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  • Tag: agenting

    • Deal Announcement: Annie Cardi, YA Contemporary

      Posted at 10:39 am by Laura, on December 12, 2024

      I’m happy to share that Annie Cardi, author of the powerfully moving novel Red, will have another equally urgent and powerful novel coming out in 2026: Winter White!

      Ardyce Alspach at Union Square Kids has acquired Annie Cardi’s (Red) next retelling, Winter White. This YA adaptation of Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale, centered around domestic abuse and the opioid epidemic, follows a teen girl living in rural Maine with her domineering father. When a boy from her past reappears, she finds solace in his kindness and strength in his help as she uncovers the mystery of her identity. Publication is slated for early 2026; Laura Crockett at Triada US Literary Agency negotiated the deal for world English rights.

      After Red‘s publication, Annie’s publisher expressed interest in seeing more classic retellings, and Annie was happy to oblige. We created a massive list of ideas, with summaries and pitches and (in some cases) whole outlines for different classic narratives paired with modern issues and topics that teens face daily. The publisher narrowed it down, and then Annie followed her gut from those options and wrote a proposal for the project that most interested her and she felt most passionate about.

      I’m so glad Ardyce and Union Square agreed! Winter White is going to be a balm for teens within and adjacent to similar circumstances. Edits are currently underway, and I’ve already been moved to tears. This is gonna be a great book, friends––keep your eyes peeled!

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • Deal Announcement: Laura E. Weymouth, Adult Fantasy

      Posted at 10:56 am by Laura, on December 11, 2024

      I’m thrilled to share––even belatedly––that the wonderful Laura E. Weymouth is finally publishing her adult magnum opus: the Daughters of Light duology containing The Castle & the Cloister and The Starlight & the Flame!

      YA author Laura E. Weymouth’s adult debut THE CASTLE & THE CLOISTER and THE STARLIGHT & THE FLAME, a political duology following a wet nurse, a pacifist queen, and a warrior priest as they attempt to alter the fate of a continent shattered by war, pitched for fans of PRIORY OF THE ORANGE TREE and the Farseer trilogy, to Nivia Evans at Saga Press, in a very nice deal, in a pre-empt, in a two-book deal, for publication in spring 2026, by Laura Crockett at TriadaUS Literary Agency (NA). UK rights to Kate McHale at Del Rey UK, in a pre-empt, in a two-book deal.

      As I shared in the YA deal announcement, Laura and I have danced around one another for years, and to finally be able to work with her and bring this special project to shelves is an absolute dream come true for both us. I’m excited for you to read it! Add The Castle & the Cloister to your TBR shelves!

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • Deal Announcement: Laura E. Weymouth, YA Fantasy

      Posted at 2:37 pm by Laura, on June 6, 2024

      dealannouncement

      I am so excited to share (albeit a little belated!) that Laura E. Weymouth is coming out with a new YA fantasy, Steel & Spellfire!

      Nicole Fiorica at McElderry Books has acquired Laura E. Weymouth’s (The Voice Upstairs) next YA fantasy, Steel & Spellfire, pitched for fans of Divine Rivals and The Witch Haven. A gifted mage with clandestine romantic connections to a Royal Guard joins the court social season in an attempt to undo past wrongs, only to fall under suspicion when a creature with powers like her own begins slaughtering her fellow debutantes. Publication is set for summer 2025; Laura Crockett at Triada US did the deal for North American rights.

      Laura is no stranger to publishing, nor to our agency. But I am elated to represent her and her work. She has such a gorgeous way of writing fantasy worlds with compelling characters that grip your heart. Steel & Spellfire is no different!

      Funny story, though. Years and years ago, in the early days of my career, Laura had queried me a much earlier version of this project. There was a nugget of something there, something intriguing. Over time Laura honed her skills and grew in her craft. To be reunited with this project is such a joy––to see how far the project and Laura have come is a true pleasure as an agent.

      (I’ve seen the cover on this one. Friends, you’re gonna love it!)

      Add Laura’s Steel & Spellfire to your TBR and stay tuned for more news to come!

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • Deal Announcement: Tesia Tsai, YA Fantasy

      Posted at 8:23 pm by Laura, on May 28, 2024

      dealannouncement

      I am so happy to share the news (albeit a little belated!) that debut author Tesia Tsai YA fantasy, Deathly Fates, will be published! 

      Vanessa Aguirre at Wednesday Books has bought, in a preempt, debut author and Pitch Wars alum Tesia Tsai’s Deathly Fates. Siying, a priestess who reanimates the dead to shepherd them home, accepts a risky job guiding a prince’s corpse from a battlefield––only to find that he awakens more alive than dead. But as they work together to strengthen and preserve what life he has left, the truth of his death becomes a threat to the fate of the entire kingdom. Publication is slated for winter 2026; Laura Crockett at Triada US did the two-book deal for North American rights.

      Once upon a time…

      Way back in February 2021, back when Pitch Wars was still a thing (RIP), I requested a project titled THE ART OF DEATH. In a handful of days Tesia had received offers of rep and I was scurrying to read and throw my hat into the ring too. I do not know how many other agents offered, nor do I care––but I was over-the-moon thrilled that she chose me!

