Today I’m thrilled to have agent Carrie Pestritto here. She is a
literary agent at Laura Dail Literary Agency.
Status: Open to submissions.
Hi Carrie! Thanks so much for joining us.
About Carrie:
1. Tell us how you became an agent, how long you’ve been
one, and what you’ve been doing as an agent.
I fell into agenting accidentally. I’d always loved books and always thought about a career in publishing, but had no idea that literary agents even existed. When I was in college, a friend of mine, who had interned at Writers House previously, told me I should apply for their internship program when I told her I was trying to figure out what to do over the summer. I got the internship and after I graduated, I got a job as an assistant there for a year before I joined Prospect Agency. I am now with the Laura Dail Literary Agency and so happy to be a part of the team there!
About the Agency:
2. Share a bit about your agency and what it offers to its
authors.
The Laura Dail Literary Agency is full of passionate, smart, and innovative agents who strive to build successful, long-term careers for their authors. They have a really amazing roster of bestselling and award-winning authors with exciting projects! Their philosophy is one that I embrace and a fantastic thing about LDLA, besides the talented people who work there, is the great sense of support, community, and dedication.
Personally, I try to go above and beyond for my clients by having annual strategy sessions with them at the start of each year, where we set up an individual phone call to talk about our goals for the year ahead and how to best achieve them. I also created a private Facebook group for my clients so that they can all talk together, commiserate, and encourage from their various places in the publishing process!
What She’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?
I represent across the board in
terms of age groups. The genres I work
with are:
PB: nonfiction,
educational
MG: contemporary,
nonfiction, historical, sci-fi/fantasy, mystery
YA: sci-fi/fantasy,
contemporary, historical, nonfiction, mystery
Adult: romance,
historical fiction, commercial fiction, memoir, biography, nonfiction, women’s
fiction, chick lit, mystery, thriller
I am always looking for diverse
stories, as a person of color. I think
it’s so important for readers to be able to see themselves in the characters
they read about and am passionate about bringing forward diverse voices. I also get hooked by really unique, immersive
voices, tight plotting, and meticulous world building.
4. Is there anything
you would be especially excited to seeing in the genres you are interested in?
Snarky chick lit a la the
Bachelorette movie; books that take place in bakeries, chocolate shops, etc.;
ethnic YA fantasy; Victorian mysteries; a unique WWII story; an ownvoices
Caribbean-set women’s fiction; nonfiction that tells me something I never knew
about in history like GEORGE WASHINGTON’S SPIES; or a Mexico City version of
CRAZY RICH ASIANS! Check my #MSWL tweets
for more!
What She Isn’t
Looking For:
5. What types of submissions are you not interested in?
I am not the best agent for adult
epic sci-fi/fantasy, really literary books, crime fiction/police procedurals, fiction
picture books, memoirs about illness, or poetry.
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 love authors who come to the table willing to work and willing to collaborate. I most enjoy working with clients who are commercial and who are open to trying something new and who are open to suggestion. If there is no give-and-take, it makes the relationship less dynamic.
I think of my agenting style as a paradoxical mix of laid-back and involved—I love communicating and working with my authors, but even though I make suggestions and give advice (about what I think might be most effective for the market, for a certain imprint, for an author brand, etc.), I’m always willing to be convinced to try things a different way if the author feels incredibly passionately about it.
I also feel strongly about working with diverse authors, since diversity in publishing is something that is very close to my heart, and am hoping that in 2018 I will be able to build my list to include more authors like this! As an aside, I suggest that all POC authors look at Penny Moore’s upcoming website Lit Agents of Color!
As for what kind of books I want to represent, I am looking for smart, evocative, interesting writing that leans commercial. I love relatable, diverse characters with great voices, unusual premises, exciting plots, and lots of tension. I want books that make me feel completely invested in the world and characters—great books are ones that make me miss my subway stop or that I simply can’t put down!
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?
To a certain extent, yes. When I
first started out, I used to use Track Changes to give line edits and comments
EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. I read a version of a manuscript. Unfortunately, I don’t have that kind of time
anymore, but I also have discovered that I prefer to leave the specifics of how
to accomplish something up to the author’s vision. I love brainstorming and hashing edits out
and I usually send my authors a detailed editorial letter each time I read and
we chat about my thoughts, their thoughts, and what we’re going to do
afterwards, but I leave the nitty-gritty up to them to execute how they see
fit.
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?
