Free Publishing Tip: The One-Page Synopsis

Alle C. Hall
2 min readNov 9, 2024

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A reader asks: do agents ever ask to see it?

Other writers report that the query letter and sample pages are much more important than the one-page synopsis I am wondering how often you’ve been asked to provide one . Thanks for any guidance.

Alle sez:

The one-page synopsis is critical. When submitting through a platform such as Query Tracker, there is a box asking for a synopsis of a word count that equaled my one-page.

Certainly, when I sent an initial query directly to an agent’s office, the common requirement was a cover letter and three chapters (or about 50 pages). However, that was not unilateral. Additionally, when asked for the full manuscript, it was all but unilateral that the agent wanted included a one or two-page synopsis. That sort of request is not one you want to respond to with: “Give me a week.” You want to have all your our submission materials lined up and ready to go before you begin your agents search.

Without meaning to overwhelm you: I did best to have on hand:

  • one-page: single-spaced in a 12-point font of a standard type such as Times New Roman, with one-inch margins
  • two-page: double spaced in a 12-point font of a standard type such as Times New Roman, with one-inch margins
  • single paragraph: four to six short sentences that is part of your cover/query letter.

Don’t worry so much about the chapter-by-chapter outline. Get that first batch of five or ten submissions out there. While waiting for your responses, research five to ten more agents. Then get your chapter-by-chapter outline together. I was only asked for once!

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Alle C. Hall
Alle C. Hall

Written by Alle C. Hall

Author, teacher, speaker. Novel: As Far as You Can Go Before You Have to Come Back: 16 honors, incldng Nancy Pearl Book Award finalist & two #1 Kindle spots.

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