      What followed in our submission journey were all of these revision requests from editors. Changing the name of the protagonist, changing the perspective from third to first, adding in more horror, adding in more romance. Tesia toiled away on this project, polishing it bit by bit. It’s been an extraordinary journey, and we knew we were finally, surely, getting close to that perfect editor match. 

      I’m so glad we continued to persevere! Because we found the perfect person with Vanessa Aguirre. She adored the manuscript to pieces, she really understood Tesia’s intentions with the narrative on grand and minute scales. So much of publishing is more than hard work and revision––it’s also luck too. 

      The stars aligned!

      And the rest…is history.

      Congratulations, Tesia! You’re going to be a published author! 

       

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 1 Comment | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • Deal Announcement: Tasha Suri, Fantasy

      Posted at 3:49 pm by Laura, on March 11, 2024

      I’m so happy to finally share the news that Tasha Suri (Books of Ambha duology and The Burning Kingdoms trilogy) is coming out with two brand new fantasy standalones!

      World Fantasy Award-winning author Tasha Suri’s next standalone fantasy novel about a knight and a witch who must change the fate of magic and the world by altering the end of their story, pitched as Green Knight meets The Starless Sea with reincarnation, to Priyanka Krishnan while at Orbit, with Tiana Coven editing, in a two-book deal, for publication in fall 2025, by Laura Crockett at Triada US Literary Agency (world).

      We’ve been waiting to share this news for a whole year. One whole year. It’s been agony to not speak of it, to generate buzz, to discuss research and tales and myths. It’s been so long, I’m not even sure what to say about it other than it’s sapphic, it turns Arthurian tales on its head, it makes you see British history through a different lens, it’s magical and whimsical, it’s dark and painful, and above all it’s so beautifully written it makes you weep.

      And that’s just one of the novels! I still can’t talk about the second standalone! *cackles*

      Congratulations, Tasha!!!

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • MSWL for 2024

      Posted at 12:39 pm by Laura, on December 30, 2023

      Also known as
      What I’d Like to See in my Agent Inbox in 2024

      In general, my manuscript wish list stays the same no matter the season or year! But for 2024, I’m really hoping to see these kinds of projects in particular appear in my inbox. Similar to the priorities of past years (2021, 2022, 2023) but with an emphasis on sweeping epic fantasies (particularly non-Euro), joyful and uplifting stories (in contemporary narratives), and uncharted historical.

      As I mentioned in a post, the industry is slammed, the economy is tight, and publishers are being even more selective, making it even harder for debuts. So I need to be extra picky as well––and I’m hopeful this post helps provide insight to my wishlist!

      Keep in mind, a manuscript is more than a recipe combining themes/tropes of Book A, characters like those found in Book B, with a plot like Book C. It’s in the essence of the writing, the threads of the narrative, the style of the voice––that’s what captures attention. A really great manuscript infuses the tone, atmosphere, and emotion into every word, applying careful attention to detail to evoke a sensation from the page to the reader’s mind. That’s what agents are looking for. We’re enticed by your recipe and hope to be moved by the outcome. So while I am pointing out published books that accomplished elements of what I love and what I’m seeking, I’m also pointing out books that most accurately display the essence of what I’m looking for.

      ~~~

      ADULT FICTION

      Fantasy || I adore fantasy inspired by historical events, cultures, folklore, and fairytales. More often than not, these fantasies tend to be set in secondary worlds, where magic may or may not exist, but the feel of the novel is certainly magical. My absolute favorites are The City of Brass (Islamic- and Arabic-inspired, set in 18th-c outside Cairo), Uprooted and Spinning Silver (Eastern European and Jewish fairytale retellings), The Wolf of Oren-Yaro (Filipino-inspired culture), A River Enchanted (Scottish mythology) and Daughter of the Forest (Irish Celtic mythology), and Nettle & Bone (a horror-fantasy fairytale spun on its head). Award-winning author and client Tasha Suri‘s Empire of Sand, Realm of Ash, and The Jasmine Throne are inspired by Indian history and mythology, and Malice by Heather Walter spins a fairytale completely on its head. These books have lush writing and beautiful characterizations, darkness and complexity, which is what I’m most drawn to in these fantasies. I also enjoy in-depth world-building and unique perspectives (literally everything about The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue and The Kingdom of Sweets), have thoroughly enjoyed dragon stories (Priory of the Orange Tree and His Majesty’s Dragon), am seeking more previously-established-relationships among ensemble casts with one POV (a la Kings of the Wyld), and I want to find my own Queen of Blood, Bone Ships, or The Wolf and the Whale.

      Pie-in-the-sky manuscript: What every single book mentioned above accomplishes is the ability to take a creature, character, or tradition from a culture, tale, or faith and make it entirely new, unique, fresh. I want to see golems, djinn, wendigos, vetalas, almasties––I’m tired of the typical werewolf/vampire/angel/fairy. Give me something rarely covered in Western literature. Give me depth to the world and the characters. I don’t need heists and sword fights and action-action-action to propel my reading. I would especially love to see this from marginalized and underrepresented voices.

