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 "The Inside Pitch" Screenwriting Blog
A Hollywood Executive Talks About Screenwriting
 Agent in the Middle
Agent Lori Perkins blogs and tells all
 Association of Authors' Representatives
 Blake Snyder's Blog
Screenwriter and "master of story structure" Blake Snyder runs a blog.
 BookEnds Agent Blog
Agents from Bookends Literary blog
 Caren Johnson's Agent Blog
A literary agent talks pitching and everything else
 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
 Conferences for writers
 Diana Fox's Agent Blog
A literary agent talks publishing
 Dystel & Goderich Agent Blog
 Elizabeth Jote's Agent Blog
An agent with Objective Entertainment talks crazy queries and much more
 F+W Bookstore
Buy Guide to Literary Agents and a bunch of other great WD Books.
 Folio Literary Management's Blog
All the agents chime in on this new blog
 Full Circle Literary's Blog
Agents from Full Circle Literary in California blog
 Greenhouse Literary Blog
Agent Sarah Davies shares her thoughts and wisdom
 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
 Kate Schafer's Agent Blog
 Kevin Alexander's "Writer's Life" Blog
WD funnyman and contributing editor Kevin Alexander tries to make you laugh while learning something about writing at the same time
 Knight Agency Blog
Exactly what it sounds like
 Lit Agent X Blog
Agent Rachel Vater of Folio blogs
 Lit Soup (Jenny Rappaport's Agent Blog)
An agent at the L. Perkins Agency blogs
 Lyons Literary Agent Blog
Agent Jonathan Lyons blogs
 Maria Schneider's "Writer's Perspective" Blog
The editor of Writer's Digest blogs
 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No longer active, but this blog by anonymous agent Miss Snark still has oodles of priceless info in its archives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
 Novel & Short Story Writer's Market
 Poetic Asides
A poetry blog from the editor of Writer's Market
 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
 Script Notes
A WD scriptwriting blog from Chad Gervich, TV producer
 Spencer Ellsworth's Agent Blog
A new agent at L. Perkins Associates blogs
 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 Rejecter (Anonymous Agent)
 There Are No Rules
Jane Friedman of Writer's Digest Books, talks about publishing trends and has interviews online
 United States Copyright Office
 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 Market
This pay site is our online database of listings (magazines, book publishers, agents, and everything else). It has more than 6,000 listings.
 Writers Online Workshops
Online writing courses are taught by WD staffers and contributors
 Wylie Merrick Agency's Blog

 Tuesday, October 16, 2007
New Agency Alert: Literary Works, LLC
Posted by Kristen Howe

Jacqueline Hackett, formerly of Watkins Loomis Agency, has founded Literary Works, LLC.

Jacqueline has not yet responded to our GLA questionnaire, but her page on Publishers Marketplace will get you started. She specializes in Commercial and Literary Nonfiction, Commercial Fiction (comic novels, Fiction with a strong suspense element), African-American and Pop Culture. See the PM page to learn how to query her.

                


New Agency Alerts
10/16/2007 1:44:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
New Agency Alert: PlainSmart Publishing Agency
Posted by Kristen Howe

They haven't responded to the GLA full questionnaire yet, but I wanted to tell you about PlainSmart Publishing Agency. Check out their Web site to learn more. If you have feedback about them, good or bad, feel free to leave a comment here.


New Agency Alerts
10/16/2007 1:13:53 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
Zack Company Seeks Queries
Posted by Chuck

The Zack Company, Inc., a literary agency, is actively seeking clients. In the past, the agency has stopped accepting queries at different times (because of slush pile overflow, most likely).

As far as I can tell, the agency is looking for all kinds of nonfiction, and some fiction. Regardless, this seems like a great opportunity.

The agency's Web site has an incredibly detailed "What We Want" page detailing what to send and how to send it.


Nonfiction | Random Updates
10/16/2007 11:20:29 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
Florida First Coast Writers' Festival Canceled
Posted by Kristen Howe

The Florida First Coast Writers' Festival has canceled its 2008 writers conference. The Jacksonville-based annual conference, which usually featured a number of agents who took pitches, is indefinitely canceled because of funding issues. A return in 2009 is possible.

See their Web site to learn about their continuing contests, though.


Writers' Conferences
10/16/2007 10:55:42 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, October 15, 2007
Screenwriting News
Posted by Chuck

Some screenwriting news this Monday afternoon...

1. First of all, the big news in Hollywood is the pending strike by the Writer's Guild of America. As the strike looms, script agents are having to get into the fray. The Los Angeles Times did a great piece on how all this affects agents. See the full article here.

2. I just received an e-mail from the Screenwriting Expo in Los Angeles, updating their already impressive list of attending screenwriters who will be presenting. Recently added presenters include William Goldman (All the President's Men), Scott Frank (Minority Report) and more. This would be an awesome conference to attend if you're into screenwriting, though I admit I do not know how the looming strike will affect the conference going-on's, if it affects the conference at all.

