I’m on a social networking site for personal reasons (it’s not Facebook or MySpace). I’ve got a lot of personal friends on there, many of whom I don’t keep up with in any other way. But I don’t mind letting people know that I’m a children’s book editor because it’s fun to point people in the direction of the basics, like The Purple Crayon, SCBWI (and its attendant local writing groups), and a few other good children’s book resources.

I’m on MySpace too, in a more professional capacity. I generally use that account to promote Mirrorstone (but now that we have a Mirrorstone MySpace, it’s less necessary) and to participate in groups like the Readergirlz chats. The Mirrorstone MySpace lets librarians and others on our friends’ list know about author appearances, contests, and other important information. On my personal account, I love connecting with teen readers and with writers published and unpublished on a social level to
talk about literature and recommend both books that I’ve worked on and others’ books.

I personally use social networking sites, in other words, to network socially. There’s a professional aspect to it, but mostly it’s about the fun of, in one case, all sorts of things with my personal friends, and in the other, all things books-related.

The complications come when someone expects personal attention because they’re a “professional” in some related industry. (Perhaps they know graphic design, or they are in the magazine industry, etc.) But if they don’t know children’s books–and there are a lot of really great people on both sites who aren’t published but who know the industry–generally their lack of understanding of this very particular industry shows, and they’re just as likely to tell me all about the illustrator they found for their picturebook, or to ask me, a perfect stranger, to read their manuscript.

So here are a few guidelines for connecting with an editor on a social networking site. Just some friendly advice that hopefully will help you avoid annoying the person you might like to help you. For most people who know children’s books, this will be obvious information. 

We editors tend to be a cynical bunch, because we’ve probably seen the same thing a hundred times before in our slush and at conferences. So it’s best to treat an editor online the same way you would in person.

·         Don’t expect them to read your manuscript. We’re not on those sites to read more slush, and you, as a perfect stranger, are slush. If they ask you about your manuscript, that’s another thing entirely. But certainly don’t act like you’re doing them a favor by offering to let them see your book. And DEFINITELY don’t just send it anyway.

·         Don’t question their ethics and trustworthiness while at the same time asking them to read your manuscript. (No, we won’t steal your ideas.)

·         Don’t say that you’ve been working with this great illustrator and you’re just looking to “partner with a printer” who can give you national exposure. Believe me, you look like you don’t have a clue what you’re talking about.

·         DO make sure to follow the links to the basics of the industry that the kind editor has sent you so that you know the lingo the next time you try to pick her brain.

·         Do your homework. If your question is answerable by a hundred other sites on children’s lit, you probably don’t need to ask an editor.

·         Don’t tell her, “Oh, I’ll get to those links sometime. I don’t like looking at 3rd hand information when I have your ear.” You don’t have her ear that much, and she’s not going to retype all the basics just because you don’t want to click on a link.

·         Don’t complain that it’s been the “most formal exchange I’ve had on one of these sites.” The editor is being formal because you’ve asked quest
ions about her profession. If you’d asked questions about her cats, she might be a little less formal. But don’t ask questions about the cats just to get in with her on the professional side. If you want to be her friend, be her friend. If you want to be a writer, act like a professional.

It all comes down to basic professional behavior. Just because you’re on the same social networking site as the editor and 50,000 or a million other people (and ESPECIALLY if you don’t even have a friend in common!), don’t think that somehow it will give you any kind of edge. If you ask me a question about publishing on a social networking site, I’ll give you the same information I give anyone on this blog, on my blog at Gleemax*, on the Mirrorstone blog, and pretty much at any conference I might speak at. I don’t play favorites, especially with perfect strangers.

Know the industry. Write well. These are the secrets to success. There are no magic bullets. 

* I’ve been meaning to post about that blog at Gleemax for a while, but I haven’t really gotten it up and running yet. Mostly my plan is to copy over important posts from here for a while, but I haven’t really had the time to do a lot
of copying yet. Gleemax is Wizards of the Coast’s new gaming social network, which is in alpha right now. Several staff members keep blogs there. Most of them are from the gaming side of things, though I and an editor from the adult imprint keep blogs, too.

Also, book recommendations

I think I’ve nearly exhausted the Seattle Public Library’s YA audiobook collection.

I just realized today that it’s been a couple months since I listened to an audiobook on my commute. I made this realization because the commute has gotten reeeeally boring lately. I need reading material.

So give me reading recommendations. I should be reading books for adults; what am I missing out on? (Amazing, isn’t it, that I have to actively search for books that might appeal to adults?) Any nonfiction I might find interesting? Preferably something I might find on audiobook, obviously!

