Upcoming Agent Spotlight Interviews & Guest Posts

  • Mark O'Brien Agent Spotlight Interview and Query Critique Giveaway on 6/11/2025
  • Taj McCoy Agent Spotlight Interview and Query Critique Giveaway on 7/30/2025
  • Shelly Romero Agent Spotlight Interview and Query Critique Giveaway on 8/20/2025

Agent Spotlight & Agent Spotlight Updates

  • Agent Spotlights & Interviews were all edited in 2021. Every year since then, I update some of them. I also regularly add information regarding changes in their agency as I find it. I have been updated through the letter "N" as of 1/26/2024 and many have been reviewed by the agents. Look for more information as I find the time to update more agent spotlights.

Author Interview: Michael P. Spradlin and Threat of the Spider Giveaway

 Happy Monday Everyone! Today I’m thrilled to have author Michael P. Spradin here to talk about his newest MG Threat of the Spider and his career as an author. Threat of the Spider is the second book in the Web of the Spider Series. It sounds like an action-packed story set in Nazi Germany, and I’m looking forward to reading it. 

Here’s a blurb from Goodreads:

 

A twelve-year-old boy searches for his father and fights for free press amid the chilling rise of Hitler’s Germany in this second book in the action-packed middle grade series Web of the Spider for fans of I Survived and A Night Divided.

Ansel has never been afraid to say what’s on his mind. He’s always the first among his friends to speak up when something doesn’t feel right. When the Hitler Youth first set up shop in Heroldsberg the year before, Ansel quickly made enemies of the chapter’s arrogant leader, Hans. Of course, Ansel is also twelve years old, so he spends much of his time reading his favorite Dirk Goodly, Boy Detective novels and trying to make his friends laugh.

But more and more of his classmates have been swayed by Hans’s tactics and the Youth organization is growing throughout the city. Ansel knows that Hans and his group are spreading false information—after all, Ansel’s father is a journalist for the local paper and has been going toe to toe with Nazi propaganda for a long time.

Then Ansel’s father goes missing right before a prominent Nazi leader comes to town. With the local police in the Nazi’s pocket, can Ansel and his friends use their detective skills to find his father and thwart the Nazi’s plans to suppress the truth?
 

Follower News 

Before I get to Michael’s interview, I have Follower News to share. Victoria Marie Lees released Determination: A Mother of Five Conquers College, her memoir, today. Here’s a blurb: You’re not smart enough. Determined to prove both her father and education authorities holding her daughter back they’re wrong, Victoria Marie Lees begins college. The challenge of college takes on a whole new meaning when you add five young children and self-doubt to the mix. And here are a few links:

Website

twitter

facebook

Instagram 

Interview With Michael P. Spradlin

Hi Michael! Thanks so much for joining us. 

1. Tell us about yourself and how you became a writer. 

It was a process. I loved to read as a kid. Really loved it. As I got older, I realized that I actually truly enjoyed the act of writing. But I grew up in a small town that—as far as I know—had no writers. I had no indication it was something you could do to make a living (and there are times it’s still not!). Fast forward to college, where I was a history major and an English minor. You tend to do a lot of writing in those disciplines. It was there that I had several professors start encouraging me about my “writing ability.” One flat out told me, “Dude, you need to do this for a living.” And that was where the idea took root! It wasn’t until I was in my forties though, that I found I had anything to say.  

2. Where did you get the idea for Threat of the Spider and the Web of the Spider Series? 

It morphed out of a conversation with my editor. I was interested in writing a book about the Edelweiss Pirates. They were a group of German young people (some as young as 12) who, during World War II, opposed Hitler and the Nazi regime and engaged in espionage as well as circulating anti-Nazi propaganda. Some were caught and executed (as young as 12). We started discussing the idea of resistance and how it might take root, and we eventually got back to those who might have opposed Hitler from the very beginning. It’s incredibly important to remember that not every German citizen was a Nazi, nor a Nazi supporter. 

Your Writing Process 

3. It’s cool that your editor helped you with the idea for this story. This isn’t the first series you’ve written. Tell us how you plotted the series, and when you plotted it out in relation to publishing Rise of the Spider, the first book in this series. When and in how much detail did you plot out this story?

We came up with a rough outline for each book—sort of covering the broad strokes we wanted to make sure we didn’t miss. But that was basically just a framework. I had a lot of latitude with characters and personalities. I would say the finished books are quite different from the original outline. 

