This week's Agent Spotlight features Gina Maccoby of the Gina Maccoby Literary Agency.
Status: Open to submissions.
About: "Gina Maccoby is a New York literary agent representing authors of literary and upmarket fiction and narrative nonfiction for adults and children, including New York Times bestselling and award-winning titles. First and foremost she is captured by an engaging, compelling voice; across all forms she is looking for strong storytelling and fresh perspectives. Areas of interest in nonfiction include history, biography, current events and popular science. In fiction she is looking for upmarket novels, mysteries and thrillers, middle grade, and young adult.
"Gina served four terms on the Board of Directors of the Association of Authors' Representatives and is a member of both the Royalties and Contracts Committees. She is a long-time member of the Authors Guild and belongs to SCBWI.
"Prior to establishing her own agency in 1986, she was a literary agent at Russell & Volkening for six years where she handled her own clients as well as first serial, foreign, and movie rights for the agency. Gina grew up mostly in Northern California and graduated with Honors from Harvard College." (Link)
Web Presence:
Publisher’s Marketplace page.
AAR profile.
AgentQuery.
QueryTracker.
Twitter.
What She's Looking For:
Genres/Specialties:
General fiction, literary fiction, historical fiction, mystery, suspense/thriller, women’s literature, children’s books, picture books, middle grade, young adult.
Narrative nonfiction, biography, memoir, history, health, parenting, family, politics, current affairs, pop culture, entertainment, natural history. (Link, Link)
What She Isn't Looking For:
Cookbooks, computer books, science fiction, and screenplays (Link)
Editorial Agent?
“I work closely with clients to help them craft a persuasive proposal before sending it out. I read manuscripts carefully and often suggest changes before submitting to publishers. It depends on what's needed to make the submission ready to be seen by publishers. There's usually just one bite at the apple, so we want the material to be in as good shape as possible before it goes out.” (via e-mail 11/12)
Clients:
Linda Barnes, John Beeson, Lee Goldberg, Donald L. Miller, Joi L. Morris and Ora K. Gordon, Jean Fritz, Mary Ann Hoberman, Natalie Kinsey-Warnock, Janet Taylor Lisle, Laura Krauss Melmed, Estate of Lewis Mumford, Rick Riordan, Susan Stockdale, Lono Waiwaiole, among others.
Sales:
A list of recent sales and forthcoming titles is available on Ms. Maccoby’s PM page.
Query Methods:
E-mail: Yes (preferred).
Snail-Mail: Yes.
Online-Form: No.
Submission Guidelines (always verify):
Send a query by e-mail with the word “QUERY” in the subject line to query@maccobylit.com, or by post with a SASE. No attachments.
See Ms. Maccoby’s Publisher’s Marketplace page and AAR profile for complete, up-to-date submission guidelines.
Response Times:
Ms. Maccoby only responds if interested (Link). Stats on the web show a response range of days to a few months.
What's the Buzz?
Gina Maccoby is a veteran of the industry and a passionate author’s advocate. She represents Rick Riordan, Mary Ann Hoberman, Janet Taylor Lisle, and Jean Fritz among other prominent children’s book authors.
Worth Your Time:
Interview
None found online.
Around the Web:
Contact:
Please see Ms. Maccoby’s Publisher’s Marketplace page for contact and query information.
Profile Details:
Last updated: 5/13/2020.
Agent Contacted For Review? Yes.
Last Reviewed By Agent? 11/30/12.
***
Have any experience with this agent? See something that needs updating? Please leave a comment or e-mail me at natalieiaguirre7(at)gmail(dot)com
Note: These agent profiles presently focus on agents who accept children's and/or teen fiction. They are not interviews. Please take the time to verify anything you might use here before querying an agent. The information found herein is subject to change.