Fire away. You can rule out anything from my horribly out of date sidebar, of course!

Christmas is coming, the goose is getting fat

…please to put a penny in the old man’s hat. If you haven’t got a penny, a ha’penny will do… 

Oh, hi! 

I can’t get Miss Piggy singing that out of my head.

So we’ve decorated the house in a style to which I think even my Grandma Nelle would be proud. Wreath on front door, lights everywhere, tree in front window with pretty white lights and matching ornaments, but with just enough old, personal ones to make it interesting. Kissing Christmas bears on the TV and the Hallmark Jingle Bells snowman/snowdog on the trunk. About 3 or 4 different nativities stashed in various places. And a bookshelf now sporting every different kind of Santa I own plus a Darth Vader snowglobe that plays “Let It Snow.”

It’s a little overboard.

And why shouldn’t Grandma Nelle be proud? I think she gave me every single one of those Christmas decorations.

Finally getting over a virus that hit on Thanksgiving Day. Now it’s just a bit of the sniffles and the need for a very long nap. Hopefully I’ll feel 100% in the next couple of days because I’d like to get back on the wagon with my workout schedule. Right now I’m too asthmatic to even go get my allergy shot yet.

Got new glasses. Will show off a picture of them when I feel like putting on makeup again.

And now back to my regularly scheduled galley edit. Sorry I haven’t been around lately. I’ve been a little frazzled with being a sickie.

Happy Thanksgiving!

I’m making pies tonight, getting up early tomorrow and delivering meals to the ICU (it’s a church service project–the cafeterias in the hospitals close on big holidays which leaves ICU patients’ families eating out of vending machines), and then heading out on the ferry to Bremerton to spend the rest of the day with friends.

So, happy Thanksgiving, all. I don’t know about you, but I’ll be participating in National Buy Nothing Day the day after. I  do love sales, but the consumer frenzy (not to mention the just plain mass of people) does turn me off.

Mormons in fantasy

As you may be aware, because I’m certainly not hiding the fact, I am a Mormon (a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints). It’s kind of interesting to note how many Mormon professionals there are in fantasy and children’s/YA lit. I get past counting on both hands (especially when including editors), and while that might not seem as much compared to the various other religious and/or nonreligious groups a professional in this industry may claim, it’s always an interesting subject for Mormons to talk about. 😀

I’ve been asked to write an essay for a Mormon publication, Dialogue, on Mormon writers of mainstream YA and children’s literature. While I’m working on that, I thought I’d throw the topic out there, both to my readers who I know for a fact are LDS, and to anyone else who might be interested in the subject. What YA and children’s fantasy writers out there are LDS? Does knowing they’re LDS affect how you perceive the book? Did you learn they were LDS before or after reading, and did that change your percep tion of the book?

Let’s contrast this to a notorious example, and a timely one at that. You’ve all probably heard of the emails going round some parts about boycotting the movies based on Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials.* Would you go to see the movie? Do you believe that it should be avoided? If so, why? If not, what do you like about Pullman’s work? What influence, if any, does his background have on your reading?

Some LDS authors off the top of my head:

Orson Scott Card (included for the recognizability factor, but not really included in my essay because the book of his most considered YA material, Ender’s Game, was published so long ago–though funny enough, made some great predictions–my favority being the notoriety of internet fame)
Stephenie Meyer (Twilight, etc.)
Shannon Hale (Princess Academy, Book of a Thousand Days, Goose Girl)
Brandon Mull (Fablehaven)
Brandon Sanderson (Alcatraz vs. the Evil Librarians is his only children’s title right now, mostly adult books)
Rebecca Shelley (Red Dragon Codex, which I edited and is coming out in Jan.)
Dan Willis (several Dragonlance: The New Adventures titles)
Dave Wolverton/David Farland
James Dashner (new series coming out from Shadow Mountain, 13th Reality, and the Jimmy Fincher Saga)
Mette Ivie Harrison (The Princess and the Hound; Mira, Mirror and several other excellent titles)
Jessica Day George (Dragon Slippers)

And a few, though less current, realism authors, all YA:

McNeal/McNeal (forget their first names, but they wrote one book, white, with a little Kewpie devil on the front for which the name is escaping me, too)
Louise Plummer
Kristin Randle

(Of course I won’t be covering *all* those because this will be a short essay!)

Who am I missing?