      NOTE (edit Oct 5): While I enjoy romantic fantasy (as you can see from some of my suggestions above), I am not interested in romantasy. Romantasy has come to be defined as spicy and/or romance-forward/-focused. If the project would be perfect for fans of Sarah J Maas, Jennifer L. Armentrout, Rebecca Yarros, or Lauren Roberts, it’s not for me. (I know, I know, I’m in the minority! But that works in your favor. Best to try someone else!)

      Historical Fantasy || Though a branch off fantasy (“low fantasy”), this category is for all those books that have a hint of magic within the historical narrative. Not necessarily magical realism––but a tiny little something sparks that energy and spins into the fantastical. Babel is a stunning examination of colonialism, imperialism, racism, and translation,  In Another Time explores wormholes in WWII, The Familiars leaves you wondering if she really was a witch, The Winter Witch adds an element of intrigue on a quiet Welsh farm, Outlander has a hint of time travel but is otherwise historical, and A Secret History of Witches explores generations of women in one family and the impact their magic has on the community. I would love to see more gothic-, religiously-, politically-infused historical fantasies like Mexican Gothic, The Book of Gothel, The Once and Future Witches, and The Year of the Witching––I would fall over to represent something like that! Basically if it involves witches, a hint of magic, and the ways in which a community unravels, I’m down.

      Pie-in-the-sky: A fresh and unique spin on historical events that then asks, “what if…?” What if witches were real during XYZ historical event? What if witches were behind A? What if magic was the cause of B? What if someone with XYZ abilities could’ve changed the outcome to C? What if magic/witches were the root of religion? Take the idea and run with it. My biggest craving is anything that falls in the realm of gothic fiction. Gothic horror, gothic romance, Byronic heroes, traveling women, uncanny and eerie, haunted spaces (real speculative or imagined––leave the reader wondering!), you name it and I want it.

      Women’s Fiction || I adore women’s fiction that is about the average woman doing average things, experiencing the difficulties of everyday life, and growing from it — such as Such a Fun Age, Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, Dear Emmie Blue, The Brilliant Life of Eudora Honeysett, The Collected Regrets of Clover, Maame, and Remarkably Bright Creatures. On the flip-side, I love chick-lit/romcom — humorous women’s fiction that’s appealing to a millennial audience, about young women in the workplace and the silly things that happen in their life. My absolute favorite is Sophie Kinsella, along with Don’t You Forget About Me, Yours Truly, Ayesha at Last, The Matzah Ball, A Holly Jolly Diwali, and The Flatshare. Romance is not a primary draw for me, but it doesn’t turn me off to the story, either!

      Pie-in-the-sky: I’ve found I’m drawn to two particular sorts of protagonists and life journeys in women’s fiction. The first is the character that thinks they’re content when actually they’re lonely. Though these characters are typically older or curmudgeonly––and that’s okay––a kind and young character can experience this too. I’m drawn to the ways in which another character/event challenges them to break routine. The second is the character that has something preventing them from moving forward in life––grief, finances, a relationship––and the snowball effect that has throughout the narrative. I want to read something joyful and uplifting, with levity and humor throughout.

      Historical Fiction || I love all sorts of historical fiction, especially when it branches off little-known aspects of history, or it takes on a fresh new look at popular historical events (WWI and WWII, for example, are incredibly common on the shelves, but it’s how the story is told or the unique perspective the story is told through that brings them to the shelves). For example, my favorite historical fiction includes Shadow on the Crown (Emma of Normandy and early British history), The Alice Network (WWI/WWII parallel narrative shining light on female spy networks), The Romanov Empress (about Tsarina Maria Feodorovna, wife of Alexander III and mother of Nicholas II), and Dear Mrs. Bird (WWII advice columnist/slice-of-life narrative). I would love to see some more light shed on impressive women in history and the things they accomplished despite society’s limitations (STEM, feminism, code-breaking, politics/reigns, first female to ___), like client Clarissa Harwood‘s Impossible Saints. Some of my recent favorite books included The Book of Longings, Hamnet, The Dictionary of Lost Words, and The Personal Librarian. Admittedly, I’m most familiar with European (specifically English) history, but I’m open to reading anything as long as the premise is compelling and the writing style is relatable to a modern audience.

      Pie-in-the-sky: Lately I’ve been craving Gilded Age/turn-of-the-century narratives, particularly in the ways American wealth supported British aristocracy. I also want to read about women we know (Wu Zetian, Elizabeth Bathory, Mette Magrete Tvistman), women behind great men in history, and women being the first in smaller [and oftentimes fictional] ways––like the first to run her family’s shop in the 1800s, with Sarah Waters vibes, for example––wherein they deal with society at large and overcome obstacles.

