Ok, here goes an attempt at a message.
Hi Stephen,
I wanted to reach out and say tha I was intrigued by your thoughts on the book. I am very interested in the more political side of this, and on what the future holds. I would like the book to get more people to that point. Bringing in China as a probable
goal, something to aim for, and something to bring more light to is important. They spend far more time on us than we spend on them, and the public needs to know this, and they need to know how. I think that in the end China is a target, and the biggest
possible one. I personally have been contemplating it, and to a lesser extent North Korea. The possibility for a book like this to make people think along those same lines seems important to me. You were the only one to focus in on some of the more political
issues, and specifically the future,or where this is going in terms of targets like China.
-----
Dan,
That's what I can come up with on my own.
On Wednesday, September 21, 2011, Daniel Conaway <
dconaway@writershouse.com> wrote:
> Sorry to say that Ballantine passed--they wanted more narrative and less activist messaging. Got a slightly cryptic message from SMP, will connect with him in the morning, but I'm not optimistic.
>
> Gregg, while Barrett is working on Parsley, you might want to think about drafting an email for Stephen Morrow talking about how knocked out you were by his non-manifesto idea, about China, stuff like that. I'd then revise it w you on the fly, if you want--
>
> Point is, right now we only one bidder (Public Affair) that we're sure about. Morrow was intrigued but there's a big gap betw what we discussed and what's on the page, and big gaps tend to become "No" votes--he's basically only got my say-so to imagine
you guys are on board. But if you write him tonight in a compelling way, that might make a difference. But it would have to be tonight.
>
> Dan Conaway
> Literary Agent
> Writers House