Friday, October 21, 2022

#PitchMe 2022 Results and Wrap-up

Another #PitchMe's come and gone, and I'm delightfully worn out. #PitchMe pitches racked up 72 likes earlier this week from our agents and editors (and several pitches scored 3 additional likes from an outside agent and editor, too)! Here's a breakdown of the action:

#2 PB: MY BA'S AMBODO Kaitlyn Leann Sanchez, Jennifer Herrington, Michael Carr, Elisa Houot
#3 PB: SOUR DOUGH Jennifer Herrington
#5 PB: WHISPER TO THE WORRY STONES Jennifer Herrington, Lindsay Auld, Stefanie Molina, Kristin Ostby, Cherrita Lee
#7 PB: QUOKKA CAN'T FROWN Jennifer Herrington, Stefanie Molina, Cherrita Lee
#8 MG: KONRAD BLOOM AND THE REJECTS OF TECH-E ACADEMY Kaitlyn Leann Sanchez, Lindsay Auld, Alison Weiss
#9 MG: A RECIPE FOR DISASTER Elizabeth Bewley, Alex Aceves, Lindsay Auld, Lisa Mangum
#10 MG: MAIRA AND THE RAINBOW CITY Elizabeth Bewley, Lindsay Auld, Lisa Mangum
#11 MG: NEWTON'S NOVELTIES Jennifer Herrington, Jon Cobb, Lindsay Auld, Shari Maurer
#14 MG: MURDER AASAN Jennifer Herrington, Jon Cobb, Lindsay Auld, Michael Carr, Kristin Ostby, Savannah Brooks (plus Kristie Choi)
#15 YA: THE EXTRAORDINARY LIFE OF A FLOWER Alex Aceves, Stefanie Molina, Lisa Mangum, Savannah Brooks
#17 YA: ONCE UPON A ROAD TRIP Jennifer Herrington, Elizabeth Bewley, Alex Aceves, Elisa Houot
#18 YA: BEAUTY TO ASHES Elizabeth Bewley, Alex Aceves, Michael Carr, Kristin Ostby, Elisa Houot, Lindsay Auld, Ali Lake
#21 YA: THE WONDER BENEATH Elizabeth Bewley, Alex Aceves, Michael Carr, Kristin Ostby
#22 YA: A MAJOR IN DROWNING Jennifer Herrington, Elizabeth Bewley, Lindsay Auld, Shari Maurer, Kristin Ostby, Jon Cobb (plus Michelle Z. Jackson)
#27 A: AT THE END OF TIME Kaitlyn Leann Sanchez, Elizabeth Bewley, Jen Nadol, Kristin Ostby, Lisa Mangum (plus Michelle Z. Jackson)
#29 A: THE SOMEDAY GAME Kaitlyn Leann Sanchez, Jen Nadol, Julie Crisp

In addition, one of our PBs came to the agent round with an offer on the table!

Also, I just want to say that, if you didn't get a like--or even if you didn't get picked as a finalist--I still believe in you, and I hope you believe in you, too. The only trait every published author has in common is persistence, so keep bashing your head against that brick wall until it comes crumbling down.

Last but certainly not least, THANK YOU. Whether you were an agent, an editor, an entrant, or a finalist, I couldn't have done this without you. And I REALLY couldn't have done this without PB partner-in-crime Tara Shiroff. Thanks again for all your insights and boundless enthusiasm.

Until next year!

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

This Year's #PitchMe Finalists

 Without any ado, here are the #PitchMe finalists* in no particular order:

PB

A.W.'s THE PICKLE INCIDENT
A.W.'s WORRY STONES (a different A.W., I promise!)
R.J.'s QUOKKA CAN'T FROWN
R.M.K's HEADLINE FROM THE HEIGHTS
K.R.'s I'M NOT A CINNAMON ROLL
K.P.'s MY BA'S AMBODO
S.K.R.'s SOUR DOUGH

(Also, it's worth mentioning that Tara reads these entries blind so her opinions are unbiased!)

