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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Philadelphia Stories, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 8 of 8
1. The Push to Publish YA/Children's Book Panel: the questions we asked and answered


Before Catherine Stine, Nancy Viau, Alison DeLuca, and I met yesterday afternoon at Rosemont College for our Push to Publish YA/Children's Book Panel, we were invited to submit questions and answers for potential mulling during our panel. As the group's moderator, I promised the audience that I would share those very questions and answers here, to supplement the many other things we discussed during our it-flew-by-so-fast hour.  

Many thanks to all of you who came, to Catherine, Nancy, and Alison, who spoke so intelligently, and to Christine Weiser, Queen of Philadelphia Stories (from which the annual Push to Publish conference springs), who took this photograph for us. 


Catherine Stine:
1. How important is social media to your promo plan and when should you start to implement it?

The best advice I got from an early mentor was to start a blog way before my next big book came out, not when it came out. I started Catherine Stine’s Idea City about two years before my latest novel was published, and by that time I had over 340 followers, who helped with my book blog tour, and other promo posts such as interviews, features and giveaways, as well as me guest posting on their blogs.
 
I had no idea that the blogosphere would be so friendly and eager to help. Part of the fun is that it’s a mixed age-community, with everyone from savvy book reviewers, still in high school, to seasoned authors in their sixties. The key is to care about what others are posting! If you want good comments on your posts, you must return the favor.I’ve learned so much about publishing and writing from this vibrant community, and from indie authors as well as ones who are published with the Big Six. Other important social media to develop: a Goodreads author page, a Facebook author or book page, a Pinterest page and a twitter account. There are others, but this is a great place to start!
Topical online reads:
1. Publishers’ Weekly article on YA Marketing-Digital versus Physical:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bea/article/52455-bea-2012-ya-marketing-digital-vs-physical.html
2. Basic Marketing Tips from YA author, Elana Johnson:
http://elanajohnson.blogspot.com/2012/02/basic-marketing-plan-for-authors-who.html
3. What the heck is Pinterest, you ask? Check out a sampling of YA books for OCT on Pinterest! http://pinterest.com/BCSPLS/october-2012-children-teen-ebooks/
 

2. What are the big differences between indie and traditionally published books/authors? Between ebooks and paper copies? How do you see these trending in the future?

I see a blending in the future of who is published traditionally to who is publishing on their own, or with small houses. It will be more about the quality of the fiction and the authors’ growing readership than how authors publish. I’ve published with big houses such as Random House and American Girl, and I’ve also published through my own Konjur Road Press. Many traditionally published authors are now publishing their own out-of-print-books and novels that their agents haven’t placed. As publishing houses become more gun-shy and picky (because of less physical bookstores to sell to!) and authors learn how much they can potentially earn on their own the quality of indie fiction will grow ever higher! There is also a trend toward POD printing—that means print on demand. For instance, if someone orders your POD book through Amazon, or B&N, their publishing arm will print as many paperback copies as are ordered and no more. This has an upside for a beleaguered industry: publishers will no longer have to deal with huge store returns, which lose money for the houses when they must refund that revenue. On the other hand, it means less variety on the physical bookshelves. As more and more readers get comfy with ereading devices, more and more ebooks will sell. In the Catskills, where I go on the weekends, I feel the burn of bookstore closings. There are no more bookstores within 40 or 50 miles! People won’t stop reading, they will always want stories; they will simply buy more ebooks.  
Some related online articles:
1.
     A post by indie fantasy author, Lindsay Buroker:
http://www.lindsayburoker.com/tips-and-tricks/successful-indie-authors/ 

2.
     A post by Susan Kaye Quinn, indie YA author: http://www.susankayequinn.com/2011/09/taking-road-less-traveled-redux.html

3. Trends in YA? Write to trends or to what I love?

It’s always a gamble to predict specific trends because they change from year to year. And one should never, everwrite specifically to the trends. You should write that amazing novel that only you can write! I tell my students to focus on a subject or theme that they are totally inspired by, because maintaining fuel for those entire 250 to 350 pages is something only fierce interest and passion can drive. That said, there do seem to be trends for 2013/14: realistic YA is making a comeback, after a paranormal and fantasy-saturated market. Vamps are trending out, but there will probably always be room for that unique, geeky or charismatic vamp! Historical fantasy is in with novels such as Revolution by Jennifer Donnelly. Magical realism is growing, as is confidence in YA sci-fi like Black Hole Sun by Gill and space opera, such as A. Ryan’s Glow. Horror and unusual blends are growing in popularity as seen in novels like Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by R. Riggs. There is also a trend toward sci-fi romance, as in novels like V. Rossi’s Under the Never Sky. And then, there are the trend-busters whose mind-bending novels start entirely new trends! Will you write one of these?

