Sunday, 15 February 2026

10 UK literary agents currently open to romance fiction submissions (2026)

Looking for UK literary agents for romance fiction? These 10 agents are currently open to submissions in 2026 and actively seeking contemporary and commercial romance.

Romance fiction remains one of the most commercially powerful genres in publishing.

From contemporary romantic comedies to historical love stories and emotionally layered relationship dramas, romance readers are loyal, vocal and constantly searching for their next obsession.

Friday, 13 February 2026

What’s on my radar: when a cover makes me preorder

From Little Red Death by Alexandra Benedict to wider trends in fiction design, this post explores why book covers still influence what we read, share and preorder.
There is a very particular thrill to a cover reveal. I know there is for me. It is such a delicious moment. 

It is not the algorithmic sort of thrill, not the flash-sale urgency of consumer culture, but that quieter jolt. The moment you see a cover and think, I don’t know what this is yet, but I want to live inside it. I admit I do sometimes (not always) judge a book by its cover. I do not feel guilty for doing so.

10 UK literary agents currently open to romantasy fiction submissions (2026)

Looking for UK literary agents for romantasy fiction? These 10 agents are currently open to submissions in 2026 and actively seeking romantic fantasy novels.
Romantasy is no longer a niche. It is one of the most commercially powerful genres in publishing right now.

Blending fantasy world-building with central romantic arcs, romantasy thrives on tension, chemistry, high stakes and emotional payoff. Think epic settings, dangerous alliances, morally grey love interests and slow-burn desire.

Wednesday, 11 February 2026

10 UK literary agents currently open to fantasy fiction submissions (2026)

Looking for UK literary agents for fantasy fiction? These 10 agents are currently open to submissions in 2026 and actively seeking adult fantasy novels.
Fantasy fiction in the UK is thriving. From epic multi-book sagas to intimate myth-inspired standalones, agents are actively seeking bold new voices in the genre.

If you’re writing high fantasy, contemporary fantasy, myth retellings, dark fantasy or speculative crossover fiction, the agents below are currently open to submissions and actively looking for fantasy manuscripts.

Tuesday, 10 February 2026

20 UK literary agents you can submit your novel to right now

A calm, realistic guide to finding a literary agent in the UK, with five clear steps for debut fiction writers navigating the submission process. Navigating the UK literary agent scene can feel opaque, but it helps to know who’s out there. 

This isn’t a definitive list, but these are twenty respected, active agents known for championing strong literary and commercial fiction.

Monday, 9 February 2026

10 UK literary agents currently open to book club fiction submissions (2026)

Searching for UK literary agents for book club fiction? These 10 agents are currently open to submissions in 2026 and actively seeking upmarket and book club novels.Book club fiction sits in that rich middle ground between literary and commercial.

It is character-led but accessible. Emotional but plot-driven. The kind of novel readers press into a friend’s hands and say, “You have to read this.”

If you’re writing contemporary fiction with strong themes, layered relationships and discussion potential, you may be writing book club fiction.

Saturday, 7 February 2026

After Lonesome Dove: why Cormac McCarthy’s Border Trilogy is the Western to read next

Loved Lonesome Dove? Skip the sequels and discover why Cormac McCarthy’s Border Trilogy is the modern literary Western readers should turn to next.
For many readers, Lonesome Dove is not simply a favourite novel but a defining one. It leaves such an indelible impression. 

It certainly did for me. It arrives with deceptive ease, settles in slowly, and leaves behind the feeling of having lived another life. Its greatness lies not only in its characters, vast landscape and epic scope, but also in its sense of finality. It says what it needs to say, fully and generously.

Which is precisely why it is best left alone.

Friday, 30 January 2026

Waiting for the winter that never comes: George R. R. Martin, the long delay, and the afterlife of Game of Thrones

A reflective essay on George R. R. Martin’s long-delayed The Winds of Winter, the legacy of Game of Thrones, and what it means to wait for a story that may never end — with book recommendations for the journey.
It’s been nearly fifteen years since A Dance with Dragons was published. That was 2011, the same year Game of Thrones first aired on HBO, when Twitter was still young, and we had no inkling of the juggernaut the series would become. 

Back then, The Winds of Winter seemed just over the horizon. George R. R. Martin had already begun writing it. Some readers expected it within a few years. Many still believed that the books would finish before the show caught up.

That never happened. HBO's Game of Thrones finished almost six years ago, and Martin has now been working on The Winds of Winter for well over a decade. 

Tuesday, 27 January 2026

It’s hard to get a literary agent — here’s how to improve your odds

Less than 10% of fiction writers get lite
If you’re struggling to find a literary agent, you’re not alone, and you’re not doing it wrong. 

The truth is, the odds are tough. Fewer than 10% of all fiction writers ever secure representation. Yes. You read that correctly. That's how hard it is to find a literary agent. 

Saturday, 24 January 2026

Julian Barnes: The six essential reads


With the news that Julian Barnes is soon to publish his final novel, this feels like the perfect moment to look back at his quietly brilliant career. From A Sense of an Ending to Flaubert’s Parrot and beyond, here are six essential books to get you started—or to remind you why he’s one of Britain’s finest literary voices.
A Sense of an Ending had been on my to-be-read pile for a long time, and I can’t believe I put it off for so long.

 It is such a wonderful book, and told in just 150 pages. It has the feel of a much longer novel because it packs so much in. Such a worthy Booker Prize winner.

Wednesday, 21 January 2026

How to tell if an agent is right for your book (not just your dreams)

Before you sign with a literary agent, here’s how to make sure they’re a good fit for your writing goals, style, and long-term creative vision.
So, you've got an offer from a literary agent. It is an amazing moment. After the champagne has settled (or the cautious optimism kicks in), the real work begins: deciding if this is the right person to guide your writing career.