      Contemporary/Historical Parallel Narratives in Fiction || There are great ways to introduce parallel narratives in historical and contemporary women’s fiction. Some of my favorites include anything pertaining to archivists, curators, scribes, researchers, and academics. Sometimes the parallel narrative is in the form of epistolary fiction –– artifacts and documents the curator, archivist, or researcher in the modern day stumbles across that takes us into the historical narrative literally (like The Weight of Ink, Possession, The Lost Apothecary) or figuratively (Meet Me at the Museum). I especially adore fiction that follows said curator, archivist, and academic on their journey, like The Clockmaker’s Daughter. I’m open to two historical narratives (Letters from Skye) as well as one historical and one contemporary (Next Year in Havana), just as long as both narratives are tied in some way while still having two separate, compelling journeys.

      YOUNG ADULT FICTION

      Fantasy & Historical Fantasy || The YA world is difficult to break into, especially in fantasy. But I’m such a sucker for YA fantasy — I love all the worlds and ideas and originality that floods the market. That’s the issue at stake, though: it needs to be original. So while I love fairytale retellings, they need to be proper retellings, with twists and turns and (for goodness’s sake) new names––just like my clients Lisa DeSelm’s The Puppetmaster’s Apprentice and Chloe Gong’s These Violent Delights. I love culturally-influenced or mythology-inspired stories (like Six Crimson Cranes and Don’t Call the Wolf), as well as historically-inspired fantasies and elemental magic narratives like Divine Rivals, A Magic Steeped in Poison and Together We Burn. I’m immensely interested in gothic-infused fantasies like House of Hollow. If you have a YA fantasy, send it my way, especially if they fit into any of the above criteria.

      Pie-in-the-sky: (As stated in the adult fiction section, since it applies here too) What every single book mentioned above accomplishes is the ability to take a creature, character, or tradition from a culture, tale, or faith and make it entirely new, unique, fresh. I want to see golems, djinn, wendigos, vetalas, almasties––I’m tired of the typical werewolf/vampire/angel/fairy. Give me something rarely covered in Western literature. Give me depth to the world and the characters. I don’t need heists and sword fights and action-action-action to propel my reading. They’re entertaining, but I’m here for the meat of the story, not the garnish. I would especially love to see this from marginalized and underrepresented voices.

      NOTE (edit Oct 5): (As stated in the adult fiction second, since it applies here too) While I enjoy romantic fantasy (as you can see from some of my suggestions above), I am not interested in romantasy. Romantasy has come to be defined as spicy and/or romance-forward/-focused. If the project would be perfect for fans of Sarah J Maas, Jennifer L. Armentrout, Rebecca Yarros, or Lauren Roberts, it’s not for me. (I know, I know, I’m in the minority! But that works in your favor. Best to try someone else!)

      Contemporary Fiction || It is all about the voice for me when it comes to YA contemporary. When I read YA contemporary, I need to feel like I’m talking to my high school best friend. Teen readers can spot inauthenticity in a heartbeat, and you want to make sure you have their desires and heartbreaks in the voice of your protagonist. You’re not an adult trying to be a teen — you are a teen. That said, I am seeking fantastic rom-coms like When Dimple Met Rishi (technology camps!), Royals (royals’ sidekicks fall in love!) and Anna and the French Kiss (study abroad programs!); badass heroines like Dumplin’ (fighting against stereotypes!); and great family and friendship dynamics like Emma Mills, Morgan Matson, and Jenny Han. Perfect examples of this are my own clients Kaitlyn Hill (Love From Scratch), Annie Cardi (Red), Jared Reck (A Short History of the Girl Next Door) and Nina Moreno (Don’t Date Rosa Santos). I’d love to see more characters with fun and interesting jobs and unique hobbies (A Pho Love Story and Happily Ever Afters). I tend to lean on the lighter side of things, with hope at the end of the tunnel. I do like tear-jerkers, but I want that spark of hope and inspiration at the end.

      Historical || Historical fiction is very hard to break into in YA. Sometimes it needs to have magical elements, sometimes it needs to be an era that readers are familiar with. Look to your own city, look to the history books, look to your family history, and see what seemingly small event had a large impact for that area. Great YA historical fiction requires an intriguing and original premise, a general accessibility (appealing to more than the library and education market), and bringing the past to life for a modern audience. I would love to see historical fiction set outside the US and Western Europe!

      ~~~

      For a final once-over, feel free to read my Manuscript Wishlist post, follow submission guidelines, read up on Publishers Marketplace deals, check out my clients page and book deals records, and catch up on this blog once in a while to read my thoughts and reviews of published works. Every little bit helps to getting representation! Oh, and as a reminder:

      ALWAYS seeking: diversity. Race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation, ability, mentality, health, economic status, religious affiliation, all of it. I want my clients’ projects to reflect the beautiful diversity of the world, I want to see and share with others life through another’s eyes, I want to see these differences expressed through art and creation and culture, to show that these books need to be on bookshelves. So yes, there is no question to it: I want diversity.

