Sunday, April 19, 2009

we love Janice Repka!

The Stupendous Dodgeball Fiasco
six years back, i picked THE STUPDENOUS DODGEBALL FIASCO from the slush. it is a funny middle-grade, which is, take note, the consistently most sought-after kids' book category. the book-buying population peaks during the middle-grade years and few writers can reach it. the stories we see are derivative, trite, dreary; the storytelling is wordy, ill-shaped, and in a fake voice; the characters are flat, wooden, inauthentic. authors do not dig deeply enough into their imaginations to realize the children's experience. these readers are still children, but they are not cutesy, gosh-golly know-nothings, and i suspect fantasy and reality are more fluid constructions for them than becomes true for teens.

not only can Janice write for these illusory creatures, at once it was apparent how seriously she takes her craft— this is what i look for— and her work would only get better. through her own promotion, THE STUPENDOUS DODGEBALL FIASCO achieved solid hardcover sales (especially for a debut). even so, Dutton's paperback arm, Puffin, declined to publish a mass market edition. (it may yet correct its mistake.) nevertheless, we sold audio rights so at least you have two formats to chose from. we just sold Janice's second book and our expectations are high. Janice is a writer to watch.

Do You Know. . .

how much we like our Kindles? paper mss were the heart of my professional reading experience-- as for all agents and editors-- but electronic readers made their ungainliness instantly obvious. paper mss weigh a lot and keeping the pages together is a drag and slows reading. a light-weight Kindle holds everything, goes everywhere; and even though note-taking is trickier than marking physical pages, or going back to scrutinize issues of pace/character/logic/etc., these devices are sure to own future of reading.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

THE DAY OF ROAWR!

 THE WAIT IS OVER! This p-e-r-f-e-c-t picturebook publishes today. Get ye to a bookstore! 

Monday, April 6, 2009

Look What Maurie's Done Now!



Never thought I'd have a Gallup-- as in The Gallup Poll-- book. oh, the places you'll go (to coin a phrase) with versatile talent in the stable. Three cheers* for Maurie Manning!

* Margin for error plus or minus 1 cheer

We Can Hardly Wait!



Intrigued? This logo treatment is for Arthur Slade's Fall 09 steampunk series. Hold on to your stovepipe: it's creepy and mysterious and romantic and . . . hunchbacked!

Countdown to ROAWR!













BUY IT! SAVOR IT! BE GRANDLY REWARDED

The Ninja Who Wanted to be Noticed


Ain't it time you saw Julie Phillipps's debut picturebook? No stock problem here. it went back for a 2d printing— a mere week after it pub'd! Julie rocks!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Here You See. . .

 
This extraordinary constellation of talent met mid-March for mega meetings at Penguin. From left to right are Patti Gauch, Philomel editor supreme, illustrious Dutch illustrator Jan Jutte, and genius author Barbara Joosse. The first of three books by this PERFECT collection of creators (it is a  w-o-n-d-e-r  how they sparkle together) is due Apr 16: ROAWR! You must get your hands on this one: it brims with  BRILLIANCE. no joke. it is a study in a perfect picture book. Now, how often do you hear that?

Monday, March 30, 2009

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Thursday, March 26, 2009

ScottTreimelNY.com

We chatted it up for weeks and now ScottTreimelNY.com is here! Oh, the myriad wonders that await.

Submissions Our on-line Submission Form (we jettisoned snail- mailed and emailed submissions)  means we now respond in THIRTY DAYS! (rather than our long-standing 90 days). 

Writers and/or Illustrators note: we still look hard for talent, established and new. Lest anyone forget, STNY has a tradition of finding new talent and launching first-rate careers.

Business Partners will work with ease on password-protected content areas.

Acquiring Editors can directly download illustrated manuscripts and/or large files and have access to continually updated ancillary materials and relevant websites.

Permission Editors can request work via an on-line Permissions Form!

Foreign Colleagues can source STNY’s continually updated catalogue and check the status of projects in development. Sales support materials— reviews, awards, licensing deals, and media coverage— will be posted for each title and/or author.

Who can ask for anything more?

AT LAST!


