Free Updates

Let us tell you when new posts are added!

Email:

Navigation

Categories

Search

Archives

<August 2010>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
25262728293031
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930311234

More Links

 2nd Draft Critique Service
Before you send out your work, have it edited by an established pro!
 Agency Gatekeeper
A literary agent shares secrets.
 Agent in the Middle
Agent Lori Perkins blogs and tells all
 Ashley Grayson Agent Blog
From the Ashley Grayson Literary Agency
 Association of Authors' Representatives
 Barbara Doyen's Articles Page
Agent Barbara Doyen shares her knowledge.
 Barry Goldblatt Literary
A blog from the whole agency.
 BookEnds Agent Blog
Agents from Bookends Literary blog
 Brenda Bowen
Agent Brenda Bowen's "Bunny Eat Bunny" kids writing blog.
 Cameron McClure
Cameron, with the Donald Maass Lit Agency, runs her "Book Cannibal" blog.
 Caren Johnson Literary Agency
The official CJLA blog
 Children's Writer's and Illustrator's Market Blog
This blog, run by Alice Pope, is a must-read for anyone writing in the juvenile market
 Chip MacGregor's Agent Blog
A Christian agent speaks
 Chuck's conference speaking schedule
See where Chuck will be presenting and when!
 Colleen Lindsay's Agent Blog
A new agent at FinePrint Literary blogs
 DHS Literary Blog
David Hale Smith's "Literary Show and Tell" blog.
 Diana Fox's Agent Blog
A literary agent talks publishing
 Dystel & Goderich Agent Blog
 Eddie Schneider
An agent from JABberwocky Literary blogs.
 Elaine English Literary Agency Blog
A blog from the whole agency.
 F+W Bookstore
Buy Guide to Literary Agents and a bunch of other great WD Books.
 FinePrint Literary Management Blog
A blog from the whole agency.
 Folio Literary Management's Blog
All the agents chime in on this new blog
 Fresh Books Blog
An agency blog.
 Full Circle Literary's Blog
Agents from Full Circle Literary in California blog
 Girl Meets Book
Agent Jamie Brenner of Artists & Artisans blogs.
 Greenhouse Literary Blog
Agent Sarah Davies shares her thoughts and wisdom
 Hartline Literary Blog
A blog from the whole agency.
 Janet Reid
Agent Janet Reid of FinePrint Literary gives her two cents on anything and everything
 Jennifer Jackson's Agent Blog
An agent with the Donald Maass Literary Agency blogs
 Jenny Bent's Blog
From the founder of The Bent Agency.
 Jill Corcoran
A kids agent at the Herman Agency blogs.
 Joshua Bilmes Agent Blog
JABberwocky Literary Agency
 Kathleen Ortiz Agent Blog
Kathleen with Lowenstein Associates
 Kelly Mortimer
Agent Kelly Mortimer's "Perils of Publishing" blog.
 Ken Atchity
The president of AEI, a script and literary management co., blogs.
 Kid Lit
A blog by kids agent Mary Kole of the Andrea Brown Literary Agency
 Kimberly Cameron & Associates
A blog from the whole agency.
 Knight Agency Blog
Exactly what it sounds like
 Laurie McLean's Agent Blog
The "Agent Savant" blog
 Lit Soup (Jenny Rappaport's Agent Blog)
An agent at the L. Perkins Agency blogs
 Lucienne Diver's Agent Blog
A blog on "Authorial, Agently and Personal Ramblings."
 Lyons Literary Agent Blog
Agent Jonathan Lyons blogs
 MFA Confidential Blog
This new WD blog features Kate Monahan and all things about getting an MFA
 Michael Larsen's Blog
Agent Michael Larsen of Larsen-Pomada Literary Agents blogs about publishing and nonfiction writing.
 Miss Snark
No longer active, but this blog by anonymous agent Miss Snark still has oodles of priceless info in its archives
 Nathan Bransford
A popular blog from an agent at Curtis Brown in San Francisco
 Nephele Tempest's Agent Blog
An agent with the Knight Agency blogs
 Poetic Asides
A poetry blog from the editor of Writer's Market
 Promptly (Prompts Blog)
WD's own blog of writing prompts, run by magazine staffer Zac Petit
 Pub Rants
Kristin Nelson's Agent Blog
 Publishers Marketplace
 Query Shark
Janet Reid's blog where she dissects query letters
 Questions and Quandaries Blog
WD staffer Brian A. Klems answers questions of all kinds
 Rachelle Gardner
A blog by an agent who specializes in Christian Writing
 Romantic Reads
Dorchester editor Leah Hultenschmidt blogs romance.
 Sara Crowe's Blog
An agent from Harvey Klinger blogs.
 Scott Eagan's Agent Blog
The great Greyhaus agent blogs away.
 Script Notes
A WD scriptwriting blog from Chad Gervich, TV producer
 Steve Laube's Agent Blog
A Christian agent and former editor talks the biz.
 Suzie Townsend
A new assistant agent at FinePrint Literary blogs.
 Terry Burns's Blog
An agent with Hartline Literary blogs.
 Terry Whalin's Blog
"The Writing Life," as told by a former editor and agent.
 The Buried Editor
A blog dedicated to juvenile writing (YA, middle grade, picture books) run by an editor at CBAY Books and Blooming Tree Press
 The Gail Ross Literary Agency
The agency blog.
 The Inside Pitch Screenwriting Blog
A Hollywood Executive Talks About Screenwriting
 The New Literary Agents
A few new literary agents share advice.
 The Rejecter (Anonymous Agent)
 The Shatzkin Files
 The Sound and the Furry
WD contributor Nancy Parish talks writing.
 There Are No Rules
Jane Friedman of Writer's Digest Books, talks about publishing trends and has interviews online
 Tracy Marchini
An agent from Curtis Brown, Ltd. blogs
 United States Copyright Office
 Upstart Crow Blog
A blog from the whole agency at Upstart Crow Literary.
 Waxman Literary Agency
A blog from the whole agency.
 Wendy Sherman Associates Blog
Multiple agents blog.
 Writer Beware
A site dedicated to protecting writers from scams of all kinds - including unscrupulous agents
 Writer Unboxed
Primarily devoted to genre fiction, this site features plenty of interviews with industry pros
 Writer's Digest magazine
This big hub has tons of online articles from past issues of WD. Check out the revamped new site!
 Writer's Digest University (Writers Online Workshops)
Online writing courses are taught by WD staffers and contributors
 Writer's Market
This pay site is our online database of listings (magazines, book publishers, agents, and everything else). It has more than 6,000 listings.
 Writing-World
A huge writing website and resource writers should check out.
 Wylie Merrick Agency's Blog
 Zack Company Blog
Agent Andrew Zack blogs.