      ALWAYS open to queries: even during times of the year when publishing seems extra busy, or extra slow, or I’m on vacation or traveling — I am open to queries. I’ve never closed queries in the nine years I’ve been an agent. I read every single query. It’s unfair to you as the writer to try to keep track of all the agents who are opened or closed, and (selfishly) it’s unfair to me to be closed when something truly remarkable could have been in my inbox for me to represent. With that said, if I’m busy or traveling or on vacation, I’ll have an away message up with clear, simple instructions about what will happen with your query in the time I’m away.

      NOT actively seeking: anything set in space, anything set in the future, thrillers and suspense (psychological, military, legal, political, or otherwise), Greek or Roman-inspired narratives (I’m sorry, I’m just not into it), all nonfiction (poems, essays, memoirs, how-tos, everything nonfiction), scripts or screenplays, short story collections, picture books, chapter books, paranormal romance, smut, erotica, high spice. If your project uses any of these descriptors, it’s an automatic no. I’m not the agent for any of these projects, so please do not send them to me.

      ~~~

      I hope this is helpful! I’m looking forward to receiving great manuscripts in 2024!

      Posted in agenting | 2 Comments | Tagged agenting, personal
    • MSWL for 2023

      Posted at 10:45 am by Laura, on December 30, 2022

      Also known as
      What I’d Like to See in my Agent Inbox in 2023

      In general, my manuscript wish list stays the same no matter the season or year! But for 2023, I’m really hoping to see these kinds of projects in particular appear in my inbox. Similar to the priorities of past years (2021, 2022) but with an emphasis on joyful and uplifting stories (especially with contemporary narratives), sweeping epic fantasies (particularly non-Euro), and uncharted historical.

      As I mentioned in a post, the industry is slammed and publishers are being even more selective, making it even harder for debuts. So I need to be extra picky as well––and I’m hopeful this post helps provide insight to my wishlist!

      Keep in mind, a manuscript is more than a recipe combining themes of Book A, characters like those found in Book B, with a plot like Book C. It’s in the essence of the writing, the make-up of the narrative, the style of the voice––that’s what captures attention. A really great manuscript infuses the tone, atmosphere, and emotion into every word, applying careful attention to detail to evoke a sensation from the page to the reader’s mind. That’s what agents are looking for. We’re enticed by your recipe and hope to be moved by the outcome. So while I am pointing out published books that accomplished elements of what I love and what I’m seeking, I’m also pointing out books that most accurately display the essence of what I’m looking for.

      ~~~

      ADULT FICTION

      Fantasy || I adore fantasy inspired by historical events, cultures, folklore, and fairytales. More often than not, these fantasies tend to be set in secondary worlds, where magic may or may not exist, but the feel of the novel is certainly magical. My absolute favorites are The City of Brass (Islamic- and Arabic-inspired, set in 18th-c outside Cairo), Uprooted and Spinning Silver (Eastern European and Jewish fairytale retellings), The Wolf of Oren-Yaro (Filipino-inspired culture), A River Enchanted (Scottish mythology) and Daughter of the Forest (Irish Celtic mythology). Award-winning author and client Tasha Suri‘s Empire of Sand, Realm of Ash, and The Jasmine Throne are inspired by Indian history and mythology, and Malice by Heather Walter spins a fairytale completely on its head. These books have lush writing and beautiful characterizations, which is what I’m most drawn to in these fantasies. I also enjoy in-depth world-building and unique perspectives (literally everything about The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue and A Darker Shade of Magic), have thoroughly enjoyed dragon stories (Priory of the Orange Tree and His Majesty’s Dragon), am seeking more previously-established-relationships among ensemble casts with one POV (a la Kings of the Wyld), and I want to find my own Queen of Blood, Bone Ships, or The Wolf and the Whale.

      Pie-in-the-sky manuscript: What every single book mentioned above accomplishes is the ability to take a creature, character, or tradition from a culture, tale, or faith and make it entirely new, unique, fresh. I want to see golems, djinn, wendigos, vetalas, almasties––I’m tired of the typical werewolf/vampire/angel/fairy. Give me something rarely covered in Western literature. Give me depth to the world and the characters. I don’t need heists and sword fights and action-action-action to propel my reading. I would especially love to see this from marginalized and underrepresented voices.

      Historical Fantasy || Though a branch off fantasy (“low fantasy”), this category is for all those books that have a hint of magic within the historical narrative. Not necessarily magical realism––but a tiny little something sparks that energy and spins into the fantastical. Babel is a stunning examination of colonialism, imperialism, racism, and translation,  In Another Time explores wormholes in WWII, The Familiars leaves you wondering if she really was a witch, The Winter Witch adds an element of intrigue on a quiet Welsh farm, Outlander has a hint of time travel but is otherwise historical, and A Secret History of Witches explores generations of women in one family and the impact their magic has on the community. I would love to see more gothic-, religiously-, politically-infused historical fantasies like The Book of Gothel, The Once and Future Witches, and The Year of the Witching––I would fall over to represent something like that! Basically if it involves witches, a hint of magic, and the ways in which a community unravels, I’m down.