This is THE BEST historical of all. Pat Hughes's first book went over big where she set it, Missouri, an undeclared state during the Civil War. Seven years after the hardcover release of  GUERRILLA SEASON, FSG is giving the world a paperback— hoping Missouri will require every middle-grader to buy— I mean, read it. If you write historical fiction— or anything at all— read GUERRILLA SEASON, it's downright scintillating.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Wake Up and Smell the Dog P--- Well, Anyways


Here is a SPECTACULAR book by writing + illustrating dynamos (also husband and wife)  Jeff Crosby and Shelley Ann Jackson.

LITTLE LIONS, BULL BAITERS, & HUNTING HOUNDS traces 50 dog breeds to their geographic origins, connecting them to the jobs they were breed specifically to perform. Jeff and Shelly's next book, on Horses, is in-the-works.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Who Says Janie Bynum Doesn't Rock?

No one! And that's because she does! ONE LITTLE FLOWER GIRL won a 2009 Oppenheim Toy Portfolio GOLD  BOOK AWARD! hip hip hurray for Janie Supreme!

Sunday, March 15, 2009

ScottTreimelNY.com is coming this week!

ScottTreimelNY.com (we expect) will launch this week! 

Note 
John and I are now reading on electronic readers, and submissions henceforth are ONLY accepted via our electronic submission form. Now, before you start grousing, take heed: we will now respond MUCH faster. We still want exclusives but our turnaround will be one-third our long-standing 90 days. We will now respond to submissions within 30 days. Cool, right?

Also Note
  • Snail-mailed hardcopy submissions will be returned un-opened.
  • Submissions emailed to our STNY mailboxes will be deleted unread.
  • We will not answer submissions for screenplays or for the adult market.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

What Pamela Travers Said

(Who is Pamela Travers? That's why we have Wikipedia.)

In a British review, she wrote that anyone who writes for children successfully is probably writing for one child, namely the child that is him/herself. That one true inner critic, to me, ALWAYS knows best. if there is a barrier to sourcing it, you have to get over it.

ST


Tuesday, March 10, 2009

A Wendy Lamb Books (R-H) Publishing Event!

New Art Slade novel! 
For your delectation, an original blend of boy, pig, truffles, and lightening— oh, and an odd prep school where the kids have to wear kilts. Click now and let the entertainment begin!

Thursday, March 5, 2009


GET A LOAD OF THIS MONKEY!






Just look how fabulous Janie Bynum is. We're not kidding!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Here She Comes. . .

 Janie Bynum's super cute, pastel-y pictures will smile you up (despite the kinda lame text). LITTLE FLOWER GIRL wannabes might commence plucking petals themselves for tossing practice. Not to worry: the book comes with a packet of FREE silk organza petals. Now, that's fancy!

Monday, February 23, 2009

We Almost Forgot!

Don't you forget! This awesome book by Gail Giles! is now in paperback. You won't even have to spend an arm and a leg for edification! Get reading!

Did we mention awesome?

Monday, February 16, 2009

What About a Query Letter?

Read enough query letters and they start to sound the same. I read hundreds each week, and after a couple hours my eyes glaze over. Okay - what's the main character's crazy name? Is the bully on the soccer team or the football team? What odd/curious/quirky place has the family moved to this time? What device activates the time travel?

I do not want to go into what is derivative and what is original in a story. I want to tell you that an excellent query letter will separate you from the pack. By "excellent" I mean "convenient for me" - but this will apply to all the other assistants on the front line.

Open directly Please consider. . . or I hope you will want to request. . . . Resist introducing yourself with Hello, my name is. . . Your stationery and signature will do that. Include a brief synopsis - no more than a paragraph. This isn't a jacket blurb, so it's okay to spill the ending. If there is one thing that drives me crazy— and it is really only because 90 percent of queries open this way— it is the "provocative" question: What would you do if. . . ; How does a teenager cope when. . .; What can possibly go wrong when. . . .

If you know something about STNY and our list (which you absolutely should, if you submit to us), tell us. Familiarity with our authors is a big plus. I can't tell you how many How-To-Save-Your-Marriage proposals I get. These writers don't know beans about STNY. Do your homework!

A brief bio is welcome. If you've published before, we want to know with whom. Do you have relationships with editors? Do you have a platform?. Also, if your manuscript has been rejected by a lot of publishing houses, it's important we know. Do not suppose that they will accept it because STNY submits it. We generally will not want to return to those houses, anyway. Finally, if your manuscript has been rejected and rejected and rejected, it makes me wonder why you do not write another.We look for career authors, not one-book Johnny's. Now, I know writers comfort themselves reciting the famous books that were rejected fifty times before landing with an editor. Just know, this is RARE and not the model you want to aspire to.