William Goldman.


Screenwriting and Script Agents | Writers' Conferences
10/15/2007 4:21:44 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
Janet Reid's Query Letter "Don'ts"
Posted by Chuck

Since I've highlighted Fineprint Literary Management lately, I wanted to share something great I found on agent Janet Reid's blog today.

It's called "The Top 8 Things Telling Me I Don't Have to Take Your Cover Letter Seriously," and it's hilarious, as usual.

To see the full post, click here.

Here's a snippet:

1. Start your query with a description of what the cover will look like.
2.Put (c) year on the title page. Even better is (c) five years ago.
3. Put "do not duplicate under penalty of criminal prosecution" on the title page...


Queries, Synopses and Proposals
10/15/2007 4:00:54 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, October 09, 2007
Literary and Creative Artists: Note the Address
Posted by Chuck

I just received an e-mail from Literary and Creative Artists (based in DC) saying that their address was not up to date. A recent check into the database revealed that the address was indeed updated, but perhaps older versions of Guide to Literary Agents had an outdated address.

Take note of the current address:

Literary and Creative Artists, Inc.
3543 Albemarle Street, NW
Washington, DC 20008


Random Updates
10/9/2007 11:31:48 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
Jennifer Laughran Seeks Clients...
Posted by Chuck

Post Update: It appears that this valuable link below is now off limits to non-members of Verla Kay's site. The good news is it should be very easy to become a member of her site and forum, so sign up.

Jennifer Laughran, a reader for the Andrea Brown Literary Agency in California, just wrote a long post on Verla Kay's chat board regarding her possible jump into the agenting business.

It seems that Jennifer is trying to become a full-fledged agent, and needs clients to do so. She focuses on middle-grade and young adult work, and tells all about what she doesn't want to receive, as well. She mentions that she is only interested in queries/etc. that have not been turned down by Andrea Brown agents previously.

This seems like a golden opportunity for writers, so check out the full post!


Children's Writing
10/9/2007 11:08:07 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [5]
Agent Advice: Sha-Shana Crichton of Crichton & Associates, Inc.
Posted by Chuck

"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 literary agent Sha-Shana Crichton of Crichton & Associates, a Maryland-based agency. Sha-Shana represents both fiction and nonfiction, and is well versed in legal issues such as copyright law and intellectual property.

GLA: What's a recent thing you've sold?

 

SSC: A recent nonfiction sales is Professor W. Sherman Rogers’ Black Economic Inequality In America: The Role of Entrepreneurship. Recent fiction sales include Candace Haven's paranormal chick-lit books, and romance novels by Pamela Yaye. 

 

GLA: You said recently that you're actively seeking women's fiction. What are things you look for in a women's fiction story/manuscript?

 

SSC: I look for a great voice with an equally great hook, and stories that not only grab my attention but keep me wanting to finish reading them. I love well-researched stories that evoke the emotions; stories that make you laugh, cry, and otherwise take you into the world of the characters. I am a huge fan of Jodi Picoult.

 

GLA: What needs to be there for you to keep reading?

 

SSC: I love character-driven stories. For me to keep on reading, the characters have to be well developed, believable and multidimensional. It is important to me that the author does his or her research and writes accurate stories. I tend not to finish reading stories with inaccuracies because I think the author does not care about me, the reader. 

 

GLA: Let's say that a writer makes a book deal directly with a publisher, but wants to have someone look over the contract before signing. Is it better to hire a lawyer to review the contract, or contact an agent and bring up the possibility of signing with them pre-deal?

 

SSC: It depends on the needs and the goals of the author. Generally, in addition to negotiating the deal, a literary agent provides career guidance, markets and monitors the author’s subsidiary rights, and monitors the publisher’s actions to ensure that, among other things, the author is paid on time, the royalty statements are correct, and the publisher otherwise complies with the contract. 

 

GLA: You're very knowledgeable in topics such as copyright law and intellectual property. What one tip can you pass along concerning how writers can protect their work?

 

SSC: Be very careful how you share your story with various "critique partners." It is always best to know and develop a relationship of trust with your critique partners before sharing your work with them. 

 

GLA: What's the number one problem you see in unsolicited novel queries?

 

SSC: Queries that tell me how great the author is but do not tell me what the story is.

 

GLA: Let's say you meet a writer at a conference, hear their pitch, then request to see sample pages. The writer then goes home, takes another look at his work, and decides it's not edited well enough to submit. Six months later, the writer has another project - a second different project. Can he send you pages from that manuscript or should he query you again?

 

SSC: I would prefer that he or she sends me another query. The writer should note that we met before.

 

 

      Sha-Shana Crichton of Crichton & Associates, Inc. represents writers of fiction and nonfiction works, including materials with African, African-American, Caribbean and Latin American themes. Crichton & Associates, Inc. is currently seeking nonfiction by expert authors, contemporary fiction, commercial fiction, chick-lit, and romance novels (contemporary, inspirational, African-American and multicultural).