- Send a concise email query letter to: queries [at] ldlainc [dot] com
- Along with your book's title, please include the name of the agent you are querying in the subject field. This helps guarantee that your submission ends up in the right person's queue. (Example subject line: QUERY: TITLE for AGENT)
- Your query letter should include a short pitch, a short plot summary, and a short bio. Please also include publisher submission history and previous publishing credits, if applicable. If you are a debut author, do not worry.
- After your query letter, paste the FIRST 5-10 PAGES of your novel into the body of the email. Your writing sample MUST be pasted into the email, as we do not open unrequested attachments of any kind. You may also include a synopsis, but it's not required.
9. Do you have any
specific dislikes in query letters or the first pages submitted to you?
I love query letters with sharp,
evocative writing that paints an interesting picture or characterization and
leaves me wanting more. I would say my
pet peeve is writing that rambles or is overly wordy. When I come across superfluous, lengthy
prose, it makes my eyes skip ahead to latch on to the next good bit of writing.
Response Time:
10. What’s your response time to queries and requests for
more pages of a manuscript?
Once I receive your query, if I am
going to request pages, I usually do so by the 1-2 month mark. When I receive the pages, I put them in
my To Read queue and respond with feedback in about 2-4 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, many of my authors
self-publish or have books with smaller presses. If you have a lot of energy and time to
devote to self- or indie-published projects, they can be very rewarding. My authors who do the best in those arenas
are ones who aggressively market and publicize themselves.
If you are a self- or
indie-published author looking for representation, your sales figures and the
kind of reviews you’ve garnered will definitely affect an agent’s
consideration. If you’re a romance
writer who has self-pubbed and you have very low sales, to an agent or editor
it’s a signal that you haven’t garnered an audience and who is to say that we
will be able to change that?
12. With all the changes in publishing—self-publishing,
hybrid authors, more small publishers—do you see the role of agents changing at
all? Why?
At its core, the job of an agent is
to be an advocate, protector, strategist, and sounding board. No matter how the landscape of publishing
changes, I don’t see that role changing.
I think that we will adapt and develop different skills or ways of
approaching things, but those are means rather than the ends.
Clients:
13. Who are some of the authors you represent?
Bragging time! I love all of my authors and you can see a full list of my clients on my blog, Literary Carrie, but some examples of the great people I represent are USA Today Bestseller Lauren Smith, NYT Bestseller Suzy K. Quinn, Peabody finalist Marlo Mack, 2015 ASJA Honorable Mention author Dean A. Haycock, and Erin Peabody, whose children’s series Behind the Legend earned a starred Booklist review!
Interviews and Guest
Posts:
14. Please share the links to any interviews and guest posts
you think would be helpful to writers interested in querying you.
Sure! Here are some recent interviews I’ve done:
·
Publishers
Weekly
Also see Carrie's Guest Post with debut author E.M. Castellan at Literary Rambles (03/2020)
Also see Carrie's Guest Post with debut author E.M. Castellan at Literary Rambles (03/2020)
Links and Contact
Info:
15. Please share how writers should contact you to submit a
query and your links on the Web.
I will only respond to queries sent via the LDLA query email, so please be sure to send your pitches that way and do not email me directly!
Also, please follow me @literarycarrie to stay up-to-date on my #MSWL tweets and check out my blog, Literary Carrie, to enter my monthly query critiques, read my tips, and get a peek into what is going on in my life!
Additional Advice:
16. Is there any other advice you’d like to share with
aspiring authors that we haven’t covered?
Decide what is important to you in
terms of representation early on and stick to your guns. Do you want an editorial agent, a diverse
agent, one who communicates frequently, who has a record of only pursuing Big
Five publishers or one who helps his/her authors find other great homes? Oftentimes, I think that after the long slog
of querying, authors can get so excited to get an offer from an agent that they
don’t really stop to consider whether or not that agent is the perfect match
for them.
In a
similar vein, I also think that sometimes when authors have multiple offers
coming in, they feel compelled to pick the biggest, shiniest name rather than
the one whose vision or philosophy aligns most closely with theirs. Sometimes a
great fit for one author isn't a great fit for another, and even a great agent
might end up being the wrong agent for you.
Thanks for sharing all your advice, Carrie.
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 is an international giveaway.
Profile Details:
Last updated: 5/21/2020
Agent Contacted For Review? Yes
Reviewed By Agent? N/A
Have any experience with this agent? See something that needs updating? Please leave a comment or e-mail 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 here before querying an agent. The information found here is subject to change.