4. How do you keep track of everything you need to know about Ansel, the main character of your story, as you tell his story over the books in this series? Do you have him work through an emotional in addition to the outward plot problem in each book? 

I tend to keep notes with character descriptions and personality traits. Ansel is the main character in Threat of the Spider, but he will be a secondary character in the other books, so it becomes a little easier to keep track of things. 

5. I’ve read that you don’t write every day. And you’ve successfully published over 39 books. How do you stay so productive and write so many stories that are good enough to be published? 

I don’t write every day. It’s just not possible for my brain! I can’t think of any job where someone does it intensely, every single day without their work suffering for it. I think it’s vital to step away and recharge. That said, when it is a writing day, make sure you write. 

Your Journey to Publication 

6. How did Timothy Travaglini become your agent? 

Tim and I had met at a conference years ago, and he actually became my editor on a couple of my books. He bought The Youngest Templar Trilogy while he was at Penguin and edited that. It’s probably been my most successful project to date! Eventually, he moved on to agenting and he was a natural choice when I was looking for a new agent. 

7. Your first book, The Legend of Blue Jacket, was published in 2002. What was your road to publishing that picture book? How did you get your publishing contract for this series? 

Most of my books happen because of conversations. I had a conversation about the story behind The Legend of Blue Jacket with an editor at a conference. They asked to see it and bought it. Just like that! I don’t have the “hundreds and hundreds” of rejections that so many other writers have. This series also came out of a similar conversation at a conference several years ago. It only goes to show that you never know how much time something is going to take. Hold onto those ideas! 

8. I think we’d all like to sell books through conversations like you have. You write for all ages and have published at least 34 books since 2002. How have you been able to steadily continue publishing for all these years? What advice do you have for new authors for growing their careers? 

There’s no secret! Write as well as you can and just keep doing it. Don’t give up. Worry about writing for your own pleasure and not so much for publication. Remember a book is written word by word, while a career is built reader by reader. 

Promoting Your Book 

9. How have you been promoting Threat of the Spider? How has your marketing of your books changed over the years? Why? 

The internet has changed everything. It has made it easier to reach larger groups of people more easily. But I still believe the onus is on the writer to write a great book, and the publisher to publish it well. Publishers do a good job of finding readers. If you stay true to your readers, I believe you’ll eventually find success. 

10. What are you working on now? 

I am working on the next book in the Web of the Spider series, The Spider Strikes, which will be out in 2026.

Thanks for sharing all your advice, Michael. You can find Michael at michaelspradlin.com, and on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and X. 

Giveaway Details 

Michael’s publisher is generously offering a paperback of Threat of the Spider for a giveaway. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower of my blog (via the follower gadget, email, or bloglovin’ on the right sidebar) and leave a comment by July 5th. If I do not have your email (I can no longer get it from your Google Profile), you must leave it in the comments to enter the contest. Please be sure I have your email address.

If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media sites and/or follow me on Twitter or Bluesky or follow Michael on his social media sites, mention this in the comments, and I'll give you an extra entry for each. You must be 13 years old or older to enter. This book giveaway is U.S.

Marvelous Middle Grade Monday is hosted by Greg Pattridge. You can find the participating blogs on his blog.

Upcoming Interviews, Guest Posts, and Blog Hops

Tuesday, July 1st I’m participating in the Sparkle Time Giveaway Hop

Wednesday, July 2nd I have an interview with author Nia Davenport and a giveaway of her YA Love Spells Trouble and my IWSG post

Monday, July 7th I have an interview with author Natalie Richards and a giveaway of her MG Survive This Safari

Monday, July 14th I have an interview with debut author Sarah Mendonca with a giveaway of her MG An Enchantora's Guide to Monstros & Magic

Wednesday, July 16th I’m participating in the Hip Hip Hooray Giveaway Hop

Monday, July 28th I have an interview with author Marzieh Abbas and a giveaway of her MG Aarzu All Around

I hope to see you on Wednesday!

Dad-o-mite-Giveaway Hop

 

Happy Monday Everyone! Today I'm excited to participate in the Dad-o-mite Giveaway Hop hosted by MamatheFox and Mom Does Reviews. Can you believe it's already mid-June? I've been doing fun things with friends and am looking forward to a trip with my daughter to visit family in Dallas next month.

