Showing posts with label Editors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Editors. Show all posts

Friday, April 15, 2011

Agents and Editors: Marietta Zacker

SCBWI WWA Spring Conference time! As always, I'm posting the links I've gathered to free interviews and information on the agents and editorial faculty that will appear at our conference this year. Sorry the links are homely, but at least you'll know where you are going! Today: Marietta Zacker.

Marietta Zacker

http://nancygallt.com/

http://agentquery.com/agent.aspx?agentid=1130

no author advance profile

http://twitter.com/agentzacker

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/03/2011-conference-series-agent-faculty_25.html

5/2010 http://community.livejournal.com/thru_the_booth/tag/marietta%20zacker

2/2010 http://faeriality.blogspot.com/2010/02/mardi-gras-wedmarketing-to-indie.html

10/2009 http://solvangsherrie.blogspot.com/2009/10/agent-spotlight-on-marietta-zacker.html

8/2009 http://scbwiconference.blogspot.com/2009/08/marietta-zacker-continued_07.html

6/2009 http://caseylmccormick.blogspot.com/2009/06/agent-spotlight-marietta-b-zacker.html

http://caseylmccormick.blogspot.com/2009/06/interview-with-literary-agent-marietta.html

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Agents and Editors: Joe Monti and Tina Wexler

SCBWI WWA Spring Conference time! As always, I'm posting the links I've gathered to free interviews and information on the agents and editorial faculty that will appear at our conference this year. Sorry the links are homely, but at least you'll know where you are going! Today: Joe Monti and Tina Wexler. Tomorrow: Marietta Zacker.

Joe Monti

http://www.bgliterary.com/contactme.html

A blank blog: http://josephmonti.blogspot.com/

Blogger profile http://www.blogger.com/profile/12487342046465829673

http://twitter.com/joemts

no agent query profile

http://www.authoradvance.com/agents/joe-monti

http://www.jacketflap.com/profile.asp?member=joemonti

http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=153976610309

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/02/2011-conference-series-agent-faculty_13.html

10/2010 http://writergirl.myartsite.com/2010/10/25/75/

10/2009 http://caseylmccormick.blogspot.com/2009/09/agent-spotlight-joe-monti.html

8/2009http://www.guidetoliteraryagents.com/blog/Agent+Advice+Joe+Monti+Of+Barry+Goldblatt+Literary+Part+I.aspx


Tina Wexler

http://www.icmtalent.com/#/Publications

http://agentquery.com/agent.aspx?agentid=627

http://www.authoradvance.com/agents/tina-dubois-wexler

http://www.jacketflap.com/profile.asp?member=TinaWexler

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/04/2011-conference-series-faculty-q-with_10.html

11/2010 http://www.intent.com/sayantanidasgupta/blog/tina-wexler-ber-cool-literary-agent-interview

7/2010 http://caseylmccormick.blogspot.com/2010/07/q-with-tina-wexler-of-icm.html

3/2010 http://caseylmccormick.blogspot.com/2010/03/agent-spotlight-tina-wexler.html

2/2010http://www.guidetoliteraryagents.com/blog/Successful+Queries+Agent+Tina+Wexler+And+Tagged.aspx

1/2010 http://anitanolan.wordpress.com/2010/01/20/what-agent-tina-wexler-is-currently-looking-for/

3/2009 http://gretchenmcneil.blogspot.com/2009/03/interview-with-tina-wexler-literary.html

2007? http://algonkianconferences.com/agent-TinaWexler.htm

9/2006 http://ridingwiththetopdown.blogspot.com/2006/09/interview-with-literary-agent-tina.html

? http://www.gumbowriters.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=32:tina-wexler-icm-talent&catid=1:agents&Itemid=13

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Agents and Editors: Liz Waniewski and Sarah Davies

SCBWI WWA Spring Conference time! As always, I'm posting the links I've gathered to free interviews and information on the agents and editorial faculty that will appear at our conference this year. Sorry the links are homely, but at least you'll know where you are going! Today: Liz Waniewski and Sarah Davies. Tomorrow: Joe Monti and Tina Wexler.

