I have a guest post for you today by Derek Taylor Kent author of 'Scary School'
The Scary Path to a Book Deal
By
Derek Taylor Kent (AKA Derek the Ghost)
My name is Derek Taylor Kent (AKA Derek the
Ghost). I recently received a
three-book deal for my YA horror-comedy series Scary School, which came out June 21, 2011 (scaryschool.com). How
this came to be is a bit of a horror-comedy itself.
March 1994. At the age of 15, I undertake
writing an epic illustrated fantasy series. It’s an ill-conceived cross between
Dr. Seuss and Lord of the Rings, but I spend six long years trying to get it
published. Nothing ever comes of it.
April 2005. Painfully abandoning the
illustrated book series and inspired by Harry Potter, I spend a year writing my
first novel: Scary School, Book 1: My
Homework Ate my Dog. After completing the first draft, I submit it to a few
agents and publishers. All rejections.
Confused, I gave the manuscript to readers.
I receive notes that suggest a heavy rewrite. Reluctantly, I spend months doing
exhaustive rewrites, but I had to admit the book was greatly improved.
Early 2007. I feel the book is ready to
submit once again. But I had a relentless day job and my spare time was filled
with other projects. My Homework Ate My
Dog goes on the backburner.
Another year passes.
July 2008. There’s a brief window of time
off from my day job. I decide that it’s time to go full-out toward finding an
agent or a publisher. If it doesn’t happen, it will probably be the end of my
YA writing aspirations.
The task before me is daunting. I have the
Guide to Literary Agents and the Children’s Marketplace books. It would take me
a year to reach out to every agent and publisher, and I only have a window of a
couple weeks. So, I hire an assistant. His job is to send out packages to every
single YA lit agent in America. I spend my time focusing on online querying.
Responses start coming in. I’m getting
bites. About one in every ten I sent out is asking to read my manuscript or
sample chapters. Most are rejections, but if you have a 10% positive response
rate to your query, you know that you probably have something good.
August 2008. Eric Myers from the Joe
Spieler Agency requests sample chapters. A week later he requests the complete
manuscript. On September 20, 2008, Eric Myers is my agent. He is very
enthusiastic and has a great track record.
December 2008. Every publisher my agent has
submitted to has passed.
The only glimmer of hope is from a junior
editor at HarperCollins who says that she “really likes my writing and the
humor of the book, but what I was expecting from a book called Scary School: My Homework Ate My Dog was
not what I got. I was hoping for a light, funny book about a Scary School for a
young audience.”
She was exactly right. My title was
screaming: silly/funny book for 8-year-olds, but I had given her a darker Harry
Potter fit for 12-year-olds.
The editor concluded with: “I do feel there
is a market for a Scary School book
series for a younger audience should he feel inclined to write it.”
There it was. A bite from a publisher. The
only problem was my “bite” felt like an orca whale. I’d have to write a whole
new book for her, and I’d have to write it fast so she didn’t forget about me
or buy another book in the same genre.
I sequester myself and complete the first
draft of a new book series, just called Scary
School.
The first draft is done by January 2009. I
send it to my agent. He’s a little
shocked that it’s not a linear story like My
Homework Ate my Dog, but we agree to send it to HarperCollins as is.
March 2009. The junior editor writes back:
“This is exactly what I was hoping for. I love it! I think we really have
something here!”
A few weeks later HarperCollins offers me a
three-book deal for Scary School.
I dance around my apartment and weep with
joy.
The advance is not enough to quit my day job,
but it’s enough to create a website, hire a publicist, and print thousands of
Scary School T-shirts.
As I write this, I am exactly one week away
from the Scary School release date on
June 21, 2011. I had to wait another two years before it was scheduled for
release.
It was agony.
Over that time I have self-published what
is now called Rudy and the Beast: My
Homework Ate My Dog! There’s
still an issue with the title, but I won’t surrender it. I also self-published
an illustrated book called Simon and the
Solar System.
This year, I finished a new YA novel called
Principal Mikey about a kid who
becomes principal of his school. I think it’s my most well-written novel and is
absolutely hilarious.
No bites so far.
Thanks for featuring on my blog Derek. The books sound like great fun. :D
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