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SECRETS AND LIES BLOG TOUR AND THE LIAR SOCIETY: LIES THAT BIND GIVEAWAY
Today I’m super excited to be a part of Lisa and
Laura’s Blog Tour for THE LIES THAT BIND, book 2 in THE LIAR SOCIETY series. It
was released on November 6, 2012. For a while, I didn’t think it’d work out for
us to participate in the blog tour because of what we already had scheduled and
I was so bummed because THE LIES THAT BIND sounds like a fantastic sequel to
THE LIAR SOCIETY. But luckily it worked out.
Here's a description from Goodreads:
Just when Kate Lowry thought she had life at elite private school Pemberly Brown figured out, she cracks open a fortune cookie to find a message from her best friend Grace--who's supposed to be dead.
Another Sister Gone
A classmate has gone missing, and Kate soon realizes that the disappearance is tied to the secret societies that rule her private school. Her best friend died for their secrets, and there's no way she'll let them get away with it twice. It's up to quirky outsider Kate to get some answers, but in a school where every answer leads to more questions and nothing's as it seems, who can she trust?
So we had planned an interview with Lisa and Laura, but that didn't work out. So instead I have a fabulous guest post on how to create quirky but believable YA characters. Who doesn't need help with that?
Quirky But Not Crazy- How to make
your original character unique but still relatable to YA readers
We’re old. Not old-old, but old
enough. There’s always risk in writing for teenagers when you’re not, in fact,
a teenager. We had all these goals for Kate—we wanted her to be independent and
funny and cute and smart and sad and lonely and loving. The list goes on and
on. But we needed to ensure that she wasn’t a thirty-something trapped in the
body of a neon-haired detective. Because, let's face it, there's nothing worse
than a bossy thirty-something trapped in the body of a blue-haired teen.
So we channeled
our inner-YA, our awkward high school selves, and imagined who we always wished
we could have been. We thought we knew everything in high school, we had it all
figured out so we needed Kate to have a little of that—most teenagers do.
Kate is
extremely goofy and makes us laugh out loud. This is actually very sad because
it means that we’re laughing at our own jokes. The reality is that as we switch
the book back and forth while drafting, we’re always trying to one-up the other
sister. Our main goal is to play make-me-laugh with the manuscript (or
make-me-scared, make-me-cry, etc., depending upon the scene).
Kate is also
very sensitive, even if she doesn’t show it all the time (what teenager does?).
She’s fueled by her love for Grace and her need to right a wrong. She takes
advantage of her devoted neighbor Seth, but sometimes she lets her guard down
just long enough for the reader to witness her love for him. It will take a
long time for her to learn that Seth is the kind of guy she’ll want to marry!
Liam and Bradley are there to mix things up even more. Each of these characters
help define the true Kate Lowry.
But at the end
of the day, Kate isn't perfect. She says stupid things, judges people way too
harshly and generally makes a ton of stupid mistakes. But she's a TEENAGER. A
very imperfect teenager. But fun and brave too. Part of our goal when we
started writing The Liar Society Series was to chronicle Kate's journey as she
slowly grows up and in THE LIES THAT BIND, Kate takes one more step toward
adulthood. And maybe even half a step backward. Hey, no one ever said growing
up was easy!
Lisa's and Laura's publisher generously offered a copy of LIES THAT BIND for a giveaway. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower (just click the follow button if you’re not a follower) and leave a comment by midnight on December 15th. I’ll announce the winner on December 17th. If your e-mail is not on Blogger, please list it in your comment.
If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or your blog, mention this in the comments and I'll give you an extra entry.This giveaway is for US and Canada only.
And don't forget to enter my giveaway contests for RENEGADE, PASSION BLUE, and WRITING IRRISSISTABLE KIDLIT by Mary Kole. The links are at the top of the blog.
Here's what's coming up:
Next Monday I'm interviewing debut author Kasie West and giving away a copy of PIVOT POINT, a fascinating dystopian novel I couldn't put down.
Next Tuesday, I'm doing my annual Holiday Hop Book Giveaway. I can't wait for you to see all the great choices.
Next Tuesday, I'm doing my annual Holiday Hop Book Giveaway. I can't wait for you to see all the great choices.
