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Tip: According to our annual surveys of juvenile publishing, over 100 children's book imprints and magazines are withdrawn every year while 125-150 are added. Children's Writer reports these important comings and goings in every issue. Tip: We report on all the new publisher launches. For example, we've just reported that Amulet Books is the new imprint of Harry N. Abrams. It wants to build a list of novels and nonfiction for middle-graders and young adults. Brown Barn Books is a new publisher looking for crossover fiction for young adults, especially very original mysteries, science fiction, and fantasy. Mirrorstone Books is a new imprint specializing in paperback series fantasy.
Tip: Board books, concept books, novelty books, and picture books for the very young look simple. They're not. What they are is very popular. Children's Writer keeps you on top of all that is happening in these exciting categories.
Tip: Guideposts for Teens has just changed its name to Guideposts Sweet 16. While keeping its trademark first-person stories, it will include more pop culture, celebrity covers, and fashion and beauty topics to better serve its readers ages 11 to 19.
Tip: Sports Illustrated For Kids Editor Neil Cohen sees opportunities for freelancers. He advises that you pitch a story that reflects familiarity with the magazine. "Stories about kid athletes with a strong human interest angle also are appreciated because we could use freelancers' help to find those stories." Go to its website and click on "media kit" to see the monthly editorial calendar. Send clips with your query.
Tip: Short folktales, fairy tales, and rewritten myths will find a market in today's children's magazines as long as the "enchantment" factor is high. So say editors from Highlights for Children, Cricket and Spider, Jack And Jill, Skipping Stones, U*S*Kids, and others, in a recent issue of Children's Writer.
Tip: Editors are generally not looking for writers to propose series like the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. For fiction, most editors want one solid story, and the possibility for more books can come later. These series are shorter now and more edgy. For many publishers of nonfiction, ideas for a series--or several additions to an existing series--are welcome.
Tip: Inspirational writing is a booming market, including nonfiction, anthologies and essay collections, and magazines. Poetry, personal experience pieces, nostalgia, humor, profiles, as-told-to stories, and action/adventure true stories are all in demand.
Tip: Nonfiction picture books are on the upswing. Editors from the Bebop Books imprint of Lee & Low, Dorling Kindersley, the Calkins Creek Books imprint of Boyds Mills Press, and Charlesbridge review what works best.
Tip:
Meriwether Publishing is looking for plays and books with
theater-related themes for middle school and high school drama
classes. Comedy, farce, and parody are its favorite styles for
school plays.
Tip: New Moon celebrates the diversity of girls age 8 to 14. It publishes work from girls and women only. Girls write feature articles and several of its departments. Adults can submit fiction with strong girl characters, and articles about women in history and careers, about caring for your body, and about science.
Tip:
Many a writer is intrigued
by the
Tip: When Eve Bunting's Smoky Night, set in the Los Angeles riots, won the Caldecott Medal, the controversy started. Should picture books avoid troublesome social issues? Children's Writer concluded that writers can and should address social issues, but without assaulting young readers' tender sensibilities.
Tip: The teenage market is booming behind the surge in their numbers, already 80 million strong and not peaking until after 2005. Editors from HarperCollins, Simon Pulse at Simon & Schuster, Greenwillow, and Walker Books say that they especially want books on relationships, friendships, and romance.
Month after month you'll get valuable market tips and expert pointers on writing:
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Watch Children's Writer for these upcoming articles and features: |
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Writing puzzles and rebuses can be fun . . . and profitable too. |
| • | Good adventure stories are always in demand. Learn what publishers want now. |
| • | You can have a real impact in Pre-K fiction, but it requires skill and care to write for these kids. |
| • | Story picture books for slightly older readers are booming. Learn all about them. |
| • | Openings are key to attracting readers . . . and editors too. Learn some tricks from the pros. |
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How to set up and conduct telephone interviews for your articles. |
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How to make an effective picture book dummy. |
| • | Early reader books are fun to read and more fun to write. We explore all the options. |
| • | How to create really productive writing time. |
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Protecting your ideas is important . . . and easy. |
| • | Brainstorming and other ways to generate ideas. |
| • | Children's Writer's own writing contests--two a year--with cash prizes up to $500 and publication of the winning entries. |
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