It isn't — so long as the comp is recent and reasonable in scale.

The three rules

There are three working constraints on a good comp:

  1. Recent. Published in the last three to five years. The market shifts. A comp to a 2002 breakout tells an agent you read the bestseller list fifteen years ago. A comp to a book from last spring tells an agent you read the bestseller list last spring.
  2. Real in scale. Not a book that sold a million copies and spawned a film franchise, and not a book from a tiny indie press that sold four hundred copies. A mid-list book from a major publisher, or a successful indie from a well-regarded small press, is the sweet spot. "If my book performs like this one, we will all be pleased" is the right register.
  3. Close in fit. Genre, tone, structure, audience. A comp that's in the right category but wrong tone confuses more than it helps. "Dark, quiet literary horror" needs a comp that is dark, quiet, and literary — not a splashy commercial horror novel with the same subgenre tag.

Two comps is standard. Three is fine if they are genuinely doing different work (one for tone, one for structure, one for audience, say). More than three is too many.

How to find comps

There is no shortcut for actually reading in your category. Agents can tell when a comp has been Google-selected from a list of "books like X." But some concrete methods:

Make a short-list of eight to twelve possibilities, then narrow to two that genuinely share a sensibility with your book. You should be able to articulate, in one sentence, what each comp shares with your novel ("This book shares its domestic-horror register and its rural New England setting"). If you can't say it, the comp is wrong.

Common comp mistakes

Beyond novels

For nonfiction, the rules are the same but the stakes are even clearer: a nonfiction proposal that comps the wrong books is instantly dismissed. Publishers are buying the market, and the comps are the market. For memoir, comp recent literary memoirs with a similar register. For prescriptive nonfiction, comp recent books that solved a similar problem for a similar audience.

For short fiction collections, comps can be recent short-story collections, but some writers also comp a novel that shares the collection's sensibility, noting the difference in form. For poetry, comps usually don't appear in queries at all — most poetry submissions don't have query letters in the trade-fiction sense.