Showing posts with label middle grade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label middle grade. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Submission Spotlight: Arthur A. Levine Books

I recently read on a forum that Arthur A. Levine Books (an imprint of Scholastic Corporation and the publisher of the American version of the Harry Potter series) is accepting unagented submissions for the near future. Here's a quick link to their guidelines (turns out, it's TRUE! Hooray!)

The basics:

Picture Books: Query letter + the full text
Novels: Query letter + the first two chapters + synopsis
Other: Query letter + five page samples (five poems, five nonfiction pages, etc.)
Illustration: Three sample illustrations via attachment, and links to online portfolios
Happy writing and best of luck on your publishing journey!

Megan

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Middle Grade Book of the Week: Goblin Secrets

Oh, there is nothing I do not love about this book.

Though it's aimed at middle grade students, it has this magical quality about it that keeps it irresistable to my 30-something year old self and has even hooked my eight-year-old son. He demands that we read it aloud together each night before bed and he never wants to be bothered before bed.

Amazing!

From the book's web page:

Rownie, the youngest in Graba the witchworker's household of stray children, escapes and goes looking for his missing brother. Along the way he falls in with a troupe of theatrical goblins and learns the secret origins of masks. Now Graba's birds are hunting him in the Southside of Zombay, the Lord Mayor's guards are searching for him in Northside, and the River between them is getting angry. The city needs saving — and only the goblins know how.

I should be upfront and say that a lot of Boy Wonder's obsession with this book lies in the fact that, if given the chance, he'd stay home in his underwear all day eating Cheeze Doodles and playing World of Warcraft. I don't let him play much, but he reads the manuals, the player's guides, and LOVES the lore. Goblins, to be specific. And Zombies, too.

And while there are no zombies in our book, the fact that the land is named Zombay leaves just enough hope in his young mind that there might be.

And as for me? Well, I'm a steampunk fanatic at heart and a witch named Graba with geared chicken legs beneath her heavy skirts? I knew I was in the right book. The imagination William Alexander has put forth here is phenomenal. I can't stop saying "How cool!" aloud as I read this.

Be sure the check out the Goblin Secrets website for a little backstory, a link to the author's site, and a neat mask-making activity available for download.

Happy Reading!

Friday, April 13, 2012

Middle Grade Mystery Short Story Contest


The contest is for a well-constructed fictional mystery that will engage readers 9 to 12, to 900 words. Entries will be judged on structure, appeal for the audience, use of the best elements of the mystery genre, and an interesting protagonist.
Among the possibilities are a scary but age-appropriate story, a puzzle the reader is asked to solve using problem-solving skills, or a mix of mystery with another genre, such as historical, inspirational, or humorous fiction. The judges will look for originality, and publishability.
Entries must be received by April 30, 2012. The first contest entry is free to Children’s Writer subscribers who include their account number on page one of their manuscript. All others pay an entry fee of $15, which includes an 8-month subscription. Winners will be announced in the October 2012 issue. Prizes: $500 for first place plus publication in Children’s Writer, $250 for second place, and $100 for third, fourth, and fifth places.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

YA Submission Opportunities

Hi there! Have a fabulous manuscript burning up your thumb drive? Here are a couple opportunities hot off the wires.

Strange Chemistry (New YA imprint of Angry Robot Books)
Open to YA SFF only from April 16-30, 2012.
Details here: http://strangechemis...s.com/opendoor/

Carolrhoda Books (YA division of Lerner Publishing Group)
Open to any YA subgenre except high fantasy from April 1-30, 2012. They have a very specific Mad Libs like form.
Details here: http://www.carolrhod...s-mad-libs.html 


Best of luck!

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

MIddle Grade Book of the Week: The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane

I feel like one of the few noobs in the world who missed the Kate DiCamillo train over the past few years. My son and I absolutely loved "The Tale of Despereux" in the movie theaters but I never traced it back to the book, or author, behind it.

I remember hearing about, but not seeing, "Because of Winn Dixie" and thinking the name odd because I lived in a town with a grocery store called Winn Dixie. But as I moved more and more into the middle grade arena, one can't help but be introduced to KDC and her body of work. There are so many folks out there on the Intertubes who praise "The Tiger Rising" and how their classrooms loved it, that its only a matter of time, perhaps minutes, before I join the fan club and read it. I'm excited, even.

But my personal journey with KDC starts with "The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane." I admit I bought it on a whim because it was a special feature on BN.com and only $2.99 for my Nook. I'm cheap these days, I'll admit it. And when I couldn't stand another sentence in the numerous "get your baby to sleep through the night" books I'd been scouring, I opened up Mr. Tulane's story.

As I stated earlier, I'm not familiar with KDC's written style, but this was like nothing I'd read before. It was a bit dark. It had a main character that was not only a toy and unable to move or talk (but he could think) throughout most of the story, he was rather unlikeable. Cringe-worthy, dare I say?

"The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane" isn't exactly a warm and fuzzy sort of book. It's full of sad people. Mean people. Sick people. Abused people. And one rather pompous china rabbit who goes on the journey of his lifetime to discover the meaning of love. Even it's happy ending has little barbs of regret and loss.

It's actually an amazing book with such a strong voice, I can't help but be excited for the next KDC books I nab.

Happy reading!
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