And don't forget our Tuesday Tips and Casey's Thursday agent spotlights.
Hope to see you on Wednesday!
CORRINE JACKSON INTERVIEW AND TOUCHED GIVEAWAY
Hi Everyone! I hope that all of you who celebrate Thanksgiving had a great holiday. We had a nice quiet one, which was just what we needed.
Before I get to my awesome interview today, I need to announce the winner of ROOTLESS. The winner is BECCA FOWLER!
Congrats! E-mail me your address so I can send me your book. Please e-mail me before the end of Wednesday or I'll have to pick a new winner.
Today I’m excited to interview Corrine Jackson about
her new paranormal book, TOUCHED, which releases tomorrow. Corrine’s first
book, IF I LIE, was released August 28, 2012. In TOUCHED, I really enjoyed the
contrast between Remy’s healer powers and Asher’s inability to sense much. And Remy
is such a strong character, especially given how much she goes through. That
compelled me to keep turning the pages to find out what happened to her.
Here’s a description from Goodreads:
Remy O’Malley heals
people with touch—but every injury she cures becomes her own. Living in a
household with an abusive stepfather, she has healed untold numbers of
broken bones, burns,and bruises. And then one night her stepfather goes
too far.
Being sent to live with her estranged father offers a clean start and she is eager to take it. Enter Asher Blackwell. Once a Protector of Healers, Asher sacrificed his senses to become immortal. Only by killing a Healer can a Protector recover their human senses. Falling in love is against the rules between these two enemies. Because Remy has the power to make Protectors human again, and when they find out, they’ll becoming for her—if Asher doesn’t kill her first.
This is Book One in the Touched trilogy.
Being sent to live with her estranged father offers a clean start and she is eager to take it. Enter Asher Blackwell. Once a Protector of Healers, Asher sacrificed his senses to become immortal. Only by killing a Healer can a Protector recover their human senses. Falling in love is against the rules between these two enemies. Because Remy has the power to make Protectors human again, and when they find out, they’ll becoming for her—if Asher doesn’t kill her first.
This is Book One in the Touched trilogy.
Hi Corrine. Thanks so much for joining us.
1. Tell us a
bit about yourself and how you became a writer.
I drink way too much coffee, am a complete slob, and
read books in a single sitting. And I’m addicted to Kraft Mac and Cheese and
puppies, though not in that order. I was a shy, quiet kid who wrote short
stories as a kid. I wanted to write, but never considered it a viable career so
I went another direction career-wise. However, I couldn’t get rid of the bug. I
have a master’s in English and a professor told me I had talent, which led to me
applying to an MFA program. That was in 2008 and it was the first time I
started taking my writing seriously. I wrote three novels over the course of my
MFA program – TOUCHED, IF I LIE, and TOUCHED 2. The writing thing definitely
has a hold on me now.
2. I totally love that you're a coffee drinker like me. One of the
things I enjoyed was the intention that went into creating the powers of the
Healers in contrast to the experience of their enemies, the Protectors, who
have little sensory experiences. Share a bit about how you developed this into
your story.
Remy came to me with her Healer powers in tact.
Touching people can cause her great pain, and she hasn’t known a lot of
kindness. When I tried to imagine her counterpart, the hero had to have a depth
of experience that would mirror hers so that they would have a kind of kinship.
And so I imagined, what if he couldn’t feel anything at all – the opposite of
feeling too much as Remy does? Using that as a base, the rest of their world
started to come together.
3. That's so awesome that you thought of this. Because it's fascinating to watch the interaction of Remy and the hero. I really
liked Remy. She’s had to deal with an abusive family situation, a mother that
didn’t protect her, and starting a new life with the dad she never knew. What
were some of the challenges in developing her as a strong character rather than
a victim and how did you overcome them?