MG

T.M.'s A RECIPE FOR DISASTER (contemporary)
C.L.'s MAIRA AND THE RAINBOW CITY (fantasy)
A.M.'s ARDEN WOOD AND THE MAGICAL MUSICAL (contemporary fantasy)
C.D.'s KONRAD BLOOM AND THE REJECTS OF TECH-E ACADEMY (sci-fi mystery)
S.P.'s MURDER AASAN (fantasy mystery)
J.K.'s NEWTON'S NOVELTIES (sci-fi)
D.A.'s THE TRINITY KNOT (historical)

YA

P.C.H.'s ONCE UPON A ROAD TRIP (romantic comedy)
K.N.'s DANCING WITH THE ALL-STARS (contemporary romance)
J.W.'s MY NAME IS MARY READ (historical)
K.B.'s SONG FOR LOST SOULS (fantasy)
A.T.'s THE EXTRAORDINARY LIFE OF A FLOWER (contemporary)
E.C.'s A MAJOR IN DROWNING (speculative mystery)
K.O.'s BEAUTY TO ASHES (horror)
I.L.C.'s THE WONDER BENEATH (fantasy)

Adult

P.T.Z.'s DARK RUN (thriller)
M.F.'s PROMISE THEM A STORM (fantasy)
D.B.'s DREAM MACHINE (sci-fi)
M.P.'s THE WIZARD'S CORPSE (fantasy mystery)
E.K.'s FINDING THE MUGWORT GIRLS (cozy mystery)
R.M.'s THE SOMEDAY GAME (speculative romance)
S.L.'s AT THE END OF TIME (literary fantasy)
E.J.C.'s TOPSIDERS (sci-fi)

Congratulations, finalists! I really can't wait to dig in and help you make these awesome projects just a little awesomer.

If your submission wasn't chosen, thank you so much for submitting, and please, please, please don't give up. I took notes on every entry and wrote down something positive about every single one (and usually a suggestion, too). If you don't find an agent between now and October 20 and would like to hear my thoughts on your pitch, query, and first page, you're more than welcome to respond to your original submission with a request for that feedback. I only ask that you hold off until Thursday, October 20, the day AFTER the agent round, so I can spend these next few weeks reviewing the finalists' work.

*As I alluded to yesterday, the allocation of the wildcards is simply a reflection of what the agents who agreed to participate in #PitchMe are looking for right now. Of the 14 agents who signed up, 4 are looking for PB, 10 are looking for MG, 12 are looking for YA, and 10 are looking for adult. (The lurking editors are only on the hunt for kidlit, from PB to YA.)

Monday, September 19, 2022

Thoughts on This Year's #PitchMe Entries

I've now read every entry, and once again, you guys didn't make it easy on me! Multiple times, I added six or seven entries in a row to the longlist I was building, which made me keep wondering how I'd ever trim it down. As we make our final choices, here's a little food for thought:

Overall Impressions

  • Longtime agent Donald Maass has written multiple books about writing breakout novels, but writing break-IN novels--and especially PBs--is probably even harder. Established authors can write to trends and cover previously trod ground because they have relationships with agents and editors--and because those agents and editors know that their names alone sell books. For emerging authors, though, a PB about a dog or a YA about a boarding school may not generate interest.
  • Most queries ended with the Query Shark-approved "Thank you for your time and consideration," but many also added something along the lines of "I look forward to hearing from you." I brought this up last year, and I'm bringing it up again because I firmly believe queries shouldn't include this line. It can sound passive-aggressive if an agent has established a no-response-means-no policy, which is never a great look. Save this line for when you send agents requested material (because I firmly believe agents owe writers responses once they've requested your work).
  • It felt like roughly half of the novel-length entries were contemporaries while the other half were fantasies. This isn't good or bad--it's simply what the breakdown was--but if you're querying a manuscript in one of these two genres, you may be giving yourself a lot of extra competition.
  • More than one query admitted that this project was the first thing its author had ever written. Don't tell agents this upfront! The first thing most writers write is destined for the deep, dark drawer where people keep their old retainers and junior high-era school pictures, so don't make it easier for someone to reject your work.
  • And on a related note, you almost certainly don't need to tell agents that this manuscript would be your debut. If you don't mention other books that you've previously published, agents will assume it will be:)