# Friday, December 04, 2009
Agent Advice: Meredith Bernstein of the Meredith Bernstein Literary Agency
Posted by Chuck

Agent Interview by
contributor Ricki Schultz.

"Agent Advice" is a series of quick interviews with literary and script agents who talk with Guide to Literary Agents about their thoughts on writing, publishing, and just about anything else.

This installment features Meredith Bernstein of Meredith Bernstein Literary Agency. Meredith has been an agent for over 25 years and has run her own agency for most of that time. (She has no agency website.)

She is looking for: both literary and mainstream fiction, with a focus on psychological suspense, medical and legal thrillers, and love stories. In terms of romance, she's looking for contemporary, historical, paranormal, and suspense. For nonfiction, she seeks authors who are leaders in their field with strong commercial ties. She does not accept e-mail queries. Please query with SASE: Meredith Bernstein Literary Agency, 2095 Broadway, Suite 505, New York, NY 10023.





GLA: How did you become an agent?
 
MB: It happened organically. I was working for another literary agent as a Gal Friday (not to date myself), and I really did basic secretarial-type things. A friend called and suggested we meet the following weekend at a writer’s conference in Long Island—and I asked my boss if he would “send” me. 
     As it happened, I met a writer who seemed like another Anne Frank incarnate, and she had written a book about the impact of keeping a journal. She gave me her “book” to read on the train ride home—and I fell in love with it. I knew one publisher because he was also a client of my boss, so I told him about the book, messengered it over, and he called me the next day to make an offer.
 
GLA: What’s the most recent thing you’ve sold?
 
MB: Because I have been doing this for a long time, the things I have most recently sold are new deals for existing clients. That said, the most exciting “new” thing is the House of Night series by P.C. Cast & Kristin Cast, which is in the YA category. It’s about a vampire finishing school and has been near the top of the New York Times bestseller list for well over a year now—and going strong with the latest title, Tempted. I have also just sold another parenting book in the bestselling No-Cry series by Elizabeth Pantley to McGraw-Hill.
     And, I’m just completing an audio deal for my 2009 National Book Award nominee, David Carroll, for Following the Water: A Hydromancer’s Notebook from Houghton-Mifflin.

GLA: What are you looking for right now and not getting?  What do you pray for when tackling the slush pile?
 
MB: I am always looking and praying for very compelling narrative nonfiction; and an unforgettable love story; and fiction that has a voice that you not only never want to walk away from—but that begs you to turn the page. If you are writing any of these—send them my way! I am also looking for literary fiction that has a haunting effect.






GLA: You represent a wide array of categories in both fiction and nonfiction, but I didn't see anywhere online listing you as accepting juvenile literature—yet the House of Night series is huge. Are you currently seeking young adult or middle-grade lit?
 
MB: Because of my success with the Casts, I am now getting and seeking more YA. As for middle-grade, I still don’t feel confident I really know enough about it.

GLA: Do you notice any trends in what you tend to represent?  Subgenres or
elements that particularly grab you?
 
MB: I am extremely eclectic by nature, so whatever I represent that is of a “genre” is because I have responded to some element of that author’s creativity more than anything else.



GLA: Any topics that don’t capture your interest?
 
MB: Military history.



GLA: How do you prefer to be queried?
 
MB: Snail mail, please.


GLA: If you were teaching a class on nonfiction writing and submitting, what would be item number one on your syllabus?
 
MB: An inside-out knowledge of one’s subject matter. I also think that when one loves what they are writing about, it shows—and the reader can feel it. For example, when I read Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air, I was simply transported. I look for a writer who can transport me.



GLA: What would writers be surprised to know about you personally?
 
MB: That I am extremely artistic—and I do a mean “Hokey-Pokey.”



GLA: Will you be at any upcoming writers’ conferences where writers can
meet and pitch you?
 
MB: RWA (July 28-31 2010) in Nashville is the next one.



GLA: Best piece(s) of advice we haven’t talked about yet?
 
MB: I respect people that work really hard at what they do. If you want to stay successful in this business, you have to understand that there is always someone else ready to move into your limelight. If you look at some of the names on the bestseller lists that have been there for years, I assure you—it is no accident. These writers deliver the goods that the public wants. It is their job to keep the readership wanting it!

This agent interview by Ricki Schultz,
freelance writer and coordinator of
Shenandoah Writers in VA. Visit her blog
or follow her on Twitter.


Want more on this subject?

Agent Advice (Agent Interviews)
Bookmark and Share
Friday, December 04, 2009 9:58:12 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
Google Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links