A query should pique our interest but also show your professionalism. Dazzling wit and imagination are highly desirable— but in your work, not your cover letter.

-JMC

Thursday, February 12, 2009

J U L I E P H I L L I P P S

WINK THE  NINJA  WH WANTED   TO  BE  NOTICED

Talk about great reviews for Julie Phillipps's debut!

Phillipps shows off her true calling. . . . Kirkus Review

Phillipp's ebullient and multipatterned cut-paper artwork bears a strong resemblance to the animation style of South Park, though more sophisticated and with a Japanese flavor, and, definitely, much less crass." Booklist

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

A Submission or Query Best Omits. . .

  1. A marketing plan. This comes later, way later, by publishing personnel who may or may not let you chime in. Congratulations on your MFA, but at this stage it is your writing that concerns us (You *will* be pulled into the marketing fray once the book is published.)
  2. A dedication. It is presumptuous to expect your submission be rushed to a printer. There will be plenty of time for your editor to request it.
  3. Picture of your family or pet. With all due respect to Bob and the kids, what we really care about is your work.
  4. Chocolate, gift cards, or treats. We really shouldn't. . . and neither should you.
  5. Handwriting. Unless it's your signature, handwriting is unprofessional.
From your good ol' friendly reader of A LOT of submissions,

JMC

Sunday, February 1, 2009

A Tidbit

I like to critique new writers' work on the spot, as they pitch it. I interrupt pretty quickly, ask for information I need to help parse the concept or the story or the logic or the characters' psychology, or etc., it depends. Writers should always— here's the tidbit— state

The Category (upper middle-grade, etc.)
The Time Period and Place Setting (contemporary suburbia, etc.)
The Protagonist's Age
The Word Count and Number of Chapters

stay tuned for more tibdits . . . 

ST

Monday, January 19, 2009

Ohh La La!

Don't miss the French edition of Barbara Haworth-Attard's chick lit light. Barb's original title (still our fav) was ACNE, BOOBS, CONDOMS. In Canada that became A IS FOR ANGST, in the U.S. it became MY LIFE FROM AIR BRAS TO ZITS, and now in France it is ADAM ABOVE ALL ELSE .






Friday, January 16, 2009

SLJ Raves!

 the first review for Julie Phillipp's first book WINK: THE NINJA WHO WANTED TO BE NOTICED is. . . a School Library Journal star !


"Phillip's debut is an auspicious one." -SLJ

Monday, January 12, 2009

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Strange but True

Our Italian sub-agent today said that 10 percent of Italy's population reads over 50 percent of Italy's books. That makes for one savvy readership, eh?

"YA" is Phat Phree

Can't we ditch this patronizing 70's holdover ? The only teens not to chafe at being called Young Adult are those likeliest scandalized by today's books.

ST

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Hockey Readers?

Who knew hockey fans read? Not me. But here's proof.


Lo and behold, David Ward's HOCKEY TREE appeared on a blog for-- surprise!-- hockey books. Scholastic plans a late-09 or maybe late-10 sequel, believing the Winter 10 Olympics will spark even greater Canuck madness. (Naturally, we will have to request a television ad to exploit this bonanza.) Outside North America, however, I find little reader enthusiasm for the sport. Pat Hughes's e-x-t-r-e-m-e-l-y good teen novel OPEN ICE (a head injury threatens a a jock's identity - and his brain function) inspired no foreign interest, even though multiple U.S. houses bid for the manuscript.


Link

Boys Don't Read

Okay, they do. (We did!) But not enough. That's what Gail Giles says in her School Library Journal essay. Originally titled "Boy's Don't Read and We See To It," SLJ went for the sexier Wanted: Male Models. Nowadays, boys (girls too) can listen to Gail's teen novels. All are available on Audible

Find out more about Gail and her other titles here. Link

What I'm Looking For (Me, John)

I'm always asked what kind of work I'm looking for. Of course, I'm eager to read anything well written, plot-driven, stringent, original, etc. - but isn't everybody? One genre I'd like to see more of in particular is sci-fi. Ideally, the otherworldly elements should be used to tell a human story. I'm less inclined to care about an invasion of lizard people if the humans are flat and one-dimensional. Also, it's more interesting to find the strange in an everyday setting. Aliens in space are less exciting than aliens in your sister's closet.

