
The query below is available as an ebook. Apparently a publisher folded before they got around to publishing it and the author self-published. The quality of a self-published book is always a question mark (a couple sample pages may be read here), but I feel this one is worth reprinting because several commenters said they would be interested in reading the book (after reading the revised version).
Guess the Plot
After Goya
1. Whenever Goya, a Maltese cat, slinks by, Frisky lunges on his chain. One day the chain breaks in this picture book tale about grisly death to help children prepare for life in the real world.
2. Coded clues in microtext on the canvas of two faked Goya paintings give the location of the real long-lost Goyas. But will Sabine realize it?
3. One Mexican restaurant, two dueling Mariachi bands, and an extra large order of refried beans lead Special Agent Kit Thomas to a deadly gas consortium.
4. When famed Spanish painter Francisco Goya and a smuggler accidentally swap matching suitcases, Goya loses his clothes, but gains the Holy Grail. Suddenly, the smuggler, ruthless grail collectors, and even the Spanish Inquisition are . . . after Goya!
5. Goya has stolen the Panther’s Eye –the world’s largest emerald. When Goya discovers his “client” never intended to pay him, he keeps the stone. The “client” sends his henchmen . . . after Goya.
6. 18th century Spanish painter Juan Rodrigo de Goyat could have been one of the most influential artists of his era, if only the Royal art commissions hadn't been appointed alphabetically.
Original Version
RE: AFTER GOYA: 95,000 word commercial fiction: adventure-thriller.
Dear Agent X,
I’m actively looking for representation in the United States. I’ve read your agency’s information and thought you may be interested in my novel AFTER GOYA.
AFTER GOYA [It's okay to shout the title once. After that, a calm voice will do.] is a fast moving, very visual, story of intrigue, deception and betrayal woven around the recovery of two lost miniature paintings by the great Spanish artist Goya set against the background of a terrorist bombing campaign in contemporary Spain.
AFTER GOYA [Okay, I got it. AFTER GOYA.] tells the story of how two Goya miniatures, looted during the Madrid air-raids, inspire a deadly hunt across Spain.
AFTER GOYA’s premise is built on the documented fact of a series of Luftwaffe and Italian bombing raids on Madrid between November 19th and 22nd, 1936.
AFTER GOYA [You must be in advertising; say it loud enough often enough, and it will stick in people's minds, whether they want it there or not.] takes readers on a journey into a Spain’s physical and metaphorical interior whilst engaging them with a good yarn based on real, documented events.
The following events unfold over a three-week period from mid-May to the first week of June.
Spain is in a state of tension. [Wait a minute, what's the title again? I forgot.] Radicalized Islamists, ETA remnants, and other malcontents, commit increasingly spectacular terrorist outrages…or so the public is led to believe.
When Málaga police detective, Jordi Cotelo, is ordered to follow an English associate of a Russian gangster he has no idea that events will lead him to uncovering a well developed plot to destabilize his country.
A Russian gangster, whose grandfather organized military intelligence during the Civil War, arrives in Spain with a posse of ex-special services thugs to acquire two Goyas looted by a Soviet airman in 1936.
A young German woman has been bequeathed the very same paintings by her grandfather, a former Condor Legion airman, who acquired the paintings following the Soviet pilot’s capture, interrogation and execution.
An English art researcher, hired by the Russian to authenticate and acquire the Goyas, befriends the German woman but fails to betray her. [Englishmen are too polite to betray a woman, even if they've been paid to do so.]
An ambitious young police detective is asked by his sherry-princess fiancée’s family, influential members of Blood of Spain, a neo-fascist conspiracy, to intervene and acquire the paintings so that they can be sold to raise funds for the cause. In truth they fear that discovery of the paintings will reveal that their iconic founder has a less than saintly past; having given birth to an illegitimate child (fathered by the German airman) during the Civil War. [A paragraph with more than one sentence!] [Let me get this straight. A neo-fascist conspiracy that calls itself Blood of Spain is worried about how it will look if the world discovers their founder had an illegitimate child seventy years ago?]
A legal clerk, seeking retribution for his grandparents’ murder in Dachau, initiates a rogue operation by a section of an American funded Nazi art recovery program.
An American special operations agent is hired in to protect the anonymity of the Nazi art recovery program by doing what it takes to close down the rogue operation.
When the English art researcher, James Howard-Graham, apprehends an intruder attempting to steal one of the recovered paintings, he kills him, and takes the Goya as insurance against retribution from his Russian client.
