not all, but the majority of publishers' statements arrive on 4-1 and 10-1, which means right now is our time of— well, aargh! of course we are happy seeing sales grow and advances earn-out and cutting checks to our clients— BUT the hodgepodge of micro calculations and tabulations and, as always, errors: yikes! i want to say, you clients are sure lucky to have us. of course the reverse is even more true.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
WOW!
we cannot resist sharing Voya's rave review of Gail's new release DARK SONG. get a load of this excerpt.
Giles is a gifted writer of suspense. Her imagery sparkles, her character development is flawless, and this page-turner positively crackles with excitement. Giles’s portrayal of Ames’s gradual loss of faith in her parents and friends is intensely realistic. Ames’s attraction to Marc is completely understandable, given the circumstances, but her levelheadedness and underlying love for her family win out in the end. Suspense lovers will savor this fast-paced psychological thriller.
Giles is a gifted writer of suspense. Her imagery sparkles, her character development is flawless, and this page-turner positively crackles with excitement. Giles’s portrayal of Ames’s gradual loss of faith in her parents and friends is intensely realistic. Ames’s attraction to Marc is completely understandable, given the circumstances, but her levelheadedness and underlying love for her family win out in the end. Suspense lovers will savor this fast-paced psychological thriller.
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Agent, also Author
read John's scintillating essay Crash Course in Getting Published in CHILDREN'S WRITERS' & ILLUSTRATORS' MARKET 2011 edition and discover the wisdom of the ages— rather the aged (Scott's) infusing the next generation. John starts with his STNY job interview and ends with advice for authors aspiring to the smashing publication of their debuts, like his GIRL PARTS. John sees both sides of the phantasmagorical author-publisher experience and tells it like it is.
Monday, July 12, 2010
We Like to Spread it Around.
Our Neighborhood
hey! we made the NYTimes. notice the city's infrastructure work in the background, e-v-e-r-y-w-h-e-r-e! eventually, it is to be supposed, we will have— what? fancier water?
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Pet (Writerly) Peeves
i understand our use of language is fluid. there seems no reason to harp that "all right" is two words. (why they remained separated when already was formed i do not know.) the use of well vs good is another lost cause. answering How are you? with I'm good stills sounds like editorializing to be, but sobeit. (i love writing that as one word, which i do in honor of my mentor Marilyn Marlow, who insisited on it.)
we bow to the vagaries of usage at different rates. i myself continue to appreciate the difference between "anxious" and "eager" and am surprised, unhappily, to see writers conflate the two. another of my bugaboos: fewer vs less. Fewer units sold, so the book made less money is correct. Less buyers are to blame is wrong.
i hated seeing sneaked give way to snuck, but i feel that train left the station and cannot be brought back.
yesterday i told a writer his protagonist, in context, would not feel "disgust"; she would feel "disdain". the writer said, Why, they are indistinct. no, no, a thousand times no. the difference between those words, in context, is the difference between his character and another.
we welcome your slings and arrows.
we bow to the vagaries of usage at different rates. i myself continue to appreciate the difference between "anxious" and "eager" and am surprised, unhappily, to see writers conflate the two. another of my bugaboos: fewer vs less. Fewer units sold, so the book made less money is correct. Less buyers are to blame is wrong.
i hated seeing sneaked give way to snuck, but i feel that train left the station and cannot be brought back.
yesterday i told a writer his protagonist, in context, would not feel "disgust"; she would feel "disdain". the writer said, Why, they are indistinct. no, no, a thousand times no. the difference between those words, in context, is the difference between his character and another.