Liz Waniewski

http://us.penguingroup.com/static/pages/publishers/yr/dial.html

http://www.facebook.com/people/Liz-Waniewski-At-Dial/100000076142460#!/profile.php?id=100000076142460

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/03/2011-conference-series-editorial-art.html

11/2010 http://faeriality.blogspot.com/2010/11/interview-with-senior-editor-at-dial.html

10/2009 http://cynthialeitichsmith.blogspot.com/2009/10/editor-interview-liz-waniewski-on-dial.html

10/2007 http://querytracker.net/forum/index.php?topic=387.0

2007? http://www.sudipta.com/index_files/Page2451.htm

http://ozandends.blogspot.com/search?q=waniewski


Sarah Davies

http://www.greenhouseliterary.com/

http://www.greenhouseliterary.com/index.php/site/sarahs_blog

http://www.publishersmarketplace.com/members/SarahDavies/

http://agentquery.com/agent.aspx?agentid=1083

http://www.authoradvance.com/agents/sarah-davies

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/03/2011-conference-series-faculty-q-with.html

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/02/2011-conference-series-agent-faculty.html

9/2010 http://middlegradeninja.blogspot.com/2010/09/7-questions-for-literary-agent-sarah.html

8/2010 http://www.yahighway.com/2010/08/publisher-interviews-sarah-davies.html

http://kathytemean.wordpress.com/2010/08/11/sarah-davies-finding-the-right-agent/

2010 http://www.scbwibologna.org/2010/presenters/interviews/sarah-davies.php

7/2009 http://caseylmccormick.blogspot.com/2009/07/agent-spotlight-sarah-davies.html

3/2009 http://www.guidetoliteraryagents.com/blog/A+Childrens+Agent+Talks+Marketing+Your+Work.aspx

1/2009 http://cynthialeitichsmith.blogspot.com/2009/01/agent-interview-sarah-davies-of.html

http://misssnarksfirstvictim.blogspot.com/2009/01/secret-agent-unveiled-sarah-davies.html


Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Agents and Editors: Martha Mihalick and Tim Travaglini

SCBWI WWA Spring Conference time! As always, I'm posting the links I've gathered to free interviews and information on the agents and editorial faculty that will appear at our conference this year. Sorry the links are homely, but at least you'll know where you are going! Today: Martha Mihalick and Tim Travaglini. Tomorrow: Liz Waniewski and Sarah Davies.

Martha Mihalick

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/02/2011-conference-series-editorial-art_07.html

http://greenwillowbooks.com/

Current blog: http://marthamihalick.com/

Blog to 2009 http://acuriosityshop.blogspot.com/

6/2010 http://greenwillowblog.com/?p=1753

8/2009 http://writeoncon.com/2010/08/myths-and-misconceptions-by-literary-agent-holly-root-and-editors-molly-o%E2%80%99neill-and-martha-mihalick/

http://writeoncon.com/2010/08/live-industry-professional-panel-elana-roth-kathleen-ortiz-martha-mihalick/


Tim Travaglini

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/04/2011-conference-series-faculty-q-with_09.html

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/03/2011-conference-series-editorial-and.html

http://us.penguingroup.com/static/pages/youngreaders/index.html

http://www.zoominfo.com/search#search/profile/person?personId=79178611&targetid=profile

8/2010 http://naomicanale.blogspot.com/2010/08/interview-with-senior-editor-timothy.html

5/2009 http://mermaidsonparade.blogspot.com/2009/05/writing-editors-interview-with-timothy.html

4/2008 http://ldspublisher.blogspot.com/2008/04/storymakers-tim-travaglini-putnam.html

3/2008 http://chickenarmpits.blogspot.com/2008/03/tim-travaglini-keynote-speker.html

2004 http://www.robinfriedman.com/interviews/TimTravaglini.html


Monday, April 11, 2011

Agents and Editors: Lionel Bender, Justin Chanda

Ah, SCBWI WWA Spring Conference time! As always, I'm posting the links I've gathered to free interviews and information on the agents and editorial faculty that will appear at our conference this year. Sorry the links are homely, but at least you'll know where you are going! Today: Lionel Bender and Justin Chanda. Tomorrow: Martha Mihalick and Tim Travaglini.