[When Evil Editor finds a book is getting complicated, he likes to make a character chart to refer to while reading. Perhaps it will also work with a query letter:
1. Jordi Cotelo (police detective)
2. Englishman (associate of Russian gangster)
3. Russian gangster (After Goyas)
4. Grandfather of Russian gangster (ex-military intelligence officer)
5. Posse of thugs (After Goyas, in employ of Russian gangster)
6. English art researcher (possibly same as #2) (after Goyas)
7. Soviet airman (looted Goyas)
8. Young German woman (was bequeathed Goyas)
9. Her grandfather (former Condor Legion airman; took Goyas from #7)
10. Ambitious young police detective (secretly after Goyas)
11. His fiancée (sherry-princess)
12. Her family (Influential in Blood of Spain--see #15)
13. German airman (possibly same as #9)
14. Goya (painter responsible for this whole mess)
15. Blood of Spain (neo-fascist conspiracy; after Goyas)
16. Their iconic founder (less than saintly)
17. Her illegitimate child (fathered by German airman #13 during civil war)
18. Legal Clerk (brings Americans in to get revenge on Nazis; after Goyas)
19. His grandparents (died in Dachau)
20. U.S. special ops agent (hired to hush up rogue Nazi art recovery operation)
21. Intruder (after one Goya)]
When the Russian responds by ordering the kidnapping of the German woman, Howard-Graham [#6] attempts to redeem the situation by commissioning a couple of Goya pastiches and arranging a hostage-paintings exchange before giving himself up to the police.
Following a bloody showdown between the Russian gang [#3, #5], Howard-Graham [#6], and Special Operations police [#20+], during which Howard-Graham [#6] is killed, Cotelo's [#1] young colleague [#10] reveals his hand and attempts to take the paintings. During a struggle the young German woman, Sabine Hassell [#8], kills him. Cotelo [#1] tampers with the evidence to make it appear as if he was the killer.
A week later Cotelo catches up with Sabine and, with the help of an academic, [Aha, # 22.] expert in the history of the Spanish far-right women's movement, unravels the story. [Can we have their notes?]
The fake paintings used during the attempted exchange are returned to Sabine. The fakes embody a message, written in microtext, [Recommendation: change title to The Goya Code.] telling Sabine where she can collect the genuine Goyas.
I would be pleased to forward the completed manuscript for your consideration, [Does it come with a study guide?] or, if you prefer, sample chapters, by either email or surface mail. I enclose an SASE for your response.
Yours sincerely,
Revised Version
Dear Agent X,
I’m actively seeking representation in the United States for my 95,000-word novel After Goya, a story of intrigue, deception and betrayal set against the background of a terrorist bombing campaign in contemporary Spain, and woven around the recovery of two lost miniature paintings by the great Spanish artist, Francisco Goya.
When word leaks out that Sabine Hassel has inherited two long-lost Goya paintings, looted during the Madrid air-raids of 1936, a Russian gangster hires a posse of thugs and English art researcher James Howard-Graham to acquire the artwork. But they aren't the only ones after the paintings. A neo-fascist group calling themselves Blood of Spain wants them, as does a rogue Nazi art recovery operation financed by a man seeking revenge for the murder of his grandparents at Dachau.
Málaga police detective, Jordi Cotelo, is put on the case. Ordered to follow Howard-Graham, he has no idea that one of his fellow detectives has his own reasons for wanting the paintings. Nor is Cotelo aware that events will soon catapult him into a well-developed terrorist plot to destabilize his country.
After Goya's premise is built on the documented fact of a series of Luftwaffe and Italian bombing raids on Madrid between November 19th and 22nd, 1936. The novel takes readers on a journey into Spain’s physical and metaphorical interior, while engaging them in an exciting yarn. I would be pleased to send the completed manuscript for your consideration. I enclose an SASE for your response.
Yours sincerely,
Notes
The query was more like a time-line graphic you might see across the bottom of a major story in Newsweek. No need to tell the entire book in your letter, just enough to make it sound like the fascinating, engrossing, "good yarn" you know that it is.
6 comments:
Here it is: http://www.amazon.com/AFTER-GOYA-Haarlson-Phillipps/dp/1908147261/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1307897523&sr=1-1
Self-pubbed.
Now that's a lot of characters!
Great rewrite, as usual, oh Evil One.
Hey - I remember this one. It was one of those that seemed to have potential. I'll check it out on Kindle!
Happy vacationing EE!
Truly a classic, EE.
Hi, thanks for reprising - made me smile and laugh out loud first time around.
Go HERE for UK info and customer review:http://www.amazon.co.uk/After-Goya-Haarlson-Phillipps/dp/1908147261/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1308034907&sr=1-3
Regards
"Let me get this straight. A neo-fascist conspiracy that calls itself Blood of Spain is worried about how it will look if the world discovers their founder had an illegitimate child seventy years ago?"
Yep, that's about it - and, if you don't know as much then you don't know their Spain.
Not your Spain, and my Spain - their Spain.
Which I know you know is different to our Spain.
Regards.
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