Is there anyone in America who didn't catch some (or all) of the Oprah interviews with the Goldmans and Denise Brown?
I think most people had made up their mind about this book before seeing the interviews and I don't think there's anything either party said that woud push anyone to change their mind.
I'm glad we live in a country where even a dispicable book can get published. I just think the history of this book is as unseemly as its content.
I wish the Goldmans had given us the choce between buying the book or just sending 17 cents for their legal fund.
An established N.Y. literary agent with 20 years experience shares how and why she does the things she does.
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Brag Alert
I rarely tell you about a sale, but this is one that I was intimately involved with from it's conception, so I am overjoyed with the good news.
I had co-edited an erotic anthology and one of the stories really stood out for me (I loved them all). When I met the author at a reading for the book, I asked her what happened to the main characters after the story. She said she hadn't thought about it and I told her there was a novel in the story.
A few months later she sent me the first three chapters of the novel featuring these characters, and I began sending it out, knowing it was a a bit wild for the mainstream women's fiction market, but loving it just the same.
One publisher told me "there was too much sex." It's erotica after all, although the sex could have been muted or cut back.
Then I got a call from the author telling me that Harlequin (Harlequin!!! the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval of Women's fiction) had asked for more chapters. She sent in half the novel (this was a first novel, although the author has written hundreds of short stories). I emailed them to other houses who had the partial as well.
The Harlequin Spice line made a two book offer.
I was floored.
This was hardcore erotica about a 40 year-old duchess who runs off with the stable boy and there was a lot of sex between maidservants and eunuchs and all sorts of variations in between.
The other publishing houses all came in and said they loved the material, but weren't as daring as Harlequin.
I am soooo excited to see what becomes of this book.
It is a delicious erotic tale and Harlequin will get it into the hands of more women than I could have ever imagined.
I am thrilled for the author. I am thrilled for the state of erotic fiction in America (and Canada, I guess).
And I feel that a little piece of my reading taste made it into the zeitgeist.
I had co-edited an erotic anthology and one of the stories really stood out for me (I loved them all). When I met the author at a reading for the book, I asked her what happened to the main characters after the story. She said she hadn't thought about it and I told her there was a novel in the story.
A few months later she sent me the first three chapters of the novel featuring these characters, and I began sending it out, knowing it was a a bit wild for the mainstream women's fiction market, but loving it just the same.
One publisher told me "there was too much sex." It's erotica after all, although the sex could have been muted or cut back.
Then I got a call from the author telling me that Harlequin (Harlequin!!! the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval of Women's fiction) had asked for more chapters. She sent in half the novel (this was a first novel, although the author has written hundreds of short stories). I emailed them to other houses who had the partial as well.
The Harlequin Spice line made a two book offer.
I was floored.
This was hardcore erotica about a 40 year-old duchess who runs off with the stable boy and there was a lot of sex between maidservants and eunuchs and all sorts of variations in between.
The other publishing houses all came in and said they loved the material, but weren't as daring as Harlequin.
I am soooo excited to see what becomes of this book.
It is a delicious erotic tale and Harlequin will get it into the hands of more women than I could have ever imagined.
I am thrilled for the author. I am thrilled for the state of erotic fiction in America (and Canada, I guess).
And I feel that a little piece of my reading taste made it into the zeitgeist.
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