Lionel Bender

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/01/2011-conference-series-editorial-art.html

http://www.brw.co.uk/contact.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Bender_%28author%29

http://www.nibweb.co.uk/lionelbender.htm

http://www.jacketflap.com/persondetail.asp?person=95585

9/2010 http://scbwimidsouth2010.blogspot.com/2010/09/lionell-bender-what-are-book-publishers.html

http://www.highlightsfoundation.org/pages/current/packagers.html

Justin Chanda

http://chinookupdate.blogspot.com/2011/02/2011-conference-series-editorial-art.html

http://kids.simonandschuster.com/

http://teen.simonandschuster.com/

http://www.facebook.com/people/Justin-Chanda-Publisher/100001466441331#!/profile.php?id=100001466441331

1/31/11 http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/childrens/childrens-book-news/article/45960-atheneum-to-publish-william-joyce-guardians-series.html

12/27/2010 http://www.mediabistro.com/galleycat/tag/justin-chanda

8/2/2010 http://scbwiconference.blogspot.com/2010/08/editor-panel-justin-chanda-simon.html

http://scbwiconference.blogspot.com/2010/08/justin-chanda-simon-schuster-not-so.html

7/30/2010 htttp://www.ypulse.com/ypulse-interview-justin-chanda-simon-schuster-books-for-young-readers

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Editor - Krista Marino

Post Western Washington SCBWI Spring Conference 2009 :

These notes are from material I found on-line, a one-on-one critique of one of a work-in-progress, and any other information gleaned from the opening panel of presenters at the conference.

Krista is a San Diego native, where she began her career as an editorial assistant at Harcourt Children's Books, working for Michael Stearns (see post from last week on agents from the Spring SCBWI conference). She continued working at Harcourt in New York, and moved on to became an associate editor at Delacorte Press (part of Random House Books for Young Readers). Her title at Delacorte these days is Senior Editor. Oh, yeah, and there's this little ting about being named SCBWI Member of the Year in 2006...

Krista's just looking to fall in love with a middle grade/young adult story. She doesn't do cute- she's more on the darker edge of fiction (she has not been buying much of lighter fare lately), but she does like works with comedy in them. She prefers quality over quantity. As many of the works she's edited in the last few years are trilogies or series, she is now looking for amazing stand-alone books.

Some acquisitions from the last six to nine months:
Books in the Celebutante series sold by agent Michael Bourret
Kiss My Book sold by agent Michael Bourret
Carrie Ryan's next YA novel by agent Jim McCarthy
Victoria Laurie's next two YA novels by agent Jim McCarthy
Maze Runner series by James Dashner by agent Michael Bourret

Dystel & Goderich Literary Management (both of the above mentioned agents work there) seem to have a lot of success selling Krista what she wants to see.

Some recent or soon to be released books:
Forest of Hand and Teeth by Carrie Ryan (agent Jim McCarthy)

As I type, I have a ticket to a nice warm place for a two week vacation burning a hole in my pocket (although by the time you read this, I will already be there and blogger "scheduled posts" will be posting this for me), and I am running-out of time to aggregate information, so here are the places I found Krista Marino on the web:

From Alice's CWIM blog
A couple of posts including paraphrased notes on the "best way to run a career" from a speaker panel in 2007, and Krista's thoughts on writing for teen boys in 2006.

Shelli's faeriality.blogspot.com:
An interview with Krista in February 2009 on marketing advice and her publishing house.

