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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
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Lit Soup (Jenny Rappaport's Agent Blog)
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Lucienne Diver's Agent Blog
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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) |
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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. |
|
 Thursday, January 07, 2010
New Adult: What Is It?
Posted by Chuck
“Home” is such a simple word, at least on the surface. But where is home to a modern 24 year old? Is it the tiny apartment that she lovingly decorated with IKEA furniture and inexpensive trinkets from Target? Is it the two-story Victorian that he grew up in, where his parents still welcome him with open arms (and wallets)? Or is it that fuzzy future house he and she keep thinking about? The one they’re going to buy together a few years from now, with a big backyard for the Beagle they recently adopted and the little boy they both want someday.

These are the kinds of questions my friends and I are wrestling with as we transition out of school and into the Real World. It’s a strange time, because we’re technically adults, but most of us feel more like overgrown kids.
And that’s exactly the unique life period that New Adult fiction is intended to address.
“New Adult” is a term coined by Dan Weiss and his editorial assistant S. Jae-Jones (known as JJ). They are on a mission to discover and develop New Adult voices for St. Martin’s Press. To that end, they recently ran a contest for writers of New Adult fiction and ended up selecting 18 winners. Now they are reading partials of those 18 manuscripts, and one of them, happily, is mine.
While I calmly (hah!) sit and wait to find out if the St. Martin’s team is interested in reading more of my work, I find myself searching for the best way to explain New Adults and our fiction. It’s more difficult than I would have expected. In the end, I decided that the clearest explanation might be a composite. Here are a few quotes about the nuances of “New Adult,” accompanied by my thoughts as a New Adult person writing New Adult fiction.
THE CONCEPT
In the words of JJ at St. Martin’s, “New Adult is about young adulthood, when you are an adult but have not established your life as one (career, family, what-have-you).”
So, it’s about transition. The transformation from child to adult doesn’t happen overnight—just ask as anyone who is or has been (or is a parent to) a teenager. But the transition from teen to adult doesn’t happen overnight either. There’s a period of time where adulthood feels like a new pair of shoes. The expectations of independence and self-sufficiency are still new, still being broken in. New Adults are the people who have just begun to walk in those shoes; New Adult fiction is about their blisters and aches.
THE PROTAGONISTS
Writer and actress Adrienne Kress describes New Adult as “work that isn't quite adult and isn't really YA”—i.e., “college-age stories, or stories with individuals just out of high school.”
That puts New Adult protagonists in the range of 18 to 26 years old. (Earlier in history, adulthood may have started as early as 15 or 16, but I think you get the idea.) College, first jobs, first relationships, or marriage… There’s a lot that can happen when you’re 18-26, but the fact is, those same events feel very different at that age than they do at 12 or at 40. Because kids and teens focus on the present, while adults draw on their past experience to inform their present and future decisions. New Adults are somewhere in between. As the saying goes: old enough to know better, but still too young to care. That distinction might seem subtle, but it comes through loud and clear in the voice of New Adult fiction.
Now, obviously there have been protagonists aged 18-26 before. New Adult as a concept is not new, but recognizing and promoting it as a separate category is.
THE READERS
Agent Kristin Nelson explains that New Adult stories “will speak to older teens and twenty-somethings.” But then “where [do we] put these books so they can be found by the target audience. Does it go in the teen section or in the general fiction?”
The answer is that there is no answer yet. In an ideal world, New Adult fiction would go on a New Adult shelf, but that doesn’t exist in mainstream bookstores yet. Part of St. Martin’s mission is to help interested readers find these books, regardless of where they end up. The fact that these interested readers might hail from all different age groups makes the task more challenging, but perhaps also more rewarding.
St. Martin’s Weiss is an industry veteran, responsible for successful ventures such as the Sweet Valley High series and SparkNotes. He’s got a knack for understanding what niches are not being filled, which consumers aren’t being satisfied. If he believes New Adult fiction will have an audience, then I’m inclined to agree.
Especially since New Adult could offer a variety of “flavors.” Sci-fi, fantasy, romance, historical, thriller, literary … Just like the Young Adult umbrella, New Adult can (and probably will) cover all these genres and more.
THE BIG PICTURE
Finally, and my personal favorite, St. Martin’s Press VP Matthew Shear sums up New Adults—both its readers and protagonists—as “emerging adults who are navigating career, love and family in a 24/7 connected world.”
Exactly. In fact, that’s what I had in mind while writing Twenty-Somewhere, my New Adult manuscript currently under consideration by St. Martin’s. In Twenty-Somewhere, three best friends (Sophie, MJ, and Claudia) graduate from college, scatter across the globe, and begin their own careers and relationships. Despite their great differences and even greater distances, all three struggle through similar issues, and they struggle through them together. Because in this day and age, being close doesn’t require being nearby.
That brings us back to my original question: Where is home? For New Adults like me, I think the answer is again a composite. Home is the new apartment, the childhood residence, and the future house. For New Adult fiction, the only home right now is St. Martin’s Press. But if Weiss and JJ are successful, it’s only a matter of time before other publishing houses follow their lead. And when they do, I have no doubt that New Adult will find a home on a bookshelf of its very own.
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Definitions | Guest Columns
Thursday, January 07, 2010 10:15:35 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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