Slushpile

Query Letter Builder

Fill in each field. The tool assembles a query letter in the structure most agents expect: a greeting, a personalization line, a short pitch, a hook paragraph, book metadata (title, word count, genre, comps), and a brief bio. Read the full query letter guide if you want to know why each part exists.

Your query letter



How to use this

  1. Write the pitch first. The hardest field is the pitch paragraphs. Draft it separately, rewrite it five times, and then paste the final version in. Don't try to polish a pitch by filling out a form — the form is for assembling the finished pieces.
  2. Personalize per agent. The agent name and the personalization line should be rewritten for each query. A generic "Dear Agent" reads like a mass email, because it is one.
  3. Comps must be recent and real. Comparable titles tell an agent where your book sits on a shelf. They should be books published in the last three to five years, with sales performance you're comfortable being compared to.
  4. Keep the bio short. An agent who gets past the pitch is not buying you, they are buying the book. A short, honest bio beats a long, padded one every time.
  5. Always paste, never attach. Paste the letter into the body of the email. Don't attach the query itself. Attach pages only if the agent's guidelines request them.