Nancy Viau
How do I avoid the slush pile?

It's the "kiss of death" to address your submission to Dear Editor, Agent, or To Whom It May Concern. Research a name and target your manuscript to a real person, one who is acquiring work in the genre in which you write. There's a wealth of info to be found on websites such as www.publishersmarketplace.com
http://www.publishersmarketplace.com/>  (monthly subscription is about 20 bucks), www.agentquery.com <http://www.agentquery.com/> , www.querytracker.net <http://www.querytracker.net/> , and www.scbwi.org <http://www.scbwi.org/> . Bloggers like Casey McCormick, www.literaryrambles.com <http://www.literaryrambles.com/> , often feature authors and agents, and many editors and agents have blogs and are on Twitter or Facebook. But, instead of relying only on info found on the Internet (where everything's always correct, right? Ha!), find a better, more personal connection by going to conferences and/or getting one-on-one critiques at conferences. Strike up a conversation, exchange business cards, and schmooze your way to success.

What is in a query letter to an agent? How about a cover letter to an editor?

The best way for me to answer this is to give each person copies of letters I wrote to the above people. I'll dissect what I've included and why, and tell the group if it was a successful or not. I feel that the best "takeaway" is something someone can actually take away. : )

What types of picture books are children's book editors looking for?

This is the million dollar question! Who really knows? Many agents and editors say they want a story based on a marketable character. (Ex: FANCY NANCY, LADYBUG GIRL, DON'T LET THE PIGEON DRIVE THE BUS). In additon, they want short over long (less than 800 words), loud over quiet, and non-rhyming over rhyming. They'd also like you to be a celebrity! (*Smirk*) That being said, there are plenty of recently acquired books that break all these rules. (Ex: LOOK WHAT I CAN DO! and STORM SONG, my two picture books due out this spring. They are not character-based, they're considerably quiet, and they rhyme. And yes, I'm still shocked that they sold.)

Beth Kephart
What is the most surprising—or affirming—aspect of the YA writing community?

Although I’ve taught teens for years, I never planned to write books that were specifically set aside for that age group.  It seemed, to me, like an entirely different language, a world that I would never effectively penetrate.  Now with my eighth and ninth YA novels set for release, I have learned important things about the generosity of the YA writing community, the fervor of librarians and teachers, and the wide open heart of teen readers. Power—sometimes chaotic, sometimes strange, but nearly always mesmerizing—abides in the YA community.  And that is why, I think, adults increasingly lean in our direction.  That is also why so many teen books increasingly refuse to stay within set boundaries.  We writers of teen books want everyone to share in the magic.

Is there room for the quiet YA book?

I wasn’t sure there would be one, when I first started writing.  In fact, my kind of book was a bit of an experiment for Laura Geringer, my first YA editor, then at HarperCollins.  What would happen, she wondered, to teen books that were deliberately focused on emotion and mood, setting and  ideas, language and light, in the age of Twilight?  Would they find an audience? The good news is that there is an audience.  Not a rip-roaring, I’m-going-to-be-rich-and-famous audience.  But enough of an audience to enable me to keep writing my kind of book, to keep finding my kind of teen (and adult) reader. And for that I am hugely grateful.

What is the hottest trend in YA fiction?

I have been saying for a while now that we are at long last shedding categories with YA fiction.  We are celebrating individuals who write books that break rules and boundaries.  The Book Thief freed us, in that way. Writers like Patricia McCormick and A.S. King continue to remind us how powerful the unexpected is. And of course I still believe, as I wrote last year, that illustrated YA books, along with well-written, engaging historical novels, will find firmer marketing footholds.