we welcome your slings and arrows.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Monday, May 10, 2010
T-E-X-A-S
i will be presenting programs in HOUSTON and AUSTIN (this Friday and Saturday) for the Writers' League of Texas.
my topics are, respectively, The Misadventures of a Manuscript and Kid Lit: How to Break Into It. if you are in the neighborhood(s), come be edified. here are the details.
—ST
my topics are, respectively, The Misadventures of a Manuscript and Kid Lit: How to Break Into It. if you are in the neighborhood(s), come be edified. here are the details.
—ST
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
A Conference! A Conference!
i am happy to ballyhoo SCBWI New Jersey's Jun 4 - 5 Annual Conference. i will be on-hand, if you have a yen to meet me. even if you do not, this rich stew of field workers and well-published talent has plenty else to recommend it: the workshops and critique sessions and chance to gas with movers and shakers. the setting is great too.
--ST
--ST
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Coming Atcha!
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
GIRL PARTS signing at the BEA!
For those attending the 2010 Book Expo America in New York, I will be signing advanced copies of GIRL PARTS Wednesday 5-26 at Candlewick's booth. Hope to see you there!*
-JMC
* you'd be a fool to miss it! --ST
Monday, March 22, 2010
Preditors and Editors and an Anecdote
take note: the venerable P&E website has adjudged us highly recommended. despite vanity and pride, we pledge to remain humble and approachable— except in the manner of the man who simply walked in the front door Friday. we had a meeting going when Petey (office dog)suddenly barked impressively. a man entered with a portfolio. good grief! i say we are available, but we are not a public service.
Submission Statistics
it is a year since we moved our submission process to the web— accepting queries via our website. our system automatically collects numbers that might interest you blog perusers.
we receive, on average, 85 queries a week. of these we reject 90% and request partials for ten percent. of these we request full manuscripts for about 40%. i take this relatively high percentage as proof that our requests are well reasoned.
the number of new clients we acquire remains very small, however. NOT THAT WE DO NOT WANT THEM. our latest client is a picturebook author— and this is highly relevant to note: we are not looking for picturebook authors; it means that talent is talent and we will jump when we see it. incidentally, this new client was discovered at an SCBWI regional conference and not through the transom..
i know i speak for my colleagues when i say that discovering new talent is our greatest delight.
we receive, on average, 85 queries a week. of these we reject 90% and request partials for ten percent. of these we request full manuscripts for about 40%. i take this relatively high percentage as proof that our requests are well reasoned.
the number of new clients we acquire remains very small, however. NOT THAT WE DO NOT WANT THEM. our latest client is a picturebook author— and this is highly relevant to note: we are not looking for picturebook authors; it means that talent is talent and we will jump when we see it. incidentally, this new client was discovered at an SCBWI regional conference and not through the transom..
i know i speak for my colleagues when i say that discovering new talent is our greatest delight.
Bologna
John is presently peddling our wares internationally, as befits a zealous young agent. this is the best way to keep our subagents on the ball.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
The Golden Age— Again
ten years back, folks talked about "this period of exceptional writing for teens" (think Speak, Out of Dust). since then, since the Harry Potter explosion and A Series of Unfortunate Events and the Stephanie Myer books, the audience for children's books, especially teen books, has opened to encompass the general public (meaning adults). here's an LA Times article about adult interest in teen fiction.
A Reissue! A Reissue!

here is one of those rare picturebooks honored with a second life. originally published by Harcourt in 2001, Barbara Goldin's Chelm tale is out in a new paperback edition from our pal Margery Cuyler at Marshall Cavendish. the story is set in the Catskills in the 1920s and celebrates Shavout— the Jewish holiday commemorating the day Moses received the Torah on Mount Sinai, which i would not have known without this book. it is delightful, charming, and satisfying (School Library Journal) and includes Barb's family receipe for cheese blintzes.
note to self: persuade Dunkin' Donuts to introduce its customers to cheese blintzes (license receipe?) and secure a premium co-edition of 18 million copies.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Finally!
Here at last a clear breakdown of the agency model and what it means to authors.
Via Agent Kristin of Pub Rants:
Let’s say a title will sell on Amazon or Apple’s iPad for $10.00 (might as well make it easy math).
Now let’s look at the difference between net receipts if the publisher absorbs the cost of the agency commission versus if they don’t in defining and calculating net receipts.
If Publisher absorbs commission:
eBook price: $10.00
25% of net royalty (all the rage with publishers as of late)
Royalty to author: $2.50 per title sold
If Publisher does not:
eBook price: $10.00
$7.00 received by publisher (after 30% sales commission to retailer)
25% of net royalty
Royalty to author: $1.75 per title sold
Yep, definitely worth the time to find out exactly how this term is going to be defined in the contract when it comes to electronic books.
Agreed!
-JMC
Via Agent Kristin of Pub Rants:
Let’s say a title will sell on Amazon or Apple’s iPad for $10.00 (might as well make it easy math).
Now let’s look at the difference between net receipts if the publisher absorbs the cost of the agency commission versus if they don’t in defining and calculating net receipts.
If Publisher absorbs commission:
eBook price: $10.00
25% of net royalty (all the rage with publishers as of late)
Royalty to author: $2.50 per title sold
If Publisher does not:
eBook price: $10.00
$7.00 received by publisher (after 30% sales commission to retailer)
25% of net royalty
Royalty to author: $1.75 per title sold
Yep, definitely worth the time to find out exactly how this term is going to be defined in the contract when it comes to electronic books.
Agreed!
-JMC
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
SCBWI Bologna 2010 Interview
Here’s an interview I did for the fabulous Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators. I’ll be sitting on the SCBWI panel at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair this year. Can’t wait!
-JMC
-JMC
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Amazon Snaffu
Oy vey. More hours spent on the phone with Amazon.
Last week one of our Kindles had a meltdown and lost months of submission (meaning hours of extra work culling our email and rebuilding our list). Amazon offered to replace the model, failing to mention there's a four-week delay while they back order (from where I wonder?) the original device. So I call Amazon and they tell me they can happily send me the next-generation immediately- FOR AN EXTRA $50 BUCKS!
So...device breaks and I can wait a month for it to be replaced, or I can spend more money to upgrade? Um, what?
Our voices are now hoarse, but Amazon will send us a Kindle 2.0, at no cost, via next-day mail. But why, I wonder, did we have to kick and scream? Shouldn't this have been standard business practice?
Signed,
Apoplectic at Astor Place (jmc)
Last week one of our Kindles had a meltdown and lost months of submission (meaning hours of extra work culling our email and rebuilding our list). Amazon offered to replace the model, failing to mention there's a four-week delay while they back order (from where I wonder?) the original device. So I call Amazon and they tell me they can happily send me the next-generation immediately- FOR AN EXTRA $50 BUCKS!
So...device breaks and I can wait a month for it to be replaced, or I can spend more money to upgrade? Um, what?
Our voices are now hoarse, but Amazon will send us a Kindle 2.0, at no cost, via next-day mail. But why, I wonder, did we have to kick and scream? Shouldn't this have been standard business practice?
Signed,
Apoplectic at Astor Place (jmc)
Monday, February 8, 2010
Harper and Hachette Join Macmillian in Kindle Dispute
In case you haven't heard, it's now Macmillan, Harper, and Hachette committing to the "agency model" for E-book sales, whereby publishers set the sales price and retailers keep 30%. This means new releases from these houses (and most likely more to follow) will no longer be available for Amazon's much-disputed $9.99 on the Kindle. The new kid in town, Apple's iPad, operates on the agency model.
Frankly, though my back doesn't miss carting around manuscripts, the rest of me misses good ol' fashioned paper.
-JMC
Frankly, though my back doesn't miss carting around manuscripts, the rest of me misses good ol' fashioned paper.
-JMC
Monday, January 25, 2010
It Takes a Village

that is how i understood the meaning of this story since the day it arrived.
HIGGLEDY-PIGGLEDY CHICKS marks Barbara Joosse's debut on the Greenwillow list. we are told Barnes and Nobel is especially hip on this book.
a behind the scenes tidbit: Barb's original title was FUZZY PEEPS. Harper changed it for fear of violating the trademark for the famous marshmallow candy, Peeps. frankly, we at STNY prefer the original title and find Harper's reasoning, well, peculiar. firstly, trademarks are granted in VERY specific categories, and a candy and book title are many miles apart; secondly, a title cannot be copyrighted or trademarked.
THE DARK DEEPS
Cyndy Szekeres




do you know. . . . Cyndy has sold OVER 13 million books worldwide? here you see why.
these four will be out next month, via Sterling, as part of a 12-book Cyndy Szekeres series. they are re-issues, and, frankly, quite the nicest of the many editions these books saw under the aegis of their original publisher Golden Books (Random House). they are also an upcoming MAIN SELECTION, thank you very much, of Children's Book of the Month Club.
Monday, January 18, 2010
Congrats to Award Winners!
Congratulations to Rebecca Stead, Jerry Pinkney, and Libba Bray who won the 2010 Newbery Medal, Caldecott, and Printz Award (respectively)! More details from Pub Weekly here.
Monday, January 11, 2010
Kirkus Lives Again!
According to Pub Weekly, Kirkus Reviews will continue under new ownership. Whether the current staff will remain is unknown.
-JMC
-JMC
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
TRIBES not Forgotten

Reading Rants posts a list of the most under-appreciated young adult books of the decade. Arthur Slade's TRIBES (one of our favs) is featured. This is one title that definitely deserves more love. Check it out!
-JMC
Monday, December 14, 2009
Kirkus No More

After over 75 years and almost 400,000 reviews, Kirkus is calling it quits. Say what you will about hard-to-please, I still call this a major bummer.
-JMC
Friday, December 11, 2009
Thursday, December 10, 2009
My Favorite Novel
of course is MIDDLEMARCH. (how can anyone answer differently?) however, beyond that, i am willing to say— but only because i am asked so dang much— ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND is the book i read the most. now, that is a supreme masterpiece of English prose. every writer reading this blog ought to stop reading it and savor that delicacy immediately. it is pure edification.
ST
ST
Friday, November 13, 2009
GIRL PARTS!
with due modesty, we hereby ballyhoo the sale of our own John M. Cusick's DEBUT NOVEL. it went— at auction— to Candlewick Press, with Deb Noyes-Wayshak editing. audio rights went— also at auction— to Tim Ditlow at Brilliance Audio. we will keep you posted when our efforts selling UK and ANZ rights bear fruit.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Monday, November 2, 2009
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Thursday, September 24, 2009
THE DARK DEEPS

Here is a peek at Chris Steininger's cover concept for the Harper Canada edition of the second book in Art Slade's steampunk series THE HUNCHBACK ASSIGNMENTS. Random House U.S. is cooking up something cool, too.
The Dark Deeps includes an underwater city (New Barcelona) and an invisible no-goodnik. Also a hunchback!
THE HUNCHBACK ASSIGNMENTS is already a Canadian best-seller (after Twilight) and reviews are marvelous: "A terrific entertainment" Quill and Quire (Canada's PW)— a starred review; "an excellent start to a promising series" Kirkus; "thrilling . . . more than the straightforward adventure it may appear" PW.
"Stringent," Explained by Saunders
We often say we're looking for "stringent" writing. To better explain what we mean, here's a fantastic essay by George Saunders on precision. The first example he sites? Johnny Tremain.
An excerpt:
"When a person resolves to improve his prose, everything he is and everything he believes in, consciously or unconsciously, must be brought to bear. The movements from vagueness to precision, from generality to specificity, length to brevity, passivity to activity, involve, mysteriously, a corresponding movement from falsehood to truth."
-JMC
An excerpt:
"When a person resolves to improve his prose, everything he is and everything he believes in, consciously or unconsciously, must be brought to bear. The movements from vagueness to precision, from generality to specificity, length to brevity, passivity to activity, involve, mysteriously, a corresponding movement from falsehood to truth."
-JMC
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Saturday, September 5, 2009
A Back-to-School Rhyme
English
Nouns name things.
Adjectives describe them.
Verbs act up.
Adverbs poke and jive them.
Construct a sturdy sentence
From your toolbox of good grammar,
And if your sentence wobbles,
Smartly smash it with the hammer.
A Back-to-School Rhyme
Science
The prize winning project at the state Science Fair
Was a clay pot of radishes, growing human hair.
The prize winning student, with her parents both in tow,
Shocked those attending the ceremony show.
The audience could see they displayed horrid grooming—
Upon all three heads? Rows of radishes were blooming!
A Back-to-School Rhyme
Math
One, two, three—
Counting for a fee.
Four, five, six—
Kids don't learn for kicks.
Seven, eight, nine—
A dollar will be fine.
Ten is the end—
Off to go to spend.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Monday, August 31, 2009
LOOK!

