January 29th, 2010
Sunday, February 21
- Location: Centuries & Sleuths, Forest Park, IL
- Time: 1 p.m.
- Panel Discussion: How to Get the Most out of Writers’ Groups
- Panelists: Lee Williams and Helen Macie Osterman and more!
Sunday, March 21
- Location: Centuries & Sleuths, Forest Park, IL
- Time: 1 p.m.
- Topic: To be determined
Friday, April 16 Outreach meeting in St. Louis
- Location: Drury Plaza Hotel, 355 Chesterfield Center East, Chesterfield, MO
- Time: 5:30 Dinner ($25), 6:15 Program
- Program: Panel Discussion: Ten Things Mystery Writers Should Know about Publishing in the Marketplace Today
- Panelists: will be announced soon.
Coming in May: Outreach meeting in Milwaukee
- Details to be announced soon.
Categories: From our MWMWA president, Meetings |
Tags: Centuries & Sleuths Bookstore, Mystery Writers of America, Tony Perona | 3 Comments
November 2nd, 2009
By Michael Dymmoch
The September meeting of MWA/Midwest was held at Centuries and Sleuths, Forest Park, Illinois, on September 23.
It began with announcements: Jim Doherty has a new short story out, a pastiche on Dick Tracy. Steve Phelan has a new book out. Luisa Buehler’s next series book will be out in January of 2011. Naomi Smith’s publisher has picked up the third book in her series. Diane Piron-Gelman’s first novel, No Less Than Blood, will be published in 2011 by Five Star. President Julie Hyzy asked for volunteers to man (or woman) the MWA table at Bouchercon.
Wednesday’s speakers were Danielle Egan-Miller, President, and Lauren Olson, of Browne & Miller Literary Associates (formerly Multimedia Product Development, Inc.), founded by Jane Jordan Browne in 1971. Ms. Egan-Miller worked for the agency early in her career, returning as a partner in 2002. When Ms. Browne died in 2003, Ms. Egan-Miller became the agency president. Lauren Olson joined Browne & Miller in 2007 as an intern, and achieved her present position, Assistant to the Agents, in 2008. Browne & Miller is a full-service literary agency currently representing 200 writers, 75 of whom are actively writing. Most of these are mid-career authors, on their fifteenth book rather than their first. The agency handles print, audio, film/TV, and foreign rights, and sells 25-35 books annually; 85% of sales are fiction. Browne & Miller looks for: well written fiction, particularly substantive women’s fiction, historical fiction with strong romantic elements, narrative non-fiction, classy true crime (like Devil in the White City, but not Chicago Mob books), and young adult fiction. The agency does not deal with large print rights, poetry, screenplays, short stories, children’s illustrated books, Christian living (although Christian-themed novels are OK), Sci-Fi, horror, or works that cannot be classified at all within a genre. They say “Westerns are a hard sell.” Browne & Miller’s current wish list is posted on the Publisher’s Marketplace website (http://www.publishersmarketplace.com/members/mpdinc/).
The last four years have been very challenging. Contracts frequently come with no check; the check may come thirty days later. Some publishers divide the advance into quarters and pay on signing, on acceptance, on publication, and six months after publication (which used to be called the first royalty check). The agency doesn’t get paid until the author is paid.
Finding the right agent to represent your work is crucial. Established authors are often looking for something different from what debut authors need. “Some people think they need a New York agent. I respect that,” Ms. Egan-Miller said. “But I’m never going to be a New York agent. It has to be a match. We like to work with authors we like. I’ve had my share of authors who are difficult, but how much of me can I devote to handholding or talking people off the ledge?” Browne & Miller has taken on only four debut novels in the last three years. “The problem with debut novels is that they have no traction. We can’t make a living selling only debut fiction, so we’re very careful these days. Clever ideas and fun titles are okay, but most important is the quality of writing and storytelling. It has to be something we really believe in for us to commit to sticking with it.”
Querying is the primary way for an author to introduce his work to an agent; having an agent is still the best way to get a mainstream publisher. Some agents receive 600 book queries per week—30,000 per year! Brown & Miller gets approximately 200 queries per week, twice as many as last year. With a staff of only four, the agency cannot have much sympathy for poorly written queries, or for writers who have not learned their craft or done some basic research.
“We’re not that mean, but if you spell my name wrong….” Queries are read by three staff members before they arrive on Ms. Egan-Miller’s desk. Only five or ten make it through the screening process.
Ms. Egan-Miller distributed and discussed Browne & Miller’s “10 Tips on Query Letters” (which can be found at http://www.browneandmiller.com/Query.html). In querying, it’s most important to follow the guidelines. Query by letter or in the body of an email, whichever medium is the most comfortable. When querying by email, write your letter as a word document, spell check and proof it, then cut and paste it into the body of your email. Ms. Egan- Miller’s advice: “Email gives some people license to be casual or even rude. Err on the side of being conservative and professional.” For security reasons, email attachments will not be opened. Unsolicited material will not be read.
Categories: CLUES, Meeting report, Meetings |
Tags: Centuries & Sleuths Bookstore, Mystery Writers of America | No Comments
January 18th, 2009
Hosted by Michael Dymmoch, our guest speaker is Danny Smith, author of BEHIND THE BADGE. And Tom Keevers will be bringing a guest, Joe Walsh, recently-retired cold case homicide investigator with the CPD. Should be fun.
It from 1 to 3 pm today at Centuries & Sleuths Bookstore, 7419 W. Madison in Forest Park, IL
Categories: Meetings |
Tags: Behind the Badge, Centuries & Sleuths Bookstore, Danny Smith, Michael Allen Dymmoch, Tom Keevers | No Comments