SCBWI-AZ The Journey interview in 2007:
An interview with Krista from 2007

And, if you are SCBWI International member, you can access the full transcript of a moderated chat by Stephen Mooser with Krista Marino in 2006. It's nice and lengthy with lots of information.

My critique session with her was great. Given that my meeting with her was in the last hour or so of the conference before the last keynote speaker, she was still alert, kind and thoughtful for the ten minutes we had. She has edited a number of YA novels in my general genre with styles that I thought were similar to mine, and I was curious to see how she would react to the voice in the work in progress that I did for NaNoWriMo 2008. I actually did not get a chance to run the piece by my two critique groups until after the deadline to submit the pieces for the manuscript consultations, so what she saw was pre-critique group. Her reaction to the voice and humor were positive, and she provided some excellent criticism that will help guide my revisions, and also showed that my critique pals' suggestions were on the mark and the changes I've already done are in the right direction.

If you get the chance, and your work is in the right arena for what she likes to read and edit, I highly recommend a manuscript consultation with her.

That's it for now, and this concludes my posts on editors and agents from the conference.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Editor - Connie Hsu

Post Western Washington SCBWI Spring Conference 2009

These notes are from information I picked-up from attending sessions from this editor.

Connie Hsu is an assistant editor at Little, Brown and Company Books for Young Readers (referred to hereafter as LB) which is a group within Hachette Book Group USA, and home to Stephanie Meyer (you know, Twilight). LB is known for being more commercially driven, more about the best sellers.

They are always looking for more multicultural books, and they are a little concerned that although young adult paranormal and fantasy books are still popular, the market may be saturated. They are looking for romance - commercial, beachy reads. They already have vampires and ghosts. In picture books, the more character driven picture books are doing well.

LB has moved to a paperless submission process, and only accepts submissions that are agented, editor-requested or are Hachette employee referrals. The editors use e-readers.

A "no" to a manuscript from one editor at LB is a no from the whole house. And once a manuscript is declined by an editor there, it is a wholesale NO on that work unless they ask for revisions. So make sure you (or your agent) really know what an individual editor wants.

The LB submission process is very selective and they have a long string of steps that includes two committees a manuscript must pass before being acquired. Since the beginning of this year, Connie has received over 200 submissions. Of those, she has only taken ten to the initial committee of editors that have the power as a group to accept or reject a manuscript. On two of those works she had spent a lot of time working with the author to revise over a course of months.

None of them made it past the committee to be acquired.

Thus far, she has only actually acquired two books overall.

This editor is pretty funny in person. She says she takes everything- picture books to young adult, but not as many picture books- she only likes them if they are about dead animals. She claims she likes the morbid and the strange, and that she is "young, hungry and completely weird".

She says that the e-book market is indeed growing, but that it will not affect picture books much due to the nature of picture books. She does think, though, that it may affect paperback sales.

Connie says alphabet and counting books are uphill battles- the more elements you add on make it even harder to do right, because they are for three-year-olds, so sophistication and too many elements don't speak to that audience.

She generally likes alliteration, but watch out for starting a picture book for example, with a lot of hard consonants in a row- difficult to read.

She loves it when animals talk about their humans. And speaking of animals, in picture books, she likes real 100% true animal stories- Marley and Me, Chowder, but not so much fiction starring animals.

Connie will look at a manuscript no matter what. If it is not for her, but she thinks the writing is strong, she may take it down the hall to a co-worker.

In queries, Connie thinks you should be able to describe your book in 200 words or less.

She does not care as much about plot, story and concept- she cares about the writing. If she likes the voice and talent, she'll ask for more.

Next time: Krista Marino

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Editor - Joelle Dujardin

Post Western Washington SCBWI Spring Conference 2009:

These notes are blurbs of information I picked-up from attending sessions from this editor.

There are a number of good interviews on the web with various editors from Highlights magazine, not to mention all the great information on submissions they put on their website, so I won't go into detail on those subjects. The focus here is on Joelle's preferences and thoughts and anything that I have not heard or read before, or gives an inside scoop on Highlights.