PB Notes

  • There were 142 submissions (!) within this category (one less than I reported a couple of weeks ago, as I found a duplicate).
  • Far too many of these entries failed to credit illustrators of the comp titles they used. If there's one thing I've learned from Tara, it's ALWAYS CREDIT ILLUSTRATORS! They put the picture in PBs:)
  • I also thought some of the bios in these entries were too long. (And this wasn't just confined to the picture books, mind you; it just seemed to be an issue among more of these entries.) Unless your name is Stephen King, your bio paragraph should be the shortest one in your query--and if your name IS Stephen King, your reputation precedes you. Definitely tell us if you have any other published books, any lived experience with what your book is about, or an exceptional platform. (Hint: I don't think my platform is exceptional enough to mention in the body of a query, though I always include links to my blog, Twitter, etc., in my signature block.) Above all, keep it short and sweet.
  • A handful of these entries didn't mention their word counts, which made it really difficult to evaluate their marketability (especially in the context of this contest, as we may not have allowed you to send the full manuscript). If you want to give your picture book the best possible chance, keep your word count under 500. Nonfiction PBs have a lot more latitude--agents wouldn't bat an eye at anything under 1,000--but 500 words is a pretty firm ceiling in the current fiction market. 

I'll let Tara have the last word on the PBs: "Comp titles do not have to be about the same topic as your own book, i.e. TIGERS ARE AWESOME does not have to comp to TIGERS ARE CUTE, TIGERS ARE ORANGE, and TIGERS ARE TERRIFYING. You can comp to any book that has a similar theme to your story (friendship! forgiveness! kindness!) or the type of story (lyrical, humorous), but you don't need to strictly stick to the exact topic of your book.

"Please ensure your story is a story 'that's yours to tell.' I saw several PBs about neurodiversity where that was not the author's own background and some about disability because it was 'about my friend with a disability.' We need to leave room in the marketplace for stories from authors who have lived these experiences (neurodiversity, disability, etc.) themselves."


MG Notes

  • There were 46 submissions within this category.
  • There were also lots of fairies. And stories that revolved around the current climate crisis. There's nothing wrong with fairies or the climate crisis, right (or at least there's nothing wrong with centering a book around them!), but in this batch of MG queries, those plot elements stood out.

YA Notes

  • There were 49 submissions within this category.
  • I noticed lots of missions to avenge dead/missing parents in this batch of YA queries. (And when I say "lots," of course, I really mean, like, four or five, which isn't many in the end, but that plot point did stand out.) Same note as above: missions to avenge dead parents aren't dealbreakers on their own, but they may have made it harder for an entry to stand out.

Adult Notes

  • There were 46 submissions within this category, which is actually one more than I told you two weeks ago. (Clearly, my counting skills need work...)
  • This year, I tried to focus on the writing, writing, writing. I mean, I try to focus on the writing every year, but in the past, I've gotten wooed by super marketable concepts and kind of let the writing slide. This year, I said, "No more!" so if I didn't think the writing was ready for prime time, I forced myself to pass on super great ideas.

Lastly, I wanted to add that the nature of this contest creates some artificial issues that straight querying doesn't. Every agent who agreed to participate last year was looking for MG while significantly fewer were looking for adult. Conversely, almost every agent who's participating this year is looking for YA while significantly fewer are looking for PB. Since we want to feature projects that best match the agents' tastes, we have to choose fewer PBs than we otherwise would based on the number of entries (just like I had to choose fewer adults than I otherwise would have last year).

Finalists announced TOMORROW instead of on Wednesday!

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Second Submission Window for #PitchMe 2022 Now Open

Update: And that's a wrap! We ended up with 143 PBs, 46 MGs, 49 YAs, and 45 adults for a total of 283 entries. Finalists will be announced on Wednesday, September 21!

Welcome to #PitchMe 2022! To enter, your manuscript must meet two conditions. First, it must be COMPLETE, NEVER-PUBLISHED, AND READY TO QUERY, and second, it must be in one of the following genres:

PB fiction and nonfiction* (all genres)
MG fiction (all genres)
YA fiction (all genres)
Adult fiction (all genres, including commercial, literary, and/or upmarket but excluding erotica)

*I’ve asked PB author and two-time #TacoPitch winner Tara Shiroff to help me again!

1. All submissions must be sent to kvandolzer(at)gmail(dot)com and include A TWITTER PITCH, A QUERY, AND THE FIRST 250 WORDS of your manuscript. (PB author-illustrators are also encouraged to share links to their online portfolios.) You must paste these items IN THE BODY OF YOUR E-MAIL; otherwise, I'll disqualify it.

2. Please submit ONLY ONE PROJECT. If you submit multiple projects, I'll only consider the first.

3. It would also really help if you INCLUDE YOUR CATEGORY--PB, MG, YA, OR ADULT--SOMEWHERE IN YOUR SUBJECT LINE, but it's not a requirement.

4. THERE WILL BE TWO 30-MINUTE SUBMISSION WINDOWS to (try to) accommodate work schedules and international entrants. The first submission window opens on Wednesday, September 7, at 11:00 a.m. EDT and closes at 11:30 a.m. EDT. The second submission window opens later that same day, Wednesday, September 7, at 11:00 p.m. EDT and closes at 11:30 p.m. EDT. Hopefully, you'll be awake and/or not at work during one of these 30-minute intervals!

5. Once you send me your submission, I’ll send you a confirmation e-mail with a summary of these rules.

6. Previous finalists may enter again AS LONG AS THEY HAVE A NEW MANUSCRIPT TO SUBMIT.

For more information, including a timeline of events and a list of participating agents, check out this post. We can't wait to read your work!

First Submission Window for #PitchMe 2022 Now Open

UPDATE: The first submission window is now closed, but the second submission window will open at 11:00 p.m. EDT tonight. For your information, we've received 88 PBs, 26 MGs, 33 YAs, and 31 adults so far!

Welcome to #PitchMe 2022! To enter, your manuscript must meet two conditions. First, it must be COMPLETE, NEVER-PUBLISHED, AND READY TO QUERY, and second, it must be in one of the following genres:

PB fiction and nonfiction* (all genres)
MG fiction (all genres)
YA fiction (all genres)
Adult fiction (all genres, including commercial, literary, and/or upmarket but excluding erotica)

*I’ve asked PB author and two-time #TacoPitch winner Tara Shiroff to help me again!

1. All submissions must be sent to kvandolzer(at)gmail(dot)com and include A TWITTER PITCH, A QUERY, AND THE FIRST 250 WORDS of your manuscript. (PB author-illustrators are also encouraged to share links to their online portfolios.) You must paste these items IN THE BODY OF YOUR E-MAIL; otherwise, I'll disqualify it.

2. Please submit ONLY ONE PROJECT. If you submit multiple projects, I'll only consider the first.

3. It would also really help if you INCLUDE YOUR CATEGORY--PB, MG, YA, OR ADULT--SOMEWHERE IN YOUR SUBJECT LINE, but it's not a requirement.

4. THERE WILL BE TWO 30-MINUTE SUBMISSION WINDOWS to (try to) accommodate work schedules and international entrants. The first submission window opens on Wednesday, September 7, at 11:00 a.m. EDT and closes at 11:30 a.m. EDT. The second submission window opens later that same day, Wednesday, September 7, at 11:00 p.m. EDT and closes at 11:30 p.m. EDT. Hopefully, you'll be awake and/or not at work during one of these 30-minute intervals!

5. Once you send me your submission, I’ll send you a confirmation e-mail with a summary of these rules.

6. Previous finalists may enter again AS LONG AS THEY HAVE A NEW MANUSCRIPT TO SUBMIT.

For more information, including a timeline of events and a list of participating agents, check out this post. We can't wait to read your work!