*Full disclosure: I think Pullman’s writing is beautiful. While I didn’t necessarily agree with the conclusion of the series (as a member of a slightly unorthodox religious group that in a way rebelled/withdrew/rejected the teachings of the organized church of its day, I’m in a strange position of agreeing with him and disagreeing at the same time), I did think that HDM was beautifully written and a well-crafted fantasy story. And so what if I don’t agree with him? I think that there’s room for all of us to read each others’ perspectives and learn from them, and that freedom to do so brings to our world beauty and understanding of both our differences and similarities.


In all the correspondence I’ve seen from Pullman himself on children’s lit listservs, he’s always been respectful, articulate, and a knowledgeable advocate for children in education. And he’s got one of the best first lines of all time, too. I’ve got the Sally Lockhart mysteries lying on my bedside table begging for me to finally getting around to reading them.
So I certainly don’t advocate boycotting the movies. On the contrary, I think they look gorgeous from what I’ve seen so far and I’m interested in seeing how the books are adapted to film.

Low on content… or was that time?

I’ve kind of dropped off the face of the earth lately, sorry. But there’s good reason. I’m just plain busy. I just shepherded two first revisions out the door, as well as proofreading the galley of one book and on to reading the revision of another. With several more waiting in the wings.

Despite all the deadline-oriented stuff, I also spent some time catching up on the submissions pile, so if you’ve been waiting for a response from me, there’s a 33% chance that you’ll have received it by now. (The other 60% of the pile, which was more recently submitted than that last bit, will hopefully also hear from me soon.) If you’ve sent along a full manuscript, though, the patience quotient will have to extend a little longer. Note, however, that I take simultaneous submissions, so if you’re at the point where you felt you’ve been waiting too long, you’re welcome to continue to shop it around. If your manuscript is a gem, it will be my own fault if I miss it! (But if you do get an offer from someone else, please be sure to let me k
now so I can make sure I’m not missing out!) The wheels grind ever slowly on.

This also means that I’ve gone nowhere near my friends page here in about 3 weeks or perhaps more, so if there’s anything earthshaking going on, I’m completely missing out on it. But that’s okay, because I feel so caught up! And that’s a wonderful feeling–one that never really lasts long in this business!

Please excuse the dust

I’m trying a new skin especially for Halloween (ooOOoooOoooOoooo) and somehow in the changeover my sidebars went wonky. But I don’t have time to fix it now, so if you pay attention to these things, bear with me.

Drive-by posting

Very, very busy week this week and last! Just a quick stop-by to remind everyone in the Seattle area that if you didn’t get the chance to see Hallowmere author Tiffany Trent this morning at Washington Middle School for the Teen Read Week kickoff, make sure to head over to the Northgate Barnes and Noble tonight at 7 p.m. to get a copy of In the Serpent’s Coils signed!
Tuesday, Oct. 16
7 p.m.
Northgate Barnes and Noble
301 NE Northgate Way, Seattle WA
And now that Teen Read Week has begun, get started on your Happy Hallow-wii project!
Also, don’t forget that 31 Flavorites is still going till the end of the month! Saw all four of the lovely divas this morning at the kickoff, plugging the chance to chat with your favorite authors all month.
Must run! Taking Tiffany to the University Bookstore in Seattle to sign stock. So that means after today, all the places you will be able to find signed copies if you don’t go tonight (and hey–go tonight!) will be:
The Secret Garden Bookshop (she signed a brick! ask her the story about Stephenie Meyer and the bricks!)
All for Kids (she got to sign the wall–go check it out!)
B&N downtown Seattle
Borders downtown Seattle
B&N at U Village, Seattle
B&N at Southcenter, Tukwila
Borders at Southcenter Tukwila (if you get the last one!)
University Books, Seattle

Tiffany Trent Teen Read Week booksigning

Mirrorstone is proud to be a corporate sponsor of Teen Read Week. We know how important literacy and reading for fun is for children and teens and recognize the work of librarians in making this possible.

As I’ve mentioned previously, Hallowmere author Tiffany Trent will be in Seattle next week to help kick off Teen Read Week for YALSA at Washington Middle School. Though that particular event won’t be open to the public, she will be in the area dropping into bookstores–look for signed copies of Hallowmere at All for Kids and The Secret Garden as well as your local chain stores–and she’ll be doing an official signing event at the new Barnes and Noble at Northgate Mall on Tuesday night, Oct. 16.

The info on the signing:

Tuesday, Oct. 16
7 p.m.
Northgate Barnes and Noble
301 NE Northgate Way #1100, Seattle WA 

We hope to see you and all your friends there!