Send query letters and sample pages to jmc.st.ny@verizon.net.

Thanks!

- JMC

Saturday, November 15, 2008

HOW TO SAVE YOUR TAIL


Now in Paperback!

HOW TO SAVE YOUR TAIL
by Mary Hanson
*if you are a rat nabbed by cats who really like stories about magic spoons, wolves with snout-warts, big, hairy chimney trolls . . . and cookies, too.

Named Publisher's Weekly Zaniest Title of 2007
Watch the book trailer...




Plus!
Berekley Preparatory School of Tampa, FL,  produced a stage version of How to Save Your Tail, with a script by Dorothy Hershman. (Don't bother with Ticket Master, it was a one-time performance.)

Monday, November 10, 2008

www.ScottTreimelNY.com

The STNY website, which will feature more info about our authors as well as an electronic submission form for manuscripts and permissions requests, is under development. You can see our landing page (which features our submission policies) here. We're in the process of converting to electronic submissions only (Kindles purchased and en route!) . Soon all submissions will go exclusively through scotttreimelny.com. In the meantime, we still accept the ol' fashion way.

-JMC

Sunday, November 2, 2008

The Way of Things Today

Poets & Writers interviews the redoubtable Nat Sobel 
". . . evolving today for agents is that they need to be the first line editors for their authors. . . . We have spent years editing nearly every novel we've ever agented. We did that long before we began to discover how little editing was going on in the publishing houses. But today, agents need to be far more proactive in almost every other area of the publishing process. We have to be the marketing directors for many of our books. We have to involve ourselves in the looking at the jacket design, the jacket copy, the catalogue copy. . . . Those are things you never thought about in agenting when I first came into it. You made the deal, you negotiated the contract, and that was it—— the publisher took over."
my rejoinder, to every particular: ditto!


Thursday, October 30, 2008

ARCHIPELAGO


Imagine being lost on an island...that's 14,000 years in the past. David Ward's new adventure novel ARCHIPELAGO is now available.

"A nail-biting adventure back into time... a must read!"--CM Magazine, highly recommended

Monday, October 27, 2008

TICKLE MONSTER


Our man Kevan Atteberry does his super cute monster thing for a book + tickle glove (which Kevan designed) for Seattle-based gift company Compendium.


Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Advice from E.B. White

Place yourself in the background.

Write in a way that comes naturally.

Work from a suitable design.

Write with nouns and verbs.

Do not overwrite.

Avoid the use of qualifiers.

Do not affect a breezy style.

Use orthodox spelling.

Do not explain too much.

Avoid fancy words.

Do not take shortcuts at the cost of clarity.

Prefer the standard to the offbeat.

Make sure the reader knows who is speaking.

Do not use dialect.

Revise and Rewrite.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Monday, October 6, 2008

Foreign Covers




FROM CHARLIE'S POINT OF VIEW by Richard Scrimger, from Korea
&
SHATTERING GLASS by Gail Giles from the Netherlands

Sunday, October 5, 2008

HOUSEFUL OF CHRISTMAS


Barbara Joosse's HOUSEFUL OF CHRISTMAS is now available in paperback from Squarefish Books.

"Every Christmas, Granny’s house is full of family and festive cheer—carols and presents, and plenty of food, bows, and gift wrap for Fat Cat to play with, and lots of company for Granny and her dog, Edgar. When snow starts to fall, the family doesn’t mind at all. Because even during a blizzard, there’s no place better than Granny’s house for Christmas."

Saturday, October 4, 2008

FROONGA PLANET


Earth is in danger, and only Lunchbox, the super-intelligent basset hound, and his boy, Nate, can help them save the planet...


Art by our own Kevan J. Atteberry.

Friday, October 3, 2008

BENEATH THE MASK by David Ward



BENEATH THE MASK, the sequel to Escape the Mask and the second book in David Ward's Grassland Trilogy is now available from Amulet Books.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Barbara Joosse Interview

Last weekend Barbara spoke at Fairytale Town in Sacramento. Here she is on Sacramento's NBC affiliate, KCRA.

THEORIES OF RELATIVITY wins Prix Livrentete

Barbara Haworth-Attard's THEORIES OF RELATIVITY a winner of the Prix Liverentete award (Published in France by Editions Thierry Magnier).

Check out the U.S. and Canadian editions...


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