I had read a few novels where the heroine had an
ability, but her power didn’t come with a high cost and – WAY too often – a boy
came along to save her. I thought it would be more interesting if the heroine were
someone who saved others. And what if it cost her something every time she made
the decision to save someone? Would she still choose to use her powers? These
questions and their answers led to the creation of Remy. She wants to save
others because, deep down, she really wishes that someone had saved her when
her stepfather started hurting her and her mom. The thing that makes her strong
comes from a place that she considers her greatest weakness – her inability to
save herself. She can’t see herself as a hero, but she refuses to be a victim.
It’s a balance that she is always fighting.
4. I always love a strong heroine like Remy who can save herself instead of rely on a guy to do it. You deal
with the touchy subject of abusive families and there are some graphic scenes
of this in your story. What advice do you have for the rest of us thinking about
writing about such sensitive topics in a realistic fashion?
Research, research, research. I read up on what it
is like to be a victim of domestic violence, and then did a gut check to ensure
Remy’s reactions were in line with what I’d learned. I also had a trusted
friend read the manuscript. She’d grown up in an abusive household and offered
me a unique perspective. Mostly, I trusted my instincts, imagining how a girl
like her would respond to the people around her. At the end of the day, Remy
desperately wants to be loved, even though she’s learned to never trust the
people around her. Her reactions are driven by that.
5. That was nice of your friend to read the manuscript because it probably brought up painful memories for her. Your book,
IF I LIE, was your debut book. It released on August 28, 2012. Tell us a bit
about it.
IF I LIE is about a girl who is condemned as a
traitor by her small military town when they think she is guilty of cheating on
her boyfriend, a Marine who has gone MIA. What they don’t know is that she
could clear her name, except she’s protecting someone.
6. Sounds like an awesome story, especially because it's set in a military town. Your agent
is Laura Bradford. How did she become your agent and how did you get two book
deals with the books being released a few months apart by different publishers?
I queried Laura with TOUCHED, and she made me an
offer. The funny part of the story is that I followed her on Twitter and she
was tweeting about my manuscript as she read it. That’s how I found out I was
getting an offer from her. After we made some edits to the manuscript, we went
on submission. Sadly, I didn’t sell right away, but while on submission, I
wrote IF I LIE. IF I LIE sold quickly and a month later TOUCHED sold in a
three-book deal. That time on submission was hell, but it taught me a valuable
lesson – always keep writing.
7. That would be a reason to join Twitter. How are
you marketing your two books, especially with their release dates? And what’s
it been like having TOUCHED release first in Germany?
I can’t really complain too much about having books
release three months apart, but I won’t say it’s been easy. For instance, my
first pass pages on TOUCHED were due the day of my launch party for IF I LIE,
so I was rocking serious bags under my eyes that day. I’ve tried to take it one
book at a time, focusing on IF I LIE and then TOUCHED. There’s some crossover,
especially with events, but I do the best I can. And when I start to get a
little ragged around the edges, my friends and family step in to help.
As for TOUCHED releasing first in Germany, a lot of
people ask me why the series is releasing about ten months earlier over there.
It comes down to contracts and publishing schedules, nothing more. The German
fans have been so lovely, and I even got to visit them in Stuttgart in July,
which was a dream come true. It was surreal to see my book in German
bookstores.
8. Wow! That's cool that you got to visit with your German fans. Not all authors get to do that. I know you
work full-time. You’re my hero juggling two book releases with that. How do you
do it and what advice do you have for us aspiring authors who need to keep
their full-time jobs too?
It’s difficult to manage two careers. When you add
in the fact that authors must market their books, too, it’s almost like three
careers. I’m still trying to figure out how to find the right balance, and I
fail some days. Sometimes, I find my creative reserves depleted. I’ve had to
learn to say no to certain opportunities or to step back from social media from
time to time so that I can focus. Basically, there’s no magic formula. I have
to be disciplined and make the most of every hour. I schedule my days to ensure
that I have time to work everything in, and I prioritize the best that I can.
And I go without TV sometimes. Thank goodness for Netflix.
9. Darn it, I want a formula. Just kidding. But I can definitely relate to going without TV. What are
you working on now?