1 Comments on The Push to Publish YA/Children's Book Panel: the questions we asked and answered, last added: 10/14/2012
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2. Push to Publish: The 2012 Philadelphia Stories Conference

A week ago today I was sitting in this Florentine bookshop (of the Anglo-American variety) interviewing the owners for a forthcoming profile in Publishing Perspectives.  Our conversation canvassed many topics. We spoke, in part, about what qualities turn books into the kind book sellers can believe in.

At the annual Philadelphia Stories Push to Publish conference—happening tomorrow, October 13, 2012, Rosemont College, Rosemont, PA—writers, agents, editors, publicists, and readers will be having similarly intense conversations about the making, publishing, and promoting of books.  I'll be moderating the "Writing for Children and Young Adults" panel at 2:30, hosting the well-loved Nancy Viau, Catherine Stine, and Alison DeLuca throughout the hour-long conversation.  We'll be talking trends (and their antitheses), traditional publishing, e-publishing, and self publishing, slush-pile avoidance tactics, the art of the query letter, and craft, too.  We'll definitely talk a little about craft because, well, I can't help it.

We're hoping you'll join us. 

2 Comments on Push to Publish: The 2012 Philadelphia Stories Conference, last added: 10/12/2012
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3. Character or Plot? Part 2 of the YA Roundtable with Elizabeth Mosier, Siobhan Vivian, and Melissa Walker

Part 2 of the Philadelphia Stories YA Roundtable continues here, as Elizabeth Mosier, Siobhan Vivian, Melissa Walker, and I talk about character, plot, and the advice we give to other writers. Our great thanks to Michelle Wittle!

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4. Talking YA With Elizabeth Mosier, Siobhan Vivian, and Melissa Walker (at Philadelphia Stories)

What a thrill to be joined by my friends Elizabeth Mosier, Siobhan Vivian, and Melissa Walker in a two-part conversation about favorite young adult books, writing influences, and process.  A big thanks to Michelle Wittle who pulled this all together for Philadelphia Stories.

Please visit this link to 'hear' us talk (Part 1).

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5. Anticipating Teen Day in Manayunk with Five Extraordinary Writer Friends

Many months ago, I received an invitation to read from You Are My Only at The Spiral Bookcase, a new independent bookstore in Manayunk, PA. I was, of course, keen to meet the store's very dear owner, Ann.  And I was thrilled to have a chance to support a new independent (how many new independent bookstores do you know?)  But how much more fun would be had, I thought, if I could be joined in the event by some of the best young adult writers around.

And so Ann and I talked.  And so one thing led to another.  And so it is with a great sense of anticipation and pleasure that I am sharing news of the inaugural Teen Day in Manayunk, to be held during the afternoon of March 24th.  There will be writing workshops for teen authors.  There will be a writing contest with winning entries (judged by Elizabeth Mosier and yours truly) appearing in the extraordinary teen-lit magazine Philadelphia Stories, Jr. and on The Spiral Bookcase web; I'll also be excerpting winning work here.  There will be marching bands and media coverage and appearances by some very special souls.

I encourage teachers, parents, and young writers in the Philadelphia area to find out more about the writing contest, workshop, and meet-and-greet by contacting Ann at The Spiral Bookcase.  I encourage the rest of you to consider spending time with some truly fine writers along the canal. 

Here we all are.  There we all will be.
Susan Campbell Bartoletti is best known for her nonfiction books, including the Newbery Honor-winning Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler's Shadow (Scholastic) and the YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction Honor-winning They Called Themselves the K.K.K.: The Birth of An American Terrorist Group (Houghton Mifflin). Her most recent titles include the novel The Boy Who Dared (Scholastic) and a picture book Naamah and the Ark at Night (Candlewick 2011), illustrated by the amazing Holly Meade. www.scbartoletti.com <http://www.scbartoletti.com>  <http://www.scbartoletti.com>

Beth Kephart is the National Book Award-nominated author of thirteen books, including the teen novels Undercover, House of Dance, Nothing but Ghosts, The Heart Is Not a Size, Dangerous Neighbors, and You Are My Only; Small Damages is due out from Philomel in July.   Beth, who is an adjunct faculty member of the University of Pennsylvania, blogs at http://beth-kephart.blogspot.com/.

