Slushpile
Querying

Handling rejection without losing momentum

Every querying writer receives rejections. Most queries end in rejection. The useful question isn't how to avoid them — it's how to extract whatever signal they carry, respond professionally (usually not at all), and keep the list moving.

The four kinds of rejection

TypeWhat it meansSignal
No responseAgent's policy or backlog. Most agencies now state "no response means no" after 6–12 weeks.None. Move on at the agent's stated window.
Form rejectionAgent or reader decided to pass from the query or sample pages alone.Nearly none, individually. A pattern across many agents = check the query.
Personalized pass on queryAgent wrote a sentence or two specific to your pitch.Some. Acknowledges the book. Specifics are often still boilerplate.
Pass on partial or fullAgent requested pages and declined after reading.Substantial. Especially if they name what didn't work — take that seriously.

Reading the pattern, not the individual response

A single form rejection says almost nothing. A pattern of responses says a lot. After you've sent about fifteen queries:

A spreadsheet or the submission tracker makes this pattern visible. A vague sense of "things are going badly" is less useful than "14 form rejections, 2 personalized, 0 requests after 16 queries — the first pages probably need another pass."

What to do about a personalized rejection

A personalized rejection is a gift and a trap. The gift: an agent took time to name something. The trap: the reason they gave may be generic, may be a tactful way of saying "not for me," and may not apply to other agents at all.

Treat a single personalized rejection as one data point. Do not rewrite the manuscript because one agent said the pacing felt uneven. Wait for three agents to say similar things, independently, and then take it seriously.

Do not reply to argue. Do not reply to ask for more detail. Do not reply with a revision and a request for reconsideration. A very brief, warm thank-you — one sentence — is acceptable, but optional. Never required. Many writers simply file and move on.

What to do about a full manuscript pass

A pass on the full is the rejection that hurts most and teaches most. An agent read your whole book and said no. The reasons they give — if they give reasons — are usually the most reliable feedback you will get outside of a paid critique:

Hold revision decisions for a week after the pass. The immediate reaction is rarely the revision decision.

Staying functional

Rejection fatigue is real, and it compounds. A few practices that help:

When the answer is finally yes

A full request that becomes an offer of representation is worth a different kind of attention. Do not immediately say yes. Thank the agent, confirm you have the offer in writing, and notify every other agent currently reading the query, the partial, or the full. A standard nudge runs: "I wanted to let you know I've received an offer of representation from another agent. I'm giving all agents currently considering the manuscript two weeks to weigh in." Two weeks is the convention.

An offer of representation often produces several more offers in that two-week window — because an offer is a signal that triggers other agents to move the manuscript to the top of the pile. Use the time to talk to each agent, ask about their editorial vision, their communication style, and their plans for the book. Choose on fit, not on prestige alone.