I’m working on the third book in the Sense Thieves
trilogy (TOUCHED #3). Plus I’m working on a new contemporary.
Corrine's publisher generously offered an ARC of TOUCHED for a giveaway. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower (just click the follow button if you’re not a follower) and leave a comment by midnight on December 8th. I’ll announce the winner on December 10th. If your e-mail is not on Blogger, please list it in your comment.
If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or your blog, mention this in the comments and I'll give you an extra entry. International entries are welcome.
And don't forget to enter my giveaway contests for RENEGADE, PASSION BLUE, and WRITING IRRISSISTABLE KIDLIT by Mary Kole. The links are at the top of the blog.
Here's what's coming up:
On Wednesday, I'm participating in Lisa and Laura Roecker's blog tour and giving away a copy of their new book, LIES THAT BIND.
Next Monday I'm interviewing debut author Kasie West and giving away a copy of PIVOT POINT, a fascinating dystopian novel I couldn't put down.
Next Tuesday, I'm doing my annual Holiday Hop Book Giveaway. I can't wait for you to see all the great choices.
Next Monday I'm interviewing debut author Kasie West and giving away a copy of PIVOT POINT, a fascinating dystopian novel I couldn't put down.
Next Tuesday, I'm doing my annual Holiday Hop Book Giveaway. I can't wait for you to see all the great choices.
And don't forget our Tuesday Tips and Casey's Thursday agent spotlights.
Hope to see you on Wednesday!
Tip Tuesday #149
Tip Tuesday features writers' tips on craft, research, querying,
blogging, marketing, inspiration, and more. If you'd like to send in a
tip, please e-mail me at agentspotlight(at)gmail(dot)com.
Natalie here today. Today we have a tip from Sherry Soule who is a published author (a blurb about her book is at the end of her tip) and blogs at Fiction Writing Blog. Be sure to check out her blog.
So here's Sherry.
Natalie here today. Today we have a tip from Sherry Soule who is a published author (a blurb about her book is at the end of her tip) and blogs at Fiction Writing Blog. Be sure to check out her blog.
So here's Sherry.
I write a popular series on writing
description for my Fiction Writing Blog,
and I’ll share one of those tips today.
One of my pet peeves is the overuse of
dialogue and action (gestures and facial expressions) tags that get used so
much they've become stale and cliché. Use your imagination and try to be more
creative and limit your use of certain gestures and expressions that are
commonly abused in fiction. You may not even be aware of them, but I bet you
will be now.
One method that helps, and you may feel
silly doing it, is to act out the scene. Think about how you personally would
react. Remember, that women are more expressive and animated than men, and most
men are reserved and less emotional. Women talk with their hands and generally,
men do not. Writers can SHOW the reader more effectively what’s going on or
even what’s not being said by including a significant percentage of dialogue
beats in their scenes, as long as they are original. Or turn common generic
tags into fresh ones. Hope my advice
helps!
Here's a blurb about Sherry's book, BEAUTIFULLY BROKEN:
Thirteenth Daughter. Heritage
Witch. Demon Slayer.
They say every town
has its secrets, but that doesn’t even begin to describe Whispering Pines. The
townsfolk are a superstitious lot and the mystical disappearance of a local
teen has everyone murmuring about a centuries old witch’s curse. . .
Sixteen-year-old
Shiloh Ravenwolf is a heritage witch from the Broussard family, a family both
destined and cursed. After she takes a summer job at Ravenhurst Manor, she discovers
a ghost with an agenda. That’s where she meets the new town hottie, Trent
Donovan. But Trent may be the next victim on the supernatural hit list, and
Shiloh is the only person with the power to save him.
Complicated much?
After receiving
cryptic messages from a creepy wraith, and then frightening threats from a
demon, Shiloh finally begins to understand the mysterious significance of the
strange mark branded on her wrist. Now Shiloh must decide how much she’s
willing to sacrifice to protect the other teenagers in town.
Unfortunately, for
Shiloh, not all ghosts want help crossing over. Some want vengeance.
And you can find Sherry at: