Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.
I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.
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My thoughts are in blue, words to delete are in red, suggested rephrasing is in orange.
Seventeen-year-old Cal Anderson has a secret: he can rewind time five seconds. It’s a neat trick for dodging punches or cheating on tests, but when he discovers his ability comes from the Roman gods—and that his destiny is written in an ancient book of prophecies—his life veers off course. This is a great hook! Cal isn’t just an ordinary teenager; he’s the reincarnated grandson of Julius Caesar, descended from Venus herself. And the accident that killed his mother? Maybe it wasn’t his fault after all. I think a little more here. Is this something that he's always blamed himself for? What happened? Just a line would help.
When Cal finds a new prophecy hinting at his mother’s resurrection, he’s willing to risk everything to bring her back—even if it means rewriting history. But the gods who took her from him have laid a trap: to complete the prophecy, Cal must travel to 408 AD, How, if he can only go back five seconds? a time when barbarian Goths stand on the brink of burning Rome to the ground. If he fails, Fails at what? the city will fall. How is it a trap? What do the gods gain? If he succeeds, the consequences could be even worse. What does this mean? Along the way, he falls for Amalia, a half-Goth girl fated to die in his prophecy.What's the timeline here? Is he existing in both the present and the past? With the gods pulling the strings, Cal faces an impossible choice: save his mother, protect the city, or follow his heart—even if it means dooming them all. Why would following his heart mean dooming them all?
THE AMULETS OF CAESAR is a 92,000-word YA historical fantasy that blends the fatalistic themes of Threads That Bind by Kika Hatzopoulou with the mythological stakes of Lore by Alexandra Bracken and the cunning heists of Among Thieves by M.J. Kuhn. It is a standalone novel with series potential.
I’m querying you because [personalized reason for querying the agent]. My passion for history has fueled a lifelong obsession with ancient civilizations, leading to trips to Rome and Istanbul and an alarming ability to turn any conversation into a history lesson.
Overall, this is in pretty good shape, but you need to draw the plot a little more clearly. Why does he have to save one or the other? Why would the gods lay this trap in the first place, are they just being cruel and this is entertainment for them? Draw more clearly the through lines between the fate of the city and the fate of the women in his life, and what outcomes result from each. Also, I don't really know what he's supposed to be doing... leading an army? Fighting? It just says "if he fails," so we need more detail there.