A.S. King is the author of the highly acclaimed Everybody Sees the Ants, a YALSA 2012 Top Ten Fiction for Young Adults book, the 2011 Michael L. Printz Honor book Please Ignore Vera Dietz, ALA Best Book for Young Adults The Dust of 100 Dogs, and the forthcoming Ask the Passengers. Since returning from Ireland where she spent over a decade living off the land, te

4 Comments on Anticipating Teen Day in Manayunk with Five Extraordinary Writer Friends, last added: 2/21/2012
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6. Pushing to Publish

I was 28 and pregnant when I happened upon Natalie Kusz’s Road Song in the Princeton University Bookstore. It was the sort of story that I, then an avid reader of traditional history and biography, had not read before—a life story that read like a novel that left me wanting to know so much more. I’d been writing poems up to that point in my life. I hadn’t done much in the way of publishing. I’d studied the history of science at the University of Pennsylvania and never taken a single writing workshop. Road Song left me wrecked by something urgent. I wanted to write like Kusz had written—honestly, poetically, of a life. I wanted to discover, in the personal, universal truths.

I didn’t see myself writing a book, of course. I thought of transitioning from the poem to the essay. I bought anthologies, read widely, taught myself about this genre. I thought about what had not been done quite yet.

The first piece I produced was perhaps 1,000 words and had a lost necklace at its center. When I thought about publishing it, I went straight back to Kusz, to the front matter in her book, where she acknowledged magazines that had accepted her excerpts. One of those magazines was called Iowa Woman, and I began at once to hunt it down. Finding i at last, I sent my essay that way. And then I waited, as writers will, for months.

This was back in the old day of mailboxes and stamps. I checked my own eagerly each day. Finally, indeed, an Iowa Woman letter showed up. It was long. It encouraged. It also critiqued. It was the first literary critique I’d ever received. It asked that I reconsider some passages and asked, too, if I’d consider submitting again.

I reconsidered, and I considered. “The Pearl Necklace” was my first published essay.....

— from my keynote talk yesterday to the inspired and inspiring crowd at the Philadephia Stories' Push to Publish conference. Thank you, Christine and Carla, for the opportunity.

5 Comments on Pushing to Publish, last added: 10/22/2008
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7. Talking Forward

It's a funny time for me—taking care of all variety of client work while preparing for two literary talks. The first is tomorrow, the fall gathering at Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church, and I've decided to reflect out loud on something I've sometimes alluded to here—the role that truth plays in the fiction I write, and the ways in which fiction can lead one back around to the truth. I'm going to read from Nothing but Ghosts in the end—a scene that couples up and crumbles together a trip I once took to Cascais, an utterly made-up librarian (except that she has a best friend's name), and my adoration for the moon. "The moon is gigantic," the chapter begins, "a big white throb in a blue-black sky."

On Saturday I'm keynoting at the Push to Publish conference (for Philadelphia Stories at Rosemont College), and so I'll be speaking there of the road I've taken through the various channels of publishing. I started small—literary magazines. I bumped up against enormous resistance ("your books are not commercial"). I've received advances for some books, no advances for others, some have surprised their publishers (in good ways) and some have disappointed. I have a new book that is circulating at this moment. Its fate is not secure; I still have my heart up high in my throat and likely will be living like this for a long time. Publishing is hard work, emotional work, bruising work. I'll be talking about all of that, too.

2 Comments on Talking Forward, last added: 10/16/2008
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8. Pushing to Publish

A posting here to share with you this URL, which will connect any of you who are Philly centric to the Push to Publish program, sponsored by Philadelphia Stories. Some of you might already know about this dedicated and graceful organization—writers and editors who care about opening the world of writing to others, and who publish a gorgeous magazine. Last year's event was, I've heard, a terrific success.

I'll be keynoting that day, but the whole day looks rich and worthwhile.

http://www.philadelphiastories.org/marketing/pushtopublish.php

4 Comments on Pushing to Publish, last added: 9/26/2008
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