Book of Your Choice or Amazon Gift Card Giveaway 

This is a book of your choice or Amazon Gift Card giveaway. This month I want to highlight some middle grade great choices. You can find descriptions of these books on Goodreads. Here are your choices:

















Giveaway Details

To enter, all you need to do is be a follower of my blog (via the follower gadget, email, or bloglovin’ on the right sidebar) and leave a comment by June 30th telling me whether you want a book, and if so, which one, or the Amazon gift card and your email address. Be sure to include your email address. If I do not have your email (I can no longer get it from your Google Profile), you must leave it in the comments to enter the contest. Please be sure I have your email address. 

If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media sites and/or follow me on Twitter or Bluesky, mention this in the comments and I'll give you an extra entry for each. You must be 13 years old or older to enter. The book giveaway is U.S. only and the Amazon gift card giveaway is International.

Marvelous Middle Grade Monday is hosted by Greg Pattridge. You can find the participating blogs on his blog.

Upcoming Interviews, Guest Posts, and Blog Hops

Monday, June 23rd I have an interview with author Michael Spradlin and a giveaway of his MG Threat of the Spider

Tuesday, July 1st I’m participating in the Sparkle Time Giveaway Hop

Wednesday, July 2nd I have an interview with author Nia Davenport and a giveaway of her YA Love Spells Trouble and my IWSG post

Monday, July 7th I have an interview with author Natalie Richards and a giveaway of her MG Survive This Safari

I hope to see you on Monday!

And here are all the blogs participating in this blog hop:



MamatheFox, Mom Does Reviews, and all participating blogs are not held responsible for sponsors who fail to fulfill their prize obligations.

Literary Agent Interview: Mark O’Brien Interview and Query Critique Giveaway

Today, I’m thrilled to have agent Mark O’Brien here. He’s an associate agent at Azantian Literary Agency. 

Hi­ Mark! Thanks so much for joining us. 

About Mark: 

1. Tell us how you became an agent, how long you’ve been one, and what you’ve been doing as an agent.

 

I began my career in the book publishing industry with an editorial internship at Entangled Publishing in August 2015, six weeks after I graduated high school. From there, I haven’t stopped! I interned and assisted at five literary agencies, including Writers House, Stonesong, and Triada US, before working at NetGalley as Sales Coordinator for three years. In September 2024, I joined Azantian Literary Agency as an associate agent. I’m building my client list slowly and with intention. 

About the Agency: 

2. Share a bit about your agency and what it offers to its authors. 

Founded in 2014, Azantian Literary is committed to guiding the careers of both new and established voices in fiction and nonfiction, particularly those who have been historically underrepresented. We’re a growing agency with a boutique, collaborative style and over a dozen agents. We partner with Mushens Entertainment for foreign rights for books for all ages and genres, excluding graphic novels. Foreign rights for graphic novels are handled by Full Bleed Rights. We’re always looking to serve our clients as best as we possibly can. (We’re also nice.) 

What He’s Looking For: 

3. What age groups do you represent—picture books, MG, and/or YA? What genres do you represent and what are you looking for in submissions for these genres? 

In young adult, my first love is contemporary realistic fiction, as well as realistic with a twist. I am also building my list in YA genre fiction, including science fiction and fantasy. 

4.  Is there anything you would be especially excited to seeing in the genres you are interested in? 

As a queer, neurodivergent agent, I’m always excited to see queries from queer, neurodivergent, BIPOC, and disabled creators. 

What He Isn’t Looking For: 

5. What types of submissions are you not interested in?

I am not the best fit for horror, thrillers, picture books, novellas, poetry collections, and stories centering intense violence and/or gore. 

Agent Philosophy: 

6. What is your philosophy as an agent both in terms of the authors you want to work with and the books you want to represent? 

I want to work with voices that refuse to be denied. I find these voices most often come from authors who are marginalized in some way, or (more often) multiple ways. Because of this, I’m a careful agent. I also see myself as a cheerleader for my clients. 

Editorial Agent: 

7. Are you an editorial agent? If so, what is your process like when you’re working with your authors before submitting to editors? 

Yes, yes, and yes! We’ll usually do as many rounds of developmental and/or line edits as it takes to make sure every word counts, and shines, before sending a manuscript out to editors. 

Query Methods and Submission Guidelines: (Always verify before submitting) 

8. How should authors query you and what do you want to see with the query letter? 

Query me through QueryManager following the submission guidelines on Azantian Literary’s website. Include your first ten pages and a bio. 

9.  Do you have any specific dislikes in query letters or the first pages submitted to you? 

I prefer to be addressed as Mark, though I’d absolutely never hold a different salutation against a writer. As long as you’re professional and following my submission guidelines, you’re on the right track! 

Response Time: 

10. What’s your response time to queries and requests for more pages of a manuscript? 

Five minutes to three months. 

Self-Published and Small Press Authors: 

11.  Are you open to representing authors who have self-published or been published by smaller presses? What advice do you have for them if they want to try to find an agent to represent them? 

Yes, I’m absolutely open to established self- and indie- published authors. I recommend these authors ensure they want to pursue traditional publication before sending out query letters to literary agents. Whichever publication path you choose, be intentional about it. 

Clients: 

12. Who are some of the authors you represent? 

I’m still quite new! I represent Faefyx Collington, author of queer nonfiction I couldn’t be more excited about. I’m looking forward to expanding my list! 

Interviews and Guest Posts: 

13. Please share the links to any interviews, guest posts, and podcasts you think would be helpful to writers interested in querying you. 

This is my first—thank you, Natalie! 

Links and Contact Info: 

14. Please share how writers should contact you to submit a query and your links on the Web. 

Send me a query and ten pages through QueryManager here: http://querymanager.com/bookmarkobrien. Follow me on Bluesky here: https://bsky.app/profile/bookmarkobrien.bsky.social. Check out my freelance website here: https://bookmarkobrien.com/ 

Additional Advice: 

15. Is there any other advice you’d like to share with aspiring authors that we haven’t covered? 

As someone who was a querying writer before he became a literary agent: No agent is better than a bad agent. Always research a literary agent, and their affiliated agency, before querying. If you want to pursue traditional publication, ensure any agent you consider is capable of making a well-negotiated traditional publication deal happen. Otherwise, that agent isn’t earning their fifteen percent! 

Thanks for sharing all your advice, Mark. 

­Giveaway Details 

Mark is generously offering a query critique to one lucky winner. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower (via the follower gadget, email, or bloglovin’ on the right sidebar) and leave a comment through June 21st. If you do not want to enter the contest, that’s okay. Just let me know in the comments. If I do not have your email (I can no longer get it from your Google Profile), you must leave it in the comments to enter the contest. Please be sure I have your email address.

If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media sites and/or follow me on Twitter  or Bluesky, mention this in the comments and I'll give you an extra entry. This is an international giveaway. 

Have any experience with this agent? See something that needs updating? Please leave a comment or email me at natalieiaguirre7@gmail.com 

Note: These agent profiles and interviews presently focus on agents who accept children's fiction. Please take the time to verify anything you might use hime before querying an agent. The information found hime is subject to change.

Upcoming Interviews, Guest Posts, and Blog Hops

Monday, June 16th I’m participating in the Dad-o-Mite Giveaway Hop

Monday, June 23rd I have an interview with author Michael Spradlin and a giveaway of his MG Threat of the Spider

Tuesday, July 1st I’m participating in the Sparkle Time Giveaway Hop

Wednesday, July 2nd I have an interview with author Nia Davenport and a giveaway of her YA Love Spells Trouble and my IWSG post

Monday, July 7th I have an interview with author Natalie Richards and a giveaway of her MG Survive This Safari

I hope to see you on Monday!

 

 

 

Author Nancy McCabe Interview and Fires Burning Underground Interview

 Happy Monday Everyone! Today I’m excited to have Nancy McCabe here to share about her MG Fires Burning Underground. It sounds like a great contemporary story that also has an element of danger, and I’m looking forward to reading it. 

Here’s a blurb from Goodreads:

 

It's Anny's first day of middle school and, after years of being homeschooled, her first day of public school ever. In art, Larissa asks what kind of ESP is her telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, or telekinesis? Tracy asks how she gay, straight, bi, ace, pan, trans, or confused? And thus kicks off a school year for Anny in which she' ll navigate a path between childhood and adolescence, imagination and identity. In a year of turmoil and transition, with a new awareness of loss after the death of a friend, Anny struggles to find meaning in tragedy, to come to terms with her questions about her sexuality, and to figure out how to negotiate her own ever-shifting new friendships. And when her oldest friend's life is in danger, she must summon up her wits, imagination, and the ghosts that haunt her to save them both. 

Hi Nancy! Thanks so much for joining us. 

1. Tell us about yourself and how you became a writer. 

It’s great to be here! I don’t remember when I started writing—composing stories in my head and then on paper is something that I always did. I can remember narrating stories in my head while falling asleep at night; writing stories with friends or my cousin based on board games we played, doll dramas that we enacted, and games of pretend in the backyard; and standing waiting for the school bus trying to figure out how to describe snowflakes. I always read a ton and always wrote, so when I went to college I was ecstatic to discover that I could major in creative writing. And then excited to find out that I could go to graduate school and study it some more. And that I could go on writing and sharing the craft as part of my job as a college professor. 

2. Yes, it sounds like a dream job. Where did you get the idea for Fires Burning Underground? 

There are many autobiographical elements. When I was twelve, a friend died in a fire, and a few weeks later a neighbor’s house caught fire. Moving from a small country school to a larger junior high that year, I also made a friend with a creative, imaginative girl. Her friendship and our creative activities were a refuge from so many impending adult realities. I really wanted to write a story that captures that in between state, reluctance to leave behind childhood combined with a longing for the independence to break away from family expectations. 

Your Writing Process 

3. You’ve written nine books—YA, adult fiction, and memoir. What made you decide to write a middle grade story? How was writing for this age group different than what you’ve written in the past? 

I feel like genre chooses me rather than the other way around. Some stories just needed to be creative nonfiction/memoir because they lost their drama if I tried to write them as fiction while other stories were just more interesting if I allowed myself to make things up. The identity questions I wrote about in my YA novel Vaulting through Time felt like they would resonate a lot more with Teenage Me than adult me, and Fires Burning Underground was the sort of story that felt like it could have helped Middle Grade Me make sense of complicated issues when I was twelve. So I suppose that’s the starting point for me—when would I have found this story most meaningful? What audience do I think it will speak to most? 

The main challenge of writing for middle graders was finding the voice of a twelve year old, a process that involved rereading my childhood diaries, listening to my daughter and her friends when they were that age, and rereading middle grade novels. Some of my college students assume that writing for middle graders means “dumbing down” the vocabulary, but of course that isn’t it at all. Kids are pretty smart, with often sophisticated vocabularies. For me, it was more of a process of thinking about how kids understand the world. They’re not innocent or ignorant. They just see the world differently than adults do. 

4. I agree the writing isn’t “dumbing down.” You’re also a professor and director of the writing program at the University of Pittsburgh. What is your writing schedule like? How do you juggle your jobs as an author and professor?

Finding time has often been a huge challenge, especially because while raising my daughter I was also a single mom and my child’s only parent, so there were never any breaks. I spent many years being very, very disciplined—writing as soon as I took her to school and before I had to be on campus, finding summer activities for her so that I could write. Since she left home a few years ago I’ve been able to relax my schedule a little, but I still try to write for at least an hour every morning. Sometimes I’m more successful than others. I also usually teach one advanced writing class at night each semester, and I make a point of putting aside all of my other work and writing along with them. I’ve produced a lot that way—and it makes me a better teacher, having faced the same kinds of obstacles and dilemmas my students do. 

5. It sounds like you’ve figured out a way to squeeze in your writing to your daily schedule. Reviewers have said that you do a good job of showing the emotional rollercoaster that middle graders go through in Fires Burning Underground. Share a bit about how you weaved these themes into your story and about Anny’s character development as you told her story. 

I remember so strongly my own emotional rollercoaster at that age. I felt things deeply—joy, grief, terror. I really wanted to portray the way emotions felt when I was new at navigating them. Anny has never faced the death of a peer and that comes with a whole slew of bewildering emotions—not just sadness, but fear and awkwardness and embarrassment. Her friendship with Larissa is all the more intense in the face of that. It brings her joy but there’s also a bittersweetness as it changes and evolves. Anny also has many searching questions about her own identity, ones that she will have to face as she matures, another reason she wants to postpone growing up. Those questions cause her anguish and concerns about her ability to be accepted. 

Your Road to Publication 

6. Tell us about your journey to becoming a published author and how you got your publishing contract for Fires Burning Underground. 

