Today’s release of the hands-on how-to book for middle grade and young adult writers Writing Irresistible Kidlit (Writer’s Digest) gifts Moveable Type literary agent and KidLit.com creator Mary Kole with yet one more title: Teaching Agent-Author.
Subtitled The
Ultimate Guide to Crafting Fiction for Young Adult and Middle Grade Readers, Mary’s
interactive book offers up a bevy of agent-learned tricks, treats and best of
all tools certain to help writers learn and hone their craft as well as their
world. She shares writing exercises,
candid commentary and a collection of book excerpts and personal insights from
bestselling authors and editors who specialize in the children’s book market.
Mary joined
Movable Type from the Andrea Brown Literary Agency where she distinguished
herself as an inventive and entrepreneurial agent. Her books include author-illustrator Lindsay
Wards’ When Blue Met Egg (Dial), Emily Hainsworth’s YA debut Through to You (Balzer
+ Bray) and Dianna Winget’s A Smidget of Sky (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt). KidLit.com was named one of Writer’s Digest’s
Top 100 Websites for Writers; over 50,000 readers visit the site monthly.
This being
Halloween, a favorite holiday of just about every children’s book writer and
teacher I know, I consider Mary’s answers to my questions below both delicious,
calorie-free Treats and writer-friendly Tricks, plural.
For one more
Treat, be sure to read below of our TeachingAuthor Book Giveaway of the 2013 Children’sWriter’s & Illustrator’s Market (Writer’s Digest) which includes two of
Mary’s articles - “Crafting
a Query” and “Building Your Author Platform.”
(1) How did you become
a Teaching (Agent) Author?
I became an agent after reading for free at an agency to learn more about the
publishing business. But I've always been passionate about teaching others, so
I knew that I wanted to pass on what I was learning to writers. The publishing
business is often difficult to wrap one's head around, so I wanted to pull back
the curtain a little bit. I understand things better once I articulate them and
explain them to others, so the teaching aspect of my work has also been
invaluable to me.
(2) Why and how did
your book come to be?
I started out as a writer, so part of it was definitely yearning to be a published author. But the book also became a personal challenge: Do I have enough to say about the writing craft and can I say it in a way that it earns its keep on my readers' writing reference shelves? I hope the answer to both questions is "yes," of course, and I'm excited to see the reactions once the book is out in the world. Since I was doing a lot of programming and teaching for Writer's Digest, publishing the guide with them was a natural fit and the process of actually getting the book deal was easy. The process of writing it, though, took a lot more stress and work, but I'm very happy with the finished product.
(3) What are the Top
Three problems you note in manuscripts when you’re reading as an agent?
Beginnings are tough to do well, and I often notice that writers don't start with a strong sense of the present moment and present action. A lot of beginnings have tons of backstory and info-dumping and not enough conflict to hook a reader in. In terms of character, writers can always work on motivation and objective--a really strong reason for characters to be doing what they're doing, and an overarching goal that they work toward in the story. In a prose sense, I often find myself giving the following note: "You are saying something fundamentally simple in an overly complicated way." Not everything needs to be a showcase for Writing-with-a-capital-W. Sometimes there's style in simplicity.
(4) What are the Top
Three writers’ questions you receive at www.kidlit.com?
Questions about query letters are always popular, and this is the first
resource I end up sending to writers:
http://kidlit.com/2009/08/05/writing-a-simple-compelling-query/
http://kidlit.com/2009/08/05/writing-a-simple-compelling-query/
Other than that, I've been answering writing questions on the site since 2009
and there are a lot of different concerns that writers have. I don't
know if I can pick the runners up in terms of popularity.
(5) Please share a
favorite Writing Exercise.
To really help writers individuate characters and think about voice, I like to
ask them to describe the same scene or landscape from the POVs of two different
characters. Think about syntax, word choice, what each character notices and
how. This often drives home the point that each fictional person is unique and
has a very distinct lens that should inform every choice that a writer is
making.
(6) You’ve worn so many
hats while residing in the Children’s Book World! Which do you love wearing the
best?
I'd love
to say "reader" but, to tell you the truth, there is no better way to
frustrate one's love of reading than to actually work in publishing, where you
are reading more than you ever thought possible and under time constraints. So
I'll say that my favorite hat is "cheerleader," because there's no
better feeling than believing in a project and championing it through to
publication.
Thanks, Mary Kole, for the opportunity to bring you and your
new book Writing Irresistible Fiction to
the attention of our TeachingAuthor readers.
Happy Halloween!
Esther Hershenhorn
P.S. Trick or treat? You
bet! We’re giving away one copy of the 2013 Children’s Writer’s & Illustrator’sMarket (Writer’s Digest)!
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Just for the fun of it, and since we’re offering a Writer’s Book, share your #1 chocolate Trick or Treat candy. J
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November 9, 2012. Good luck to all!