What do I do if every Query response I get back is that it is a good work but the don't want a first time publishing author. I have two books ready and all the credible publishers I have tried said they won't even look at a submission without an agent but no agent I have talked to wants a new author.
Most of the good big publishers won't consider your work unless it's submitted through an agent.
All good agents who are open to queries will consider all books submitted to them, regardless of their authors' publication status.
The trick is to write a brilliant book first, then query it appropriately to the right agents.
That trick isn't as easy as it sounds: it takes a lot of skill and hard work, and a good understanding of the query process. But you're at AbsoluteWrite, so you've got a head start: this is the best site for writers you'll find.
Moving on, I'm glad that you all cleared up that little disagreement: it's so important that we assume good intentions, and try not to rise to any perceived slights (which often don't actually exist).
I have gone at this in the most professional of ways
I mean this kindly: but I'm worried that you haven't worked as professionally as you think.
In this thread, which you started a little over two months ago, you stated that you'd published a book with Tate Publishing, which is a notorious vanity publisher.
Now, I'm glad your book is no longer with Tate and I think you've done the right thing in getting your rights back from them: but the fact that you published with them shows that you have made mistakes (don't worry, we all have!) and I worry that you might still be making them. Especially as your assertion that "no agent I have talked to wants a new author" is not remotely true of any good agents I know, but is typical scammer rhetoric.
I'm not criticising you here, I'm just concerned for you. What I hope you'll do is take some time to learn more about the querying process before sending anything off. Learn how to discriminate between good publishers and bad. Learn how good publishing works. Don't rush at being published: it won't serve you well.
I hope to see you around the boards.