      Pie-in-the-sky: A fresh and unique spin on historical events that then asks, “what if…?” What if witches were real during XYZ historical event? What if witches were behind A? What if magic was the cause of B? What if someone with XYZ abilities could’ve changed the outcome to C? What if magic/witches were the root of religion? Take the idea and run with it.

      Women’s Fiction || I adore women’s fiction that is about the average woman doing average things, experiencing the difficulties of everyday life, and growing from it — such as Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, A Window Opens, Leave Me, Goodbye, Paris, The Brilliant Life of Eudora Honeysett, and The City Baker’s Guide to Country Living. On the flip-side, I love chick-lit/romcom — humorous women’s fiction that’s appealing to a millennial audience, about young women in the workplace and the silly things that happen in their life. My absolute favorite is Sophie Kinsella, along with Don’t You Forget About Me, The Friend Zone, Ayesha at Last, The Matzah Ball, A Holly Jolly Diwali, and The Flatshare. Romance is not a primary draw for me, but it doesn’t turn me off to the story, either!

      Pie-in-the-sky: I’ve found I’m drawn to two particular sorts of protagonists and life journeys in women’s fiction. The first is the character that thinks they’re content when actually they’re lonely. Though these characters are typically older or curmudgeonly––and that’s okay––a kind and young character can experience this too. I’m drawn to the ways in which another character/event challenges them to break routine. The second is the character that has something preventing them from moving forward in life––grief, finances, a relationship––and the snowball effect that has throughout the narrative. I want to read something joyful and uplifting, with levity and humor throughout.

      Historical Fiction || I love all sorts of historical fiction, especially when it branches off little-known aspects of history, or it takes on a fresh new look at popular historical events (WWI and WWII, for example, are incredibly common on the shelves, but it’s how the story is told or the unique perspective the story is told through that brings them to the shelves). For example, my favorite historical fiction includes Shadow on the Crown (Emma of Normandy and early British history), The Alice Network (WWI/WWII parallel narrative shining light on female spy networks), The Romanov Empress (about Tsarina Maria Feodorovna, wife of Alexander III and mother of Nicholas II), and Dear Mrs. Bird (WWII advice columnist/slice-of-life narrative). I would love to see some more light shed on impressive women in history and the things they accomplished despite society’s limitations (STEM, feminism, code-breaking, politics/reigns, first female to ___), like client Clarissa Harwood‘s Impossible Saints. In 2021, my favorite books included The Book of Longings, Hamnet, and The Giver of Stars. Admittedly, I’m most familiar with European (specifically English) history, but I’m open to reading anything as long as the premise is compelling and the writing style is relatable to a modern audience.

      Pie-in-the-sky: Lately I’ve been craving Gilded Age/turn-of-the-century narratives, particularly in the ways American wealth supported British aristocracy. I also want to read about women we know (Wu Zetian, Elizabeth Bathory, Mette Magrete Tvistman), women behind great men in history, and women being the first in smaller [and oftentimes fictional] ways––like the first to run her family’s Victorian shop, with Sarah Waters vibes, for example.

      Contemporary/Historical Parallel Narratives in Fiction || There are great ways to introduce parallel narratives in historical and contemporary women’s fiction. Some of my favorites include anything pertaining to archivists, curators, scribes, researchers, and academics. Sometimes the parallel narrative is in the form of epistolary fiction –– artifacts and documents the curator, archivist, or researcher in the modern day stumbles across that takes us into the historical narrative literally (like The Weight of Ink, Possession, The Lost Apothecary) or figuratively (Meet Me at the Museum). I especially adore fiction that follows said curator, archivist, and academic on their journey, like The Clockmaker’s Daughter. I’m open to two historical narratives (Letters from Skye) as well as one historical and one contemporary, just as long as both narratives are tied in some way while still having two separate, compelling journeys.

      YOUNG ADULT FICTION

      Fantasy & Historical Fantasy || The YA world is difficult to break into, especially in fantasy. But I’m such a sucker for YA fantasy — I love all the worlds and ideas and originality that floods the market. That’s the issue at stake, though: it needs to be original. So while I love fairytale retellings, they need to be proper retellings, with twists and turns and (for goodness’s sake) new names––just like my clients Lisa DeSelm’s The Puppetmaster’s Apprentice and Chloe Gong’s These Violent Delights. I love culturally-influenced or mythology-inspired stories (like Six Crimson Cranes and Don’t Call the Wolf), as well as historically-inspired fantasies and elemental magic narratives like Shielded by KayLynn Flanders. If you have a YA fantasy, send it my way, especially if they fit into any of the above criteria.

      Pie-in-the-sky: (As stated in the adult fiction section, since it applies here too) What every single book mentioned above accomplishes is the ability to take a creature, character, or tradition from a culture, tale, or faith and make it entirely new, unique, fresh. I want to see golems, djinn, wendigos, vetalas, almasties––I’m tired of the typical werewolf/vampire/angel/fairy. Give me something rarely covered in Western literature. Give me depth to the world and the characters. I don’t need heists and sword fights and action-action-action to propel my reading. They’re entertaining, but I’m here for the meat of the story, not the garnish. I would especially love to see this from marginalized and underrepresented voices.