Joelle is Associate Editor at Highlights magazine, one of the best markets to try and place short works. After beginning her publishing career at Henry Holt and Company, she spent several years at Carus Publishing in both the Cricket Books and non-fiction magazines arena, before being moving to Highlights in late 2004. She edits fiction for independent readers, nonfiction for beginning readers, and verse.

At Highlights, they run manuscripts through ALL of the editors for comment, and (as is our entire industry) it is subjective. You may pass the same work before one editor at two different times and get differing opinions each time.

In Joelle's opinion, Highlights' intent is to be "not opposed to change, but not spear-heading it."

Reading the reader's mail part of the magazine will give you a lot of insight into the readers that Highlights serves.

Highlights buys all rights, but it is the Highlights custom (NOT expressed in contracts) to share rights with the author if they re-sell a piece to another market, like foreign rights. The split is generally 50%. Some authors have even made more money on pieces that Highlights re-sold multiple times than on a published book!

Highlights does a lot of non-fiction by subject matter experts, but they also do take works from people who interview the subject matter experts and write a great article. They like to see full back-up- get the experts to read and approve your article before sending it in. Also, it is a good idea to include ideas and material for sidebars or other angles kids can get out of the article. Kids want things that are relevant and usable. Make sure you give information organically, without a lot of exposition.

Highlights tends to avoid personifying animals or using their POV in non-fiction.

With science articles, they like to portray science as a self-correcting process, not just a body of facts. It is okay to show that we do not have all the answers, and that it is a learning process.

Highlights refers to their younger fiction as "Thirteen-point fiction", due to the type size they use for those pieces. Topics should not be too babyish , as they still have to please older readers (up to twelve years old).

In fiction submissions, Highlights likes to see all genres represented. Via the 2008 Highlights Fiction Contest, they discovered that sci-fi is a comfortable fit for Highlights. They are trying to branch-out and go for more variety, beyond "typical Highlights" stuff.

In the magazine, there are some mixed piece pages- even if something does not show a by-line, that does not preclude that type of material from being open to submission.

For fiction, Joelle personally likes it to bring her to another place, and she would rather see too much than too little in terms of variety of submissions. Leaving a story synopsis ending hanging in your cover letter is okay with her (not required or preferred, just okay if that is the way you want to write it), since she generally skims the cover letter and looks directly at the story.

Submissions are by snail-mail, but Joelle usually asks for revisions via e-mail.

Next time: Connie Hsu

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Editor - Sarah Shumway

Post Western Washington SCBWI Spring Conference 2009 :

These notes are merely blurbs of information I picked-up from attending sessions from this editor. I'm presenting the editors from spring conference in the order of quantity of information, saving the editor with the most for last.

Sarah joined Katherine Tegen Books (an imprint at Harper Collins) six months ago, and is now building her own list. She is "wide open" for middle grade and young adult fiction. Literary, commercial - she wants to see it all.

I did not have a lot from her, so here is a great link to fill that gap. Laura Purdie Salas, a significantly published author, did an interview/workshop a few weeks back with the Institute of Children's Literature on finding markets for your manuscripts. The interview and answers are on-line, and she does such an excellent job of giving some nice basics for market research.

Next time: Joelle Dujardin

Friday, May 22, 2009

Literary Agent Update - Nathan Bransford

Post Western Washington SCBWI Spring Conference 2009 update:

I did not attend any sessions that featured Nathan as a speaker, but he did state in the opening panel that he is open to just about anything, except picture books and early readers, and that he'd rather see too much than too little.

For the next two weeks, I will be on vacation sans electric umbilical cord and laptop, but through the wonders of prescheduled posts, there will be two posts per week with information on editors- Sarah Shumway, Joelle Dujardin, Connie Hsu and Krista Marino.

Have a great weekend!

Aloha, A Hui Hou Kakou!