Melissa edits both literary and commercial projects—from middle grade to young adult novels. She seeks original voices wed to strong concepts and manuscripts with a vivid sense of place. She acquires realistic and genre fiction alike, but she has a soft spot for fresh, character-driven fantasy and richly imagined worlds—the kind of books you want to jump into and live in because the real world simply isn’t as fun as the author’s world. Books that she works on include the Pretty Crooked series by Elisa Ludwig and the forthcoming MILA 2.0 series by Debra Driza. Before becoming a children’s book editor (her absolute dream job!), Melissa worked on the adult side of the industry, with bestsellers like Harlan Coben and John Lescroart at Penguin. She tweets at @melissaedits.
Melissa, thank you for joining us at Chiseled in Rock today - we appreciate you taking the time to talk with us and our readers!!
Chiseled In Rock: As an editor for Katherine Tegen Books (an imprint of
HarperCollins Children’s Books), you acquire and edit literary and commercial
projects ranging from middle grade to young adult, but you have also worked as
an editor of adult fiction. How does acquiring (and editing) books for younger
readers differ from choosing works for an adult audience?
Melissa Miller: I find that it’s actually almost 100% the same!
As a childrens’ book editor, when you’re acquiring and editing books you worry
about the same things as an adult book editor: Are the characters believable
and compelling? Is the plot seamless and tight? Is the setting evocative
and vivid? Is the overall concept fresh and original? Is the
writing strong? Is there an audience for this?
The difference I find is that many more writers in the
children’s world struggle with voice. There are exceptions, but many
adult writers don’t have to face the challenge of writing in the voice of a
younger person; most adult books are about adults. I’ve seen many writers,
including well-known adult authors, try to write middle grade or teen novels
and come off sounding didactic and watered-down and fake. The thing is, kids
know when they’re being talked down to and they know when they’re being
preached to. Young readers have a sixth sense for authenticity.
They know—and I know—when an adult is doing a poor imitation of a kid.
The mistake that many people make when they think about novels
for children is that they conflate accessibility with simplicity. Just because
many books for young readers are more accessible and readable, does not mean
that they’re any less complex. The best children’s books out there have
many layers of meaning and emotion and have extremely rich, complex
characters. Go read The Book Thief, Walk Two Moons, Absolutely
True Diary of a Part Time Indian, House of the Scorpion, or Harper’s
recent Newberry medal winner The One and Only Ivan—to name a small few
of my favorites—if you disagree.
Finding that balance between accessibility and complexity is
very hard. Too many people underestimate young readers. That’s why I’ve
come to believe creating books for young readers might be trickier, in some
respects, than creating books for adults.
CIR: Many authors are afraid to pitch (or even talk to)
editors at Writers’ Conferences. What advice would you give to the writer
quaking in his-or-her boots?
MM: Editors are generally really nice people! No one
should fear them! We love books, we love writers, and most of all, we
love helping people. In fact, I reject your assumption that people are
afraid of editors. We’re a totally non-scary bunch. What writers are really
of afraid of is rejection and criticism—two things that editors happen to hand
out. But writers shouldn’t be afraid of rejection and criticism.
Those things make books better. Those things make writers better. Those things
make humans better.
So my advice for Writers’ Conference attendees is to chant
“this can help me, this can help me, this can help me” over and over until it
sticks—and to be as open as possible to learning opportunities. Then, no
matter what comes, there’s nothing to fear!
CIR: What led you to pursue a career in publishing, and
specifically as an editor? Do you have advice for people considering a career
in publishing?
MM: I’ve always loved writing and story-telling. As
teen, I won a Scholastic Gold Key for an essay I wrote. Winning a prize
at a very young age from a real live publisher was wonderful and encouraging,
and because of that, I applied for and won a writing scholarship to college.
That threw me into a circle of other writers. Soon, I found that I loved
helping them write even more than I liked writing my own stuff. I began
to tutor writers between 10 and 15 hours a week, helping them with their papers
and their grad school applications. I became a teaching assistant for several
writing classes. Ever since I won that award, it set me down the path to
book publishing!