      Contemporary Fiction || It is all about the voice for me when it comes to YA contemporary. When I read YA contemporary, I need to feel like I’m talking to my high school best friend. Teen readers can spot inauthenticity in a heartbeat, and you want to make sure you have their desires and heartbreaks in the voice of your protagonist. You’re not an adult trying to be a teen — you are a teen. That said, I am seeking fantastic rom-coms like When Dimple Met Rishi (technology camps!), Royals (royals’ sidekicks fall in love!) and Anna and the French Kiss (study abroad programs!), badass heroines like Dumplin’ (fighting against stereotypes!), and great family and friendship dynamics like Emma Mills, Morgan Matson, and Jenny Han. Perfect examples of this are my own clients Jared Reck (A Short History of the Girl Next Door) and Nina Moreno (Don’t Date Rosa Santos). I’d love to see more characters with fun and interesting jobs and unique hobbies (A Pho Love Story and Happily Ever Afters). I tend to lean on the lighter side of things, with hope at the end of the tunnel. I do like tear-jerkers, but I want that spark of hope and inspiration at the end. This year especially, I want to see more joy and uplifting reads!

      Historical || Historical fiction is very hard to break into in YA. Sometimes it needs to have magical elements, sometimes it needs to be an era that readers are familiar with. Look to your own city, look to the history books, look to your family history, and see what seemingly small event had a large impact for that area. A Prisoner of Night and Fog is set in Germany in the 1930s, not quite WWII but through the perspective of someone in the middle of the frightening changes in the country; Outrun the Moon is set during the San Francisco earthquake, and how race and economic status barriers fell in a state of emergency; A Madness So Discreet is set across America in the 1800s, battling patriarchy and standing up for those unlawfully sentenced to mental institutions; The Forbidden Orchid is set in Asia as a Victorian girl hunts down her father, a man in the middle of a race to find a perfect, rare orchid; The Bird and the Blade, though partially based on a folk tale, is inspired by historical events during the Mongol Empire and the Great Khan’s reign of power. There are so many more — but great YA historical fiction requires an intriguing and original premise, a general accessibility, and bringing the past to life for a modern audience. I would love to see historical fiction set outside the US and Western Europe!

      ~~~

      For a final once-over, feel free to read my Manuscript Wishlist post, follow submission guidelines, read up on Publishers Marketplace deals, check out my clients page and book deals records, and catch up on this blog once in a while to read my thoughts and reviews of published works. Every little bit helps to getting representation! Oh, and as a reminder:

      ALWAYS seeking: diversity. Race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation, ability, mentality, health, economic status, religious affiliation, all of it. I want my clients’ projects to reflect the beautiful diversity of the world, I want to see and share with others life through another’s eyes, I want to see these differences expressed through art and creation and culture, to show that these books need to be on bookshelves. So yes, there is no question to it: I want diversity.

      ALWAYS open to queries: even during times of the year when publishing seems extra busy, or extra slow, or I’m on vacation or traveling — I am open to queries. I’ve never closed queries in the eight years I’ve been an agent. I read every single query. It’s unfair to you as the writer to try to keep track of all the agents who are opened or closed, and (selfishly) it’s unfair to me to be closed when something truly remarkable could have been in my inbox for me to represent. With that said, if I’m busy or traveling or on vacation, I’ll have an away message up with clear, simple instructions about what will happen with your query in the time I’m away. I do not close to queries.

      NEVER seeking: anything set in space, anything set in the future, thrillers and suspense (psychological, military, legal, political, or otherwise), Greek or Roman-inspired narratives (I’m sorry, I’m just not into it), all nonfiction (poems, essays, memoirs, how-tos, everything nonfiction), scripts or screenplays, short story collections, picture books, chapter books, paranormal romance, smut, erotica. If your project uses any of these descriptors, it’s an automatic no. I’m not the agent for any of these projects, so please do not send them to me.

      ~~~

      I hope this is helpful! I’m looking forward to receiving great manuscripts in 2023!

      Posted in agenting | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, personal
    • Deal Announcement: Annie Cardi, YA Contemporary

      Posted at 2:47 pm by Laura, on December 8, 2022

      dealannouncement

      I am so overwhelmingly thrilled to share the news that Annie Cardi is coming out with a new book, tentatively titled Red! 

      Ardi Alspach at Union Square Kids has bought, in a preempt, YA contemporary novel Red by Annie Cardi (The Chance You Won’t Return). Pitched as a nod to The Scarlet Letter in the #MeToo era, for readers of Speak and Grown, Red follows teenager Tess as her very personal decision goes public and, rejected and harassed, she seeks solace in music and uses her voice to end the cycle of abuse in her small town. Publication is planned for January 2024; Laura Crockett at TriadaUS did the deal for world rights.

