Letswritesomenovels Query Critique #2
Welcome back to the letswritesomenovels query critique series! In this series, I’ll be critiquing followers’ queries, helping prepare them for agents. The query featured today is for a Sci-Fi novel by @onlyheretolookatthings
Fifty years after its pyrrhic victory in the Fae War, humanity remains uneasy.
I think you introduce an interesting backdrop to your story here! It’s definitely a first sentence that makes me want to keep reading!
Owen Williams, loving husband and doting father, is horrified when his wife Tiffany falls prey to the unknown force that turns humans into Fae. After she’s killed and anti-Fae forces attempt to kidnap their children, he’s forced to flee with his family to the Fae Haven of Tearmann.
This paragraph is very strong. It does everything required of it: it immediately lets us know who our main character is, what matters most to him, and what sets the plot into motion. Which is wonderful!
The only thing I would really change is the first line. “Loving husband and doting father” reads like an epitaph: pleasant but vague. And you don’t need it—the rest of that paragraph tells us that he cares about his family.
Instead of that description, do as much as you can with 1 or 2 sentences to set up Owen as character before his wife is killed. Craft an intro that will rip our hearts out a moment later when everything changes.
Also relevant: how does he feel about the Fae before his wife’s transformation? We don’t really know, but it’s so important to the rest of the query. If he hates the Fae, if he fears them, if he secretly has always been fascinated by them—that’s something we need to know to understand the stakes of the story.
A good place to sneak this opinion into this paragraph is when you introduce his wife’s transformation. After that sentence I would recommend a brief description of 1. what it means to turn Fae and 2. why it’s so horrifying.
Upon reaching the Haven, Owen is thrown headfirst into the strange world of the twelve Fae races living under the protection of the Fae Queen.
Your query is on the shorter side, so you have some space here to give us some juicy details about this “strange world.” Describe it a bit for us in two or three vivid sentences. Tell us how to feel about the Fae Queen. (Is she scary? Mysterious? Beloved?) Show off some of your world building skills. To make these new descriptions really carry their weight in this query, describe it from Owen’s point of view -- the things he finds strange, that fascinate him, scare him, excite him, etc. Are the Fae as terrible as he was probably told they would be? Are they not what he expected? Play up that tension, because it’s so important to the hook of this query.
The tension between the Fae and humans approaches a breaking point as his children succumb to the change one by one. When Owen is confronted by a force that threatens everything he is trying to protect, he must choose between his family and the world he knows.
This paragraph is a good hook—the sentences themselves are lovely and the general structure is perfect—but it can be made more compelling if the stakes are more specific. Tell us what that force is—it’s far too vague for me to understand how it’s a threat. If it’s meant to be a mystery, at the very least I need to know what its nature is (human, army, force of nature, virus, evil scientist, etc.) and what it can do (blow Haven up, change every human into Fae, kill Owen’s children, start a war, etc.) Tell us exactly what is being threatened. Tell us why “the world he knows” is even a choice for this doting, loving father when his children are on the line.
You’ve mentioned on your website that you’re interested in Science Fiction so HAVEN, a science fiction novel complete at around 103,000 words with series potential, might be of special interest to you. HAVEN will appeal to fans of Frankenstein and Dr. Franklin’s Island.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
There’s nothing in this query that reads as science-y, so I’m interested to know what science fiction elements are in it. I think if you want to show us some science-y aspects they can come in your description of the human world Own lives in, your description of the Fae world, your description of “the force”—if it’s a scientific achievement by a mad scientist (like your comp titles lead me to believe) that tells us a lot of what we need to know.
Speaking of the comp titles, Frankenstein and Dr. Franklin’s Island are both rather old and tell me very similar things about the book (And I love the Dr. Franklin’s Island reference, I loved that book so much when I was younger!!). I would suggest axing Frankenstein as a comp, and choosing a Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel from the past 5 years or so instead.
Otherwise, this paragraph is in good shape!!
The general structure of this query is great. It has so many of the elements a compelling query needs. The language is lovely and everything is easy to understand. The novel length fits its genre. This query has extraordinary bones, and it’s almost where it needs to be. I know it may seem like I’ve given you a lot of changes here, but really, it’s mostly just a matter of adding an extra four or five sentences--and, coming in slightly under 200 words, I think you have ample room to add them.
I hope this all helps! Thanks for sending your query in!
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