I’m pleased to welcome Lindsay Ribar of Greenburger Associates to the blog. I think you'll find a lot to like in this up-and-coming agent. Happy reading!
KV: Are you a writer yourself? What do you write?
LR: I am indeed! I write YA paranormal fiction. I only
have one book out so far (The Art of
Wishing, Dial Books For Young Readers), but its sequel (The Fourth Wish, Kathy Dawson Books) is
slated for summer 2014.
KV: Popping in to say it's a darn good thing THE ART OF WISHING is going to have a sequel:) All right, back to the interview!
How long have you been agenting, and how did you get into it?
How long have you been agenting, and how did you get into it?
LR: I’ve been working at Sanford J. Greenburger for a
little over six years now, primarily as an assistant to a senior agent. I’ve
been doing my own agenting for about half that time. I actually got into it
almost by accident; as a graduate of the Columbia Publishing Course back in
2006, I had my heart set on getting into the business on the editorial side.
Interview after interview yielded nothing (it’s a very crowded job market), so
I started interviewing on the agency side too, and landed a job working for
Matt Bialer at SJGA…where I found that editorial work is important on the
agency side, too. And since I got into this business so I could work on stories
with writers, I’ve found agenting to be very fulfilling indeed.
KV: How would you summarize your personal agenting
philosophy? What do you expect from an agent-author relationship?
LR: I don’t think I have a philosophy, per se, but my
M.O. is always to get each manuscript into the best possible shape before
sending it out to editors--no matter how many rounds of revisions it takes. (My
clients are sighing right now; they know this!)
As far as the relationship goes, it varies a lot from
client to client. My job is to support my clients and get the best possible
work out of them; sometimes that means leaving them alone for months at a time
while they work, and sometimes it means reading a few chapters at a time to
make sure their work is on the right track. It all depends on what they,
individually, need from me.
KV: What client work do you have coming out soon? What
drew you to those writers and/or projects?
LR: I’ve got two books coming out later this year from
clients that I co-represent with my boss, Matt Bialer:
CLEAN BURN by Karen Sandler (8/27/13, Exhibit A)--A
kickass thriller starring a private investigator who must return to the
hometown she left behind long ago, to find and stop a series of child
abductions, and battle some of her own demons along the way.
FORTUNE’S PAWN by Rachel Bach (11/5/13, Orbit)--A science
fiction adventure story starring a female mercenary named Deviana Morris, who
takes a job aboard a spaceship that’s just a little bit too notorious for
running into, shall we say, interesting
times.
And then, next year, two of my own clients have awesome
books coming out:
CALL ME GRIM by Elizabeth Holloway (Month9Books)--A YA
paranormal adventure in which a teenaged girl must choose between dying a normal
death at her scheduled time…and becoming a Grim Reaper in order to save her
best friend from damnation.
PREMONITIONS by Jamie Schultz (Ace)--A dark fantasy in
which a mercenary, along with her crew of small-time criminals, takes a job
from an untrustworthy crime lord so she can continue paying for the rare drug
that keeps her from hallucinating slices of the future.
As far as what drew me to these writers…well, it was the
same thing every time. Great writing, great characters, and a story that
pressed all the right buttons. At the end of the day, it’s really as simple as
that.
KV: What genres do you represent? What genres do you
definitely NOT represent?
LR: I mostly represent YA and middle grade, with a few
adult authors thrown in for good measure. I’m open to considering most things,
but genres I don’t represent include
religious fiction, picture books, political or legal thrillers, and most
non-fiction. Also, I’ll be honest: I’m not terribly keen on elves or dragons.
KV: What query pet peeves and/or pitfalls should writers
avoid when querying you?
LR: Oh, all the usual stuff. Don’t put someone else’s
name on a query addressed to me. Don’t forget to check your query letter for
typos. Don’t spend more than a few paragraphs telling me what your book is
about, and for the love of all things holy, don’t waste time telling me how
much your parents or your children or your colleagues or your critique partners
love your book. Just tell me what the book is about. Let the work speak for
itself.
KV: What are you looking for in a manuscript right now?
LR: Right now, I’m looking mostly for YA and middle
grade, with an emphasis on fantasy rooted in the real world, horror,
mysteries/thrillers, and LGBT books that aren’t “Coming Out 101.”
KV: What’s the best way to query you?
LR: Via e-mail, using the criteria listed on the SJGA
website: greenburger.com/agent/lindsay-ribar-2.
Thanks again, Ms. Ribar, for taking the time to answer my
questions. It sounds like you’re a busy bee, but that’s definitely not a bad thing.
Have a great weekend, all!
Have a great weekend, all!