      Once upon a time…

      Annie is such a perfect example of resilience and determination in this industry. She debuted in 2014 with The Chance You Won’t Return, represented by another agency. When she was querying for new representation, I read a sweet and fun manuscript of hers back in November 2017. I offered rep, and we’ve been working together since February 2018! We went on submission with two other projects over the years, all the while Annie was brewing a passion project…

      When I first read a sample of Red in summer 2019, I cried. I urged Annie to continue with it, and I was able to read a full manuscript in December 2020. Tess came alive, and Annie was touching upon deep issues that resonate with teens and adults across generations––the healing power of music and community, the toxicity of extremism and propaganda, the comfort and the struggles of religious faith, and (biggest of all) the physical and emotional impact of gaslighting and grooming. It was as if Annie read my soul and was also writing my dream passion project all at once. 

      Submission for this kind of project is extremely difficult. It taps into very heated topics of religion and politics, so I had to be careful with the submission and not take it personally if someone passed. But Ardi read the pitch, read the manuscript, and said to me: Wow. This was incredibly powerful and moving. She and Union Square Kids saw the same depth we did, felt the same gut-punch, and gave us an offer we couldn’t––and wouldn’t!––refuse. 

      And the rest…is history.

      Congratulations, Annie! Everyone, go add Red to your TBR! This is one you don’t want to miss. You will see yourself, a friend, a family member, in Tess. Keep an eye on this one…great things are in store for Annie and Red!

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • Deal Announcement: Molly Horan, YA Contemporary

      Posted at 2:04 pm by Laura, on November 15, 2022

      dealannouncement

      I’m thrilled to share that Molly Horan, author of Epically Earnest, has a new book coming out in Fall 2024!

      Lily Kessinger at Clarion has acquired an untitled book by Molly Horan (Epically Earnest), a contemporary YA novel in which 17-year-old Mia accidentally finds herself at the center of her classmates’ drama when her role as the theater club’s unofficial counselor goes public and her advice on life and love becomes a hot commodity, to mixed results. Publication is scheduled for fall 2024; Laura Crockett at Triada US negotiated the deal for world rights.

      As you can see, this is not Molly’s first book nor is it her first with Triada––but it is our first together! Molly’s agent last year was Elle Thompson, and when Elle left to pursue a career in law (we’re all rooting for her!) I offered to represent Molly’s incredibly voicey YA. I feel very lucky to work with her!

      And boy is this next book full of voice and humor and wit and character (and ace rep!)! Molly’s writing is so snappy and thoughtful and well-paced. I found myself laughing out loud in the opening chapters and nodding along. Swap the drama department for the music department (artsy kids, am I right?), and it’s like being back in high school. There’s a great undercurrent of raw teen emotion…I honestly feel like I’m sixteen again when I read her writing. I feel like I’m Mia.

      Keep your eyes peeled for a cover and title reveal! 

      Congrats, Molly! A second novel is on its way to publication!

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • Deal Announcement: Ana Holguin, Romcom

      Posted at 3:49 pm by Laura, on November 8, 2022

      dealannouncement

      I’m over-the-moon excited to share the announcement for the publication of two of Ana Holguin’s novels: a romcom currently titled The Upside to Being Wrong, and a romantic women’s fiction currently titled Music People!

      Ana Holguin’s THE UPSIDE TO BEING WRONG, an enemies-to-lovers romcom about a Latinx Peloton/SoulCycle-esque spin instructor and a skeptical journalist hoping to dig up some dirt for his cover story on her rise to fame; and MUSIC PEOPLE, a romantic women’s fiction about a Latinx film composer who finally gets the her chance to break the industry’s glass ceiling but only if she agrees to work alongside her old music school rival, to Sam Brody at Forever, for publication in spring 2025, by Laura Crockett at TriadaUS Literary Agency (world English).

      Once upon a time…

      When Ana queried The Upside to Being Wrong, I knew I stumbled upon the next Abby Jimenez. Though it’s a play on the Peloton/SoulCycle hype, I could definitely get behind it because I’m in a barre studio, and there’s something so wonderfully powerful and exciting being a part of a group like that and quasi-influencer trainers supporting you and leading the way. Throw in a grumpy journalist digging for dirt? Yes please. I was so deeply in love with her adult romance voice that I made an offer of rep for Upside. We had a great conversation on the call and via email about her writing, where she sees herself in the future, what her dream career would look like, and where my own strengths and interests overlap as well.

      And so began our journey into romance submissions. The market is so hard to break into, and many editors were saying they were overwhelmed with romcom submissions so it would take some time. To keep her mind off the submission wheel, Ana then wrote another manuscript. I swear, it was like she took a peek into my head and wrote it just for me, because Music People is such a me-book! Female composers, film/TV composers, the difficulty of a career in music (let alone one within Hollywood), combined with big feels, a large, warm family, and misunderstandings/hate-to-love? Yes yes yes.

      Ana has such a great, engaging voice in her writing, but Upside and Music had two different tones to the narratives. I put that on submission too, pitching it as more women’s fiction. While this was a little tricky to navigate, in the end it all worked out. Sam Brody is the perfect editor to bring Ana’s voicey romances to the world, and Forever is the perfect home for Ana’s books!

      And the rest…is history.

      Congratulations, Ana!! You’re going to be a published author!

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 0 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
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    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
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