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About #PitchMe 2022

#PitchMe is back, and I couldn't be more thrilled. If you take what I love most about multi-agent query contests--mentoring great writers at wherever they happen to be on their publishing journey--and mash it up with a pitch fest, then you've basically got #PitchMe. Are you interested? Read on!

Here’s the timeline:

September 7: The submission windows open
September 21: Selected submissions announced
September 21-October 18: Mentoring takes place
October 19: Revised Twitter pitches posted; agents (and editors!) like their favorites

Submissions

To enter, your manuscript must meet two conditions. First, it must be COMPLETE, NEVER-PUBLISHED, AND READY TO QUERY, and second, it must be in one of the following genres:

PB fiction and nonfiction* (all genres)
MG fiction (all genres)
YA fiction (all genres)
Adult fiction (all genres, including commercial, literary, and/or upmarket but excluding erotica)

*I’ve asked PB author and two-time #TacoPitch winner Tara Shiroff to help me again!

1. All submissions must be sent to kvandolzer(at)gmail(dot)com and include A TWITTER PITCH, A QUERY, AND THE FIRST 250 WORDS of your manuscript. (PB author-illustrators are also encouraged to share links to their online portfolios.) You must paste these items IN THE BODY OF YOUR E-MAIL; otherwise, I'll disqualify it.

2. Please submit ONLY ONE PROJECT. If you submit multiple projects, I'll only consider the first.

3. It would also really help if you INCLUDE YOUR CATEGORY--PB, MG, YA, OR ADULT--SOMEWHERE IN YOUR SUBJECT LINE, but it's not a requirement.

4. THERE WILL BE TWO 30-MINUTE SUBMISSION WINDOWS to (try to) accommodate work schedules and international entrants. The first submission window opens on Wednesday, September 7, at 11:00 a.m. EDT and closes at 11:30 a.m. EDT. The second submission window opens later that same day, Wednesday, September 7, at 11:00 p.m. EDT and closes at 11:30 p.m. EDT. Hopefully, you'll be awake and/or not at work during one of these 30-minute intervals!

5. Once you send me your submission, I’ll send you a confirmation e-mail with a summary of these rules.

6. Previous finalists may enter again AS LONG AS THEY HAVE A NEW MANUSCRIPT TO SUBMIT.

Selections

I'll select 6 entries within each major category--PB, MG, YA, and adult--and up to 6 wildcards. I may pick 6 adults or 3 YAs and 3 MGs or just a single PB; it depends on what I know the agents are looking for and which submissions seem strongest.

Once I've finalized my picks--with Tara’s help, of course--I'll e-mail the winning writers and announce the winning titles here and/or on my Twitter feed on Wednesday, September 21. Then the real work will begin!

Mentoring

For the next roughly 4 weeks, the winning writers will revise their pitches, queries, and first pages with my and Tara’s help. You won’t be obligated to incorporate our thoughts, and the feedback we provide on your queries and first pages won’t actually be featured in the agent round itself. We just want to help you make your pitches, queries, and first pages the very best that they can be.

Liking

On Wednesday, October 19, I'll post the revised pitches ON MY TWITTER FEED for the agents (and editors!) to review. Here are the awesome agents who’ll be liking your pitches:

Aida Z. Lilly of KT Literary
Ali Lake of Janklow & Nesbit Associates

Each like will count as a partial or full request based on the agents’ preferences. Agents will be able to review and like your pitches for a full 24 hours, at which point you’ll be allowed to submit your materials to all the agents who requested them. These likes represent serious interest in your project, so PLEASE DON’T ACCEPT AN OFFER OF REPRESENTATION BEFORE GIVING THE #PITCHME AGENTS AN OPPORTUNITY TO MAKE A COMPETING OFFER.

