Tag Archives: agent interests

Updated: What I’m looking for

23 May

Many frequent visitors to this blog know about what I’m looking for in queries and new projects. Here is an updated list of things I’m dying to see come in to me:

  • Upmarket women’s fiction (high stakes, family issues, love, troubled heart, travel) with a new fresh concept
  • Small town romance
  • Historical fiction (i.e. The Tudor period, Regency, in the tradition of Philippa Gregory)
  • Platform based non-fiction: must have a demonstrable expertise and know your quantifiable market
  • Pop science and pop psychology proposals (i.e. brands, consumer behaviour, creativity, business with a commercial spin)
  • Gritty contemporary YA
  • High concept YA with a fresh new concept that hasn’t been done (i.e. light fantasy)
  • High concept picture books that stand out from the pack (more…)

Q: An agent says they’re looking for commercial fiction and they pass on my ms. What’s the deal?

14 May

Agents say they are open to certain genres, but we pass on the majority of content that comes in. So what are we really looking for? Honestly, we don’t know why we fail to connect with work. It could very well be the quality of writing as it often is, but sometimes it’s more elusive than that: we don’t love it. Here are some of the behind the scenes answers for why we fail to connect:

  • You might have caught us at a bad time. We’re human. We’ll sign a contemporary YA one week, and pass on one the next week. We are driven by emotional connection and we might be missing that *feeling* that we’re looking for.
  • Our interests are more complex than genre labels. We, like everyone, have interests that intersect in a variety of ways. I like everything from irish history, to light women’s fiction, to pop science, to commercial literary fiction, to gritty YA, to romantic YA, to whatever falls on my desk or ereader that moves me. (more…)

The Top 10 Books I Read This Year

12 Dec

I did a cumulative post about the books I have read this year in mid-November. However, I wanted to highlight my favourite reads of the bunch in fiction and non fiction. (Minus my client’s work, of course.) They did not all come out this year, but many did. Get a taste of my interests below!

My favourite fiction reads

ANNABEL by Kathleen Winter

This is literary Canadian fiction at its finest and it had a fantastic reception in the UK. From House of Anansi’s website: “In 1968, into the beautiful, spare environment of remote coastal Labrador, a mysterious child is born: a baby who appears to be neither fully boy nor girl, but both at once. Haunting, sweeping in scope, and stylistically reminiscent of Jeffrey Eugenides’ MiddlesexAnnabel is a compelling tale about one person’s struggle to discover the truth about their birth and self in a culture that shuns contradiction.” Twitter: @supremetronic

BIRDS OF PARADISE by Diana Abu-Jaber

After hearing about this book at BookExpo America in the spring I was eager for the rest of the reading community to catch up with my excitement. From Norton’s website: “In the tropical paradise that is Miami, Avis and Brian Muir are still haunted by the disappearance of their ineffably beautiful daughter, Felice, who ran away when she was thirteen. This multilayered novel about a family that comes apart at the seams-and finds its way together again-is totally involving and deeply satisfying, a glorious feast of a book.” Twitter: @dabujaber

NEVER LET ME GO by Kazuo Ishiguro

This book changed the way I think about fiction, especially speculative fiction, and the film adaptation was fantastic. I was late coming to this one, but I’m forever changed. From Random House: “From the Booker Prize-winning author of The Remains of the Day comes a devastating new novel of innocence, knowledge, and loss. As children Kathy, Ruth, and Tommy were students at Hailsham, an exclusive boarding school secluded in the English countryside. It was a place of mercurial cliques and mysterious rules where teachers were constantly reminding their charges of how special they were.”

STILTSVILLE by Susanna Daniel

This was my latest read and again, not sure why it took so long for me to get to it, but I love the way it made me think about family, unconditional love and the way love and life plays out over the decades. From HarperCollins: “Against a vivid South Florida background, Susanna Daniel’s Stiltsville offers a gripping, bittersweet portrait of a marriage—and a romance—that deepens over the course of three decades. Called “an elegantly crafted work of art and a great read” by Curtis Sittenfeld (American Wife, PrepStiltsville is a stunningly assured debut novel sure to appeal to readers of Anita Shreve, Sue Miller, and Annie Dillard, or anyone enchanted by the sultry magic of Miami.” Twitter: @susannadaniel

THE MARRIAGE PLOT by Jeffery Eugenidies

I am new to Eugenidies as this was the first book of his I read (he wrote THE VIRGIN SUICIDES and MIDDLESEX). It is one of the best books of 2011 in my opinion. From Random House: “The triangle in this amazing and delicious novel about a generation beginning to grow up is age old, and completely fresh and surprising. With devastating wit, irony and an abiding understanding and love for his characters, Jeffrey Eugenides resuscitates the original energies of the novel while creating a story so contemporary that it reads like the intimate journal of our own lives.” (more…)

Do you write down every book you read? I do!

21 Nov

Early 2010 I started writing down all the books I read. Partly to see how many books I read in a year–but also to remind myself in case I forget…

In the past year I have read–on top of all the reading I do for my clients and the submissions I read–41 books!

For those interested in what I read, because that’s what I’m looking for in the queries that come in, below is a list of my recent literary triumphs:

The Good Daughters

The Slap

The Birth House

The Girl’s Guide to Hunting and Fishing

No and Me

Arrival City

The Postmistress

French Women Don’t Get Fat

Annabel (more…)

What do agents and editors want? Writers, you tell us

25 Oct

The truth is no one knows what they want until they see it.

Editors and agents always say they are looking for a compelling story, great voice, proper pace, believability–and excellent writing. However, no one can say exactly what that will be until it lands in their inbox.

This isn’t the industry being fickle, it’s what fiction is meant to do: take us to a fresh setting we want to spend time in, introduce us to new characters, make us think about meaning in our lives in a way we haven’t before. As Steve Jobs said: “A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them” (Business Week, 1998). (more…)

Agent Listing on Poets & Writers

8 Oct

See my new agent posting on Poets & Writers with what I am looking for and how to query me.

The Elusive Wish List

21 Jun

Most agents have a wish list. Not of gifts, but of the queries and manuscripts they want to land in their inbox. (Though these moments are akin to a great gift, if that gift is a hot manuscript wrapped with a lovely author and a big bow of staggering talent.) Now, realistically these may never arrive, but that doesn’t stop us from hoping.

Here is my list:

(more…)