My advice for people considering a career in publishing is
to network and do internships. Publishing is so small, that it’s
challenging to get a job without a referral. It took me a year to find a
job even with all of my writing and tutoring experience just because I didn’t
know anyone. Find someone who knows someone in publishing. Ask that
person for an informational interview. Ask as many questions as you can
and at the end of the interview ask if s/he knows of any jobs you can apply to
or any other people that you can meet. Repeat until you get a job.
CIR: How many books do you edit at once? Do they all take
about the same amount of your time, or do some take substantially more time
than others?
MM: Two or three or more! And I also edit outlines
and proposals for future projects simultaneous to full-length novel-editing, so
I have a lot of things coming down my pipeline.
The books I work on don’t take the same amount of time; it
depends on what kind of shape they’re in when they arrive in my inbox.
Some books come in very raw. Others, very polished. In the end, all of
them need to be very polished—but some books come more easily than others and
some take more revisions to get there.
CIR: What’s your favorite word? If you have a least favorite
word, would you share that too?
MM: I really like words that are fun to say like
“indubitably” or “ensorcelled.” I’m not too fond of the word “hate.” Too
many people use that word when they don’t really mean it. Plus, saying
“Ugh, I hate blah blah blah,” is a little bit of a cop out, you know?
There are more clever and biting ways to express dislike…especially if you
manage use words like “indubitably” or “ensorcelled.”
CIR: If you could wave a magic wand and eliminate one common
error or flaw from all unpublished children’s/middle grade/and YA manuscripts
currently in existence – what would you choose to “fix”? (If you’d like, the
wand will let you fix a different problem in each type of book.)
MM: Can I wave the wand and make all the wonderful, amazing
manuscripts come to me? The mistake is when the manuscripts do not come
to me.
CIR: What inspired you to make the switch from adult fiction
to books for younger readers?
MM: That’s easy! Kids let books change them. Sure, many adults
do, too. But kids are especially open to transformative
experiences. And just knowing that I might work on a book that makes a
young person learn to love reading is profoundly motivating.
Many editors will tell you that they were voracious readers
as children, but I was not. I was a reluctant reader. I later
realized that was in part because all of my gatekeepers were trying to give me
books they though would “improve” me instead of books that would enrapture
me. If only someone had given me Animorphs instead of boring
historicals of canonical significance where nothing fun happens and all of the
characters die then maybe I would have gotten the reading bug sooner.
When I finally discovered fantasy and thrillers—in college, I might add—I never
looked back.
I wish I could to go back in time and give myself the right
book. I wish I could make up for all those years of lost reading!
But I can’t, so instead I edit the kind of books that would have rescued me in
the hopes that they’ll rescue some other young reader.
CIR: Are you looking for anything in particular right now?
What kind of manuscripts and topics are you hoping to find in your inbox?
MM: I know it’s a tall order, but I’d love to find a sci/fi
writer whose ideas remind me of Phillip K. Dick’s or Ray Bradbury’s, or a
fantasy writer who can write an expansive series about one world like Brian
Jacques or Anne McCaffrey. Easy peasy, right? If you’re the Next of any
of these people, drop me a line.
Thank you, Melissa, for chatting with us today. We appreciate the glimpse into your world - and wish you all the wonderful manuscripts your inbox can possibly hold!
Originally posted March 13, 2013.
Originally posted March 13, 2013.
6 comments:
Such rich information-- thanks for sharing, Melissa. I appreciate the advice to get over the fear and approach editors at conferences. I also appreciate your desire to be a part of bringing great books to kids. I was one of those greedy readers when I was younger.
Hi, Melissa. Thanks for coming to the Rock today and sharing your knowledge with us. There are times I enjoy YA books more than the adult books, and for the same reasons you do. They're often deeper and more complex. It sounds like you have a very rewarding job.
Thanks for being here on the Rock today, Melissa. Writing for a YA audience is something I hope to do in the future. You've provided a lot of helpful information.
The book I'm writing right now is YA. Thanks for the wonderful info and interview!
Sarah Allen
(From Sarah With Joy)
Great stuff.
Is there a link for us to drop Melissa a line, as she mentioned?
Thx,
RudyG
I like her choice of 'indubitably'. My favorite is 'juxtapose'. There is a site called favoritewords.com where you can add your favorite words and find people sharing the same words with you.
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