I started writing Fires Burning Underground many years ago, returning to work on revisions every few years or go to conferences to learn more about writing for middle graders. In between, I wrote and published my five memoirs with university presses and two novels with good traditional small presses. So I was pretty experienced by the time I decided to send out Fires Burning Underground. I’d heard a lot of good things about Fitzroy/Regal House, so I decided to try them, and was thrilled when they were interested. With other books, I had done some pretty extensive developmental editing processes, but my editors didn’t feel that this one needed that kind of overhaul. After all, I’d already received great advice from writer friends and editors at conferences.  

7. How did working with your editor on Fires Burning Underground make it a stronger story? 

I’d already gotten a thorough critique from a writer friend about the book’s plot, followed, a few years and revisions later, by a thorough critique from an editor about its voice, and a whole lot of other feedback from readers about other elements. So by the time I worked with my editors at Regal House, we were focusing on smaller issues. They pointed out a couple of things that they felt might be problematic, and I reworked those. I love to revise and would have been happy to tackle anything else they suggested, but they felt that it was done.

Promoting Your Book 

8. I love to revise too.What did you do to celebrate the release of your book? How are you promoting it? 

Our community library partnered with our campus library, arts programming office, and the Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies program to hold a release party. We had flame-shaped cookies and I gave a brief talk and then had some young actors from the community do a table reading of some scenes from the book. It was so much fun to see the kids bring those scenes to life. I’ve been doing lots of interviews, podcasts, and guest articles to promote it and have some travel coming up. 

9. Your release party sounds fun. What have you learned about building your author platform and marketing your books since you were first published? What advice do you have for other authors? 

When I published my first books in 2003, if there were social media platforms I could have used to market my books, I was unaware of them. It wasn’t until my third book in 2011 that I had a Facebook account. Eventually I also tried out Twitter, Instagram, Tik Tok, Threads, and Bluesky, but I’ve never gotten comfortable with them—and I know that Tik Tok might be a better way to reach the age group I’m writing for. I’ve appreciated that some influencers shared my YA novel on Bookstagram and Book Tok, and hope for a similar outcome for Fires Burning Underground. 

I finally decided that for myself, it’s better to stick to what I’m comfortable with. I do post on Facebook in the hopes that my network of parents, grandparents, teachers, and librarians will be inspired to share my books with kids. I do think that school visits are one of the best ways to get the word out.  I’ve done a couple of them, and having worked as a writer in the schools in a couple of states in the past, I have skills to offer to schools who host me in the future. 

10. What are you working on now? 

I always have a pile of projects in progress. I’ve started a sequel to my YA novel, have a very rough draft of an adult novel written, am working on putting together an essay collection about my daughter’s mysterious chronic illness when she was a teenager, and have a contract with University of New Mexico Press for a craft book on writing about trauma, Creating Some Measure of Beauty: The Healing Power of the Artful Essay. I’m retiring from undergraduate teaching this semester so that I can really focus on all of these projects! 

Thanks for sharing all your advice, Nancy. You can find Nancy at https//www.nancymccabe.net. 

Thanks so much for these great questions! 

Giveaway Details 

Nancy and her publicist are generously offering a paperback of Fires Burning Underground for a giveaway. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower of my blog (via the follower gadget, email, or bloglovin’ on the right sidebar) and leave a comment by June 21st. If I do not have your email (I can no longer get it from your Google Profile), you must leave it in the comments to enter the contest. Please be sure I have your email address.

If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media sites and/or follow me on Twitter  or Bluesky or follow Nancy on her social media sites, mention this in the comments, and I'll give you an extra entry for each. You must be 13 years old or older to enter. This book giveaway is U.S.

Marvelous Middle Grade Monday is hosted by Greg Pattridge. You can find the participating blogs on his blog.

Upcoming Interviews, Guest Posts, and Blog Hops

Wednesday, June 11th I have an agent spotlight interview with Mark O’Brien and a query critique giveaway

Monday, June 16th I’m participating in the Dad-o-Mite Giveaway Hop

Monday, June 23rd I have an interview with author Michael Spradlin and a giveaway of his MG Threat of the Spider

Tuesday, July 1st I’m participating in the Sparkle Time Giveaway Hop

Wednesday, July 2nd I have an interview with author Nia Davenport and a giveaway of her YA Love Spells Trouble and my IWSG post

Monday, July 7th I have an interview with author Natalie Richards and a giveaway of her MG Survive This Safari

I hope to see you on Wednesday!