It’s tempting to say yes immediately, and many do, but not every agent is the right fit.  I've been there a couple of times, and for whatever reason, it did not pan out. Here’s how to assess whether they’re not only excited about your book but also aligned with your long-term creative goals.

Monday, 19 January 2026

The call: what happens when a literary agent wants to sign you?

Got the call from a literary agent? Here’s how to handle that conversation, what to expect, and what questions to ask before you sign.
You’ve done the research, sent the query, and waited patiently, or obsessively, and now it’s happened. An agent wants to talk. This is what’s known as the call

For many writers, it’s thrilling and surreal. It can also be nerve-racking. You should enjoy the moment, and congratulate yourself on the hard work. You have achieved something very few writers do. I certainly did, as it is so hard to get a literary agent, and I think it is getting harder. 

Friday, 16 January 2026

How to write a query letter that doesn’t sound desperate

A practical, voice-aware guide to writing a query letter that reflects your novel’s strengths — and doesn’t sound desperate in the process.

How to write a query letter that doesn’t sound desperate

Query letters walk a tightrope. Too humble and you undersell the work. Too bold and you risk sounding like you’ve written the next Ulysses. 

The trick is to find a voice that reflects your book’s tone while presenting yourself as a professional, not a hopeful. 

The literary middle: Loving books that don't go viral

A celebration of midlist and underrated fiction—books that didn’t go viral but still leave their mark.
In the age of algorithmic discovery, it often feels like the same ten books are everywhere. You open Instagram, you see Fourth Wing. You open TikTok, it's The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo. Twitter/x? Something about Babel or The Secret History

There’s nothing wrong with loving a popular book. The best ones resonate for a reason. But in all the noise, it can be hard to hear the quieter voices. The books that didn’t land on a major award shortlist or trend on BookTok, but still left something behind in you.

Friday, 9 January 2026

How to find a literary agent: five honest steps for fiction writers

A calm, realistic guide to finding a literary agent in the UK, with five clear steps for debut fiction writers navigating the submission process.Finding a literary agent can feel like trying to catch the attention of a stranger in a crowded room, while whispering. There’s mystique, gatekeeping, and a mountain of mixed advice. But the process isn’t as impenetrable as it seems. Here’s a grounded guide to finding a literary agen t in five real steps.

Wednesday, 7 January 2026

Reading in the gaps: Why we return to books that broke us

Why We Revisit the Books That Broke Us
There are books we finish and put down, and for a while, we are unable to speak. These are books that pull the air from our lungs. That leave us raw, like skin rubbed thin. And yet, somehow, we return to them.

Not immediately, of course. Often, we need time. Months. Years. Distance to recover from the ache they left behind. But they are on our minds, and the pull is there. Like gravity drawing us back to earth.

Sunday, 28 December 2025

Novels I didn’t finish, and why that’s OK

Stories I didn’t finish and why stopping is part of reading
There’s a quiet guilt attached to not finishing a book.  No longer on your TBR. Instead consigned to DNF. A sense that stopping is a kind of failure, or worse, a confession about the sort of reader you are. We talk easily about books we loved, books we devoured, books we raced through. We talk less about the ones we left behind, the bookmarks still sitting halfway through, the spines uncreased beyond a certain point.

For a long time, I treated unfinished books as a personal shortcoming. If I didn’t connect, I assumed the problem was attention, patience, or effort. That I hadn’t tried hard enough. But reading is not a moral exercise. It’s a relationship, and like most relationships, it’s shaped by timing, mood, expectation, and capacity.

Friday, 19 December 2025

Reading in the liminal: The books that hold us between seasons

A cozy reading corner featuring a stack of five books on a wooden shelf: "Blue Nights" by Joan Didion, "Stoner" by John Williams, "Gilead" by Marilynne Robinson, "Outline" by Rachel Cusk, and "Foster" by Claire Keegan. Beside the books are a ceramic mug, reading glasses, and a folded wool blanket, all illuminated by natural light from an adjacent window.
There is a particular kind of reading that feels like standing in a doorway, neither fully in nor fully out.

Not every book asks for deep attention, but some arrive quietly and stay with you longer than expected. They don’t rush to a resolution or pull you along with pace. Instead, they hold space, for a mood, a shift, a moment that hasn't yet found its shape.

Wednesday, 10 December 2025

The waiting game: Why Donna Tartt’s silence is part of the myth

Why Donna Tartt’s Disappearance Makes Her Even More Legendary
Some authors tour, tweet, podcast, publish—and then there is Donna Tartt. Three novels in more than three decades, no confirmed interviews since 2016, and not a whisper of what she might be writing now. And yet, her presence is everywhere. On BookTok, in dark academia mood boards, in conversations about obsessive friendships and beautiful prose and the kind of writing that insists you slow down and read every word.

It is a peculiar kind of fame: literary, elusive, enduring. And it begs the question—how has Tartt managed to become one of the most recognisable cult authors of our time by doing, ostensibly, so little?

Monday, 8 December 2025

The death of genre? Why writers are dismantling old labels

Blurring the Lines: How Writers Are Dismantling Genre Boundaries
It used to be so simple. You wrote a crime novel, or a romance, or a dystopia. Bookshop shelves were helpful about such things: spine out, genre in. Literary fiction sat in its elegant corner, cool, aloof, unbothered by the commercial hustle elsewhere. Genre fiction was the grafter, busy, popular, and a little bit suspect.

But something is shifting. Writers are slipping past those borders, and readers are following them. In fact, they’re relishing the trespass. Literary novels are embracing dragons and time travel. Crime writers are reaching for unreliable narrators and experimental prose. Romance authors are crafting love stories that refuse tidy arcs. In 2025, the lines feel not so much blurred as beside the point.