meet Dr. Hyde, the mad scientist in Art Slade's THE HUNCHBACK ASSIGNMENTS.
you'd be a fool to miss the first book in this full-steam(punk)-ahead series. Random House will publish it 9-22. HarperCanada pubs the book. . . tomorrow! yay!
Sunday, August 16, 2009
in paperback, at last!

Diana C0hn's lyrical story of young Mareo's realizing his vision as an artist in his small traditional Mexican village. Based on a true story!
H A U N T E D

Young girls murdered! Supernatural appearances confound! And the scared citizens of a small town in the 1910's suspect Dee's grandmother is bewitching them. This suspenseful, creepy novel joins Barbara Hawoth-Attard's expanding oeuvre next month from HarperCollins Canada. Stayed tuned for news of the U.S. edition.
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
THE HUNCHBACK ASSIGNMENTS
What is Steampunk? Take it away, Art...
Art Slade's THE HUNCHBACK ASSIGNMENTS is available September 22nd!
"An excellent start to a promising new series." - Kirkus Reviews
"Pleasing and evocative." - Booklist
Learn more at Hunchback Assignments website.
Art Slade's THE HUNCHBACK ASSIGNMENTS is available September 22nd!
"An excellent start to a promising new series." - Kirkus Reviews
"Pleasing and evocative." - Booklist
Learn more at Hunchback Assignments website.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Websites for Author Promotion
The Association of Authors' Representatives holds the occasional panel for industry folks (usually above the Hard Rock Cafe in Times Square - no kidding). Last week I attended one on e-platforms and author web-marketing. A few of the social-networking sites mentioned I knew (Goodreads, MySpace, Facebook, Twitter etc), but a few were new to me, like Library Thing, Shelfari, and Google Profile. These are tremendous tools for authors, who simply must have a strong web-presence to survive.
(For more online book-love, check out Booktumbling, a current pet obsession...)
-JMC
(For more online book-love, check out Booktumbling, a current pet obsession...)
-JMC
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Ants Rule!
How I love this book! The manuscript arrived and it featured only ONE type of killer ant. Ants (being my #1 favorite insect), I happen to know, boast FOUR killer varieties. Nick Nirgiotis revised his manuscript accordingly and STNY sold it to the first editor to see it— fellow insect lover, Mary Cash at Holiday House. the moral of the story: sometimes you hit an agent's quirk, bingo!
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Demons and Angels
Everyone wants to guess the next trend before it happens. But how? I'm wondering if the slush pile can offer some clues. The past month I've seen dozens and dozens of manuscripts about otherworldly love-affairs. No, not vampires. Angels. Will there be a heavenly response to the vampire and werewolf craze? It seems to follow. You've got gorgeous, ephemeral love-interests, Biblical battles between good and evil, forbidden love, and none of the icky blood stuff. When I see a swell of subs on the same topic, I think there must be something in the mass-unconscious that's given everyone the same idea. I wonder...
-JMC
-JMC
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