      See here for the agency's submission guidelines.

Sha-Shana Crichton


Agent Advice (Agent Interviews) | Contracts, Copyrights and Money
10/9/2007 10:54:28 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Sunday, October 07, 2007
My Adventures in Aurora...
Posted by Chuck

This past weekend saw me present at the Midwest Literary Festival. Like last year, the conference featured a wide array of authors, editors and agents from the Chicagoland area as well as from all over the country.

Agent Gary Heidt (left) and I concentrating during a jazz jam at the Midwest Literary Festival presenter dinner.


Writers' Conferences
10/7/2007 11:54:41 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, October 05, 2007
Agent Advice: Gary Heidt of Fineprint Literary Management
Posted by Nancy Parish

"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.

Recently, two medium-sized agencies in New York merged into one agency - The Peter Rubie Literary Agency and Imprint Agency have now formed Fineprint Literary Management. GLA is pleased to share an interview with agent Gary Heidt of Fineprint, who represents both fiction and nonfiction. I had the chance to meet up with Gary at the Midwest Literary Festival in Aurora, Ill.

GLA: What are some recent things you've sold?

GH: 100 Girls, by Adam Gallardo and Todd Demong, a graphic novel about a girl (actually, 100 Girls) who is/are the product of a government experiment intended to create a superweapon. Another is Secret Places, Hidden Sanctuaries, by Stephen Klimczuk and Gerald Warner. Two Knights of Malta - one a globalist businessman, the other a Scottish Lord - explain some of the world's greatest mysteries.

GLA: Recently, your boutique agency (Imprint) merged with another agency to create Fineprint. How will this merger help your - and everyone's - efforts?
 

GH: Well, we are able to pool information, contacts and resources amongst a larger group. We are doing this in a very 21st-century, high-tech manner. Everything we learn about any editor or publisher's desires will be pooled for all of our agents to access.

GLA: You represent both "history" and "military nonfiction." With so many books already written in subjects such as these, what must a nonfiction book proposal have to get you interested?

GH: There is no end to history. All of history will never be written. Anything that has a great story and great characters and profound conflicts will be of interest in history. With military nonfiction, we're looking for novelistic, action-filled narratives of battles, famous or heretofore neglected, with emphasis on the characters of the combatants, and lots of detail.

GLA: If you were teaching a course on writing nonfiction book proposals, but only had 60 seconds to talk, what would you say?

GH: 1) Spill the beans. Don't try to tantalize and hold back the juice. 2) No bullshit! We learn to see right through bullshit, or we fail rapidly. 3) Write for local publications and small publications first; why does everyone want to pole-vault from being an unpublished author to having a big book contract? It makes no sense. You have to learn to drive before they'll let you pilot the Space Shuttle.

GLA: It appears as though you gravitate toward nonfiction, but you also represent literary fiction. If you're reading a requested literary fiction manuscript, what are you looking for in the first 20 pages?

GH: There was a great first chapter of a Chuck Palahuniak novel that started out with a woman in a burning wedding gown firing a shotgun down a flight of stairs. How can you stop reading something like that?

GLA: What's another piece of advice you can pass on to writers that we didn't already cover?

GH: Get published small.  Local papers, literary journals, Web sites, anything.  The more credits you have, the better. And list them all (although not to the point of absurdity) in your query.

GLA: Will you be at any conferences in the future where writers can meet you?

GH: Probably. Although meeting in person isn't all it's made up to be. A really good query with some good prior credits will do just as well.

Gary Heidt of Fineprint Literary Management represents both fiction and nonfiction. Contact him at gary@fineprintlit.com.
      
He is currently seeking nonfiction only - history, science, true crime, pop culture, psychology, business and military. 
      
Gary was a John Jay Scholar at Columbia University and General Manager at WKCR-FM. Upon graduating, he returned to the nightclubs as a gigging musician; the Village Voice called his first album a "masterpiece." He is a published poet and columnist. His librettos for composer Evan Hause's Defenestration Trilogy earned praise from Newsday, Opera News and the New York Press, and his musical comedies (he has written several in collaboration with Gary Miles, including The Feng Shui Assassin and American Eyeball) were described by The Onion as "strangely funny." Originally from Texas, he has lived in New York City for a decade and a half.

Gary Heidt

Gary Heidt


Agent Advice (Agent Interviews) | Queries, Synopses and Proposals
10/5/2007 3:47:49 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
No 2007 Submissions for Caren Johnson Literary
Posted by Chuck

According to her blog, literary agent Caren Johnson of the Caren Johnson Literary Agency is not taking any more submissions in 2007 because she's buried in submissions. Take note before sending any queries to her.

See her whole blog post about it here.

FYI: Caren used to be an agent at Firebrand Literary before breaking off to establish her own agency

FYI part II: The post above also has to do with Teen Read Month and has lots of good information for young adult readers.


Random Updates
10/5/2007 3:29:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]