I've also enlisted the aid of some lurking editors. Their likes will also represent requests, BUT EVEN IF THEIR PUBLISHERS ALLOW YOU TO SUBMIT WITHOUT AN AGENT, I STRONGLY RECOMMEND THAT YOU WAIT UNTIL YOU SECURE REPRESENTATION. A smart, savvy agent is worth their weight in gold, and I'm hopeful agents will be even more interested in your project if they know you've got an editor request (or two!) in your back pocket.


So get those pitches polished up and plan to e-mail them to me--with your queries and first pages--on Wednesday, September 7, at 11:00 a.m. or 11:00 p.m. EDT. We can’t wait to read your work!

Have a question? Ask below!

Monday, January 24, 2022

My Top Ten Reads of 2021

I read sixty books last year, which honestly seemed a little low until I remembered that, thanks to the pandemic, I'm not getting to the library nearly as often as I used to. Still, sixty isn't nothing, and in the spirit of New Year's, I thought I would share my ten favorite reads with you (in the order that I read them, not the order that I liked them).

1. RHYTHM OF WAR by Brandon Sanderson Mr. Sanderson is one of my very favorite authors, and the books in his Stormlight Archive are my very favorites of his books. RHYTHM OF WAR is the fourth book in the series, so if you want to start at the beginning, check out THE WAY OF KINGS.

2. YOUR LIFE HAS BEEN DELAYED by Michelle I. Mason I got to read this as an ARC, which is why it shows up so early in this list. Michelle is one of my oldest and dearest writing friends, but I would have loved YOUR LIFE HAS BEEN DELAYED even if she weren't. The first few chapters, in which the MC finds out her very normal-seeming flight landed twenty-five years to the day after it took off, totally sucked me in.

3. BLACK BROTHER, BLACK BROTHER by Jewell Parker Rhodes I loved this book so much I paid my kids to read it, too, and discuss its themes with me. An age-appropriate but compelling look at race, unequal treatment, and genealogy--and did I mention that there's fencing? :)

4. FURIA by Yamile Saied Méndez Anyone who follows me on Twitter has probably figured out that I watch a lot of sports, so it stands to reason that I would love sports books--but FURIA is so much more. A worthy addition to Reese Witherspoon's book club.

5. EDUCATED by Tara Westover I know I'm exceptionally late to this party, but EDUCATED was just as impactful as I'd heard it was. Though it was hard to read in places, I also found it to be an excellent example of narrative nonfiction.

6. FADEAWAY by E.B. Vickers I love the true-crime trend that's making the rounds in YA (see my reference to A GOOD GIRL'S GUIDE TO MURDER below), and though this starts in that same vein, it eventually develops into something much more meaningful. Must-read YA at its finest.

7. LOVE FROM A TO Z by S.K. Ali I heart Ms. Ali's YA romances because I feel such a sense of kinship with her YA characters. I wasn't raised Muslim, but my Christian faith came with a similar set of modesty and dating standards, so I wholeheartedly relate to Janna and Zayneb. This is my new favorite of Ms. Ali's books.

8. AS GOOD AS DEAD by Holly Jackson Ms. Jackson's debut trilogy, which starts with A GOOD GIRL'S GUIDE TO MURDER, is a tour de force. That said, I didn't like this book--BUT I thought it was amazing. Ms. Jackson took some massive risks with her plot and characters, and though it pained me to see what her characters became, I couldn't help but tip my hat to her sheer audacity. How's that for contradictory? :)

9. CECE RIOS AND THE DESERT OF SOULS by Kaela Rivera This MG fantasy has it all: criaturas, brujas, and a courageous MC determined to consort with one so she can become the other (and save her sister in the process). A glittering debut that left me hungry for the sequel.

10. WHEN WE WERE INFINITE by Kelly Loy Gilbert My goodness, where do I start? I fell in love with Ms. Gilbert's writing when I read her debut years ago (that one's called CONVICTION, and you should also check it out), and thematically, this book hit even closer to home. Ms. Gilbert doesn't publish books nearly as often as I wish she did, but every time a new one comes out, it's a must-read for me.

Have you read any of these books, and if so, what did you think? And which books made your top ten?