Where do you work, and what you’re looking for?
—Adams Literary, Celebrating their twentieth anniversary
—Publishes middle-grade, YA, and adult novels.
—Loves stories that are timeless and timely.
—Looking for the next award-winner and bestseller.
—Open to submissions being submitted by folks attending this conference. Looking forward to what writers are dreaming up!
How can writers reach you?
Visit the website: https://www.adamsliterary.com/, then go to the submissions page. At this time, Adams Literary is closed to submissions, however, you're in luck! They are open to summer conference attendees—whoo-hoo! Simply query Adam with a full manuscript; introduce yourself, and what you’re working on/writing about. Only submit one manuscript at a time.
Keep in mind there is no time limit for submitting, so don’t rush. Submit now, a week from now, or a year from now. Be sure to somehow reference the SCBWI Summer 24 conference in your query, and you’ll scoot to the front of the list!
(Writers only, not looking for illustrators at this time)
Maneuvering an ever-changing industry at a time of change and challenge
Adams referenced the song SAME AS IT EVER WAS by the Talking Heads. Editors have always moved around. They can go from house to house, editing to agenting, writer to agent. Authors and artists should be on the lookout for reliable and established agents.
Challenge
Things are not always what they seem; it’s not that bad out there, folks! A lot of hopeful things happening in publishing at this time. Keep your heads up.
Trends
Adams is not phased by trends. He looks for writing that he loves and will speak to others. Trends matter more to editors than agents. Steer away from trends. Once you jump on the trend bandwagon, the next trend is trending. Write what you love, that’s what will be marketable.
On craft: How do you approach guiding a writer?
Not an editorial agent. Focuses on a higher, more strategic level. Adams Literary looks for people who are delivering highly polished manuscripts, and who are at a place where they are ready to go! Views his job as a facilitator, never wanting to get in the way of the author-editor relationship.
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