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brynn chapman

brynn chapman


Last Updated: 4/15/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Married
Age: 40
Sign: Aries

State: PENNSYLVANIA
Country: US
Signup Date: 9/17/2006

Blog Archive
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Tuesday, May 05, 2009 
Hi All. Here is the url for my industry blog...it also has a yahoo group if youd like to join! Just shoot me an email....

http://eablogsohmy.livejournal.com/

As an editor, what types of stories are you looking for at this time?

Right now I am focused on acquiring young adult fiction for Harlequin Teen. I am interested in stories targeted at girls, 12-18, across all teen genres. Paranormal, contemporary, historical, futuristic, science fiction, mystery, adventure, and across all tones--light, dark, funny, serious...whatever works for the story and characters.

 

What have you seen too much of lately, if anything?

I will never see too much of any particular story type when the story is well told, but, I do see too much derivative work, where the author is trying to create the next Twilight or House of Night type series, or some other current favorite author voice/story type, instead of developing his or her own story and voice.

 

What is your favorite part of being an editor? Least favorite?

My favorite part of being an editor is buying a project from a new author. It is thrilling to find a manuscript that reads fresh and original, such as the first wonderful faery story I acquired from Julie Kagawa, The Iron King, and Saving June, a contemporary story by Hannah Harrington. I also love having the chance to work with a pro author who is new to me, such as Douglas Rees, whose story Majix is one of the most heartfelt and truly funny books I’ve had the pleasure of working on. I am having the best time working with these exciting authors and can't wait to see their stories make it to the shelves in 2010 and 2011.

 

My least favorite thing by far is saying No. I put rejections off sometimes; there is just nothing fun about disappointing hopeful writers. It is even less fun when I have to say no to a story I truly like--there is just so much competition and our program is small, so I find myself in that position fairly often. It's hard.

 

Describe your dream author? And of course....the author from Hades?

My dream author is a consummate professional who is open to suggestions and is also not afraid to respectfully stand up for his or her work. He or she delivers manuscripts on time, or keeps me informed when things go amiss, and works as a team to create the best package possible for the story while being understanding of the challenges and timing faced by the in-house team. My dream author has his or her own Web site and does everything he or she can to self-promote, including anything from making connections with young adult fiction blogs and popular sites to taking advantage of local promotion opportunities. However, this author does not get so caught up in promoting that he or she stops writing!

 

The author from down below…would be someone who is constantly worrying about/comparing his- or herself to other authors, focusing on what other authors are doing and getting, and is constantly complaining about it instead of focusing on his or her own work.

 

 

What do you read for pleasure? Name three of your all time favorite books or

authors.

I am partial to mainstream fiction. Lately, I’ve been reading almost all young adult stories—not just because I’m working in that field, but because I find them earnest, honest and unpredictable in ways other genres don’t always deliver.

 

All time favorites:

Twilight by Stephenie Meyer (all four and 1/3 books—I’ve read Twilight and the Midnight Sun partial too many times to count, and the rest of the books almost as often. They’re my go-to feel-good reads).

The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

 

 

Tell us about your new YA line at Harlequin, and the titles that will be

kicking it off?

Harlequin Teen publishes young adult fiction targeted at girls, 12-18. Our stories feature extraordinary characters caught up in extraordinary adventures, told in authentic, memorable voices that will resonate with readers and be remembered after the covers are closed. HQ Teen is a single title program focused on building author names through individual and series titles and unique packages. Our first two titles, both by New York Times bestselling authors, will be published in 2009, and we’ve got about 14 books scheduled in 2010.

 

MY SOUL TO TAKE by Rachel Vincent lands on shelves in trade paperback in August. The story features teen banshee Kaylee Cavanaugh, whose discovery of her secret banshee heritage coincides with the frightening deaths of several of her classmates—and when someone near her is about to die, Kaylee can’t help her urge to literally scream bloody murder. This is book one of Rachel’s Soul Screamers series.

 

Gena Showalter’s INTERTWINED hits shelves in September in gift hardcover. The story features Aden Stone, a teenage boy who is a magnet for all things paranormal. Everyone thinks he’s crazy, which is why he’s sent to a halfway house for wayward teens.  But he doesn’t mind. For months he’s been having visions of a beautiful girl entering his life—a girl who will either save him or destroy him.  And even though he’s half in love with her before she ever arrives, he’s unprepared for the centuries-old secrets she brings with her.  Together, they’ll enter a dark underworld of intrigue and danger . . . and not everyone will come out alive. INTERTWINED is the first of four Intertwined novels.

 

 

How does one submit to you and do you accept equeries?

I get so many e-mails that, from unagented authors, I am asking for hard-copy queries, including a detailed synopsis of the story. If I am interested in a project, I may invite the author to e-mail the manuscript, although I do sometimes prefer a hard copy (my in-box tends to fill up and create problems when I receive too many attachments). I do accept agented queries and projects via e-mail. I’m also happy to send updates if gently reminded about a project via e-mail. Currently I do not have an assistant and my response time is slower than optimal, and I understand that writers are anxious for news.

 

Will you be attending any conferences this year?

I am not officially scheduled to attend any conferences as of today, but I will be lurking around RWA on Saturday and will also be making the rounds at BEA at the end of this month.

 

In a year, what is your typical percentage of signing new writers? Do they

typically come from slush, or referral, or conferences? How about the ratio

of agented to unagented?

Hmm, percentage—I’m not sure how to calculate one, but, this year so far I’ve signed one new author and hope to find several more. All of the authors signed to Harlequin Teen have agents. However, we have no rule that an author must have an agent to sign or submit to us, and I’m happy to look at all submissions. So far, the authors I’ve signed have come to me through meetings with their agents or through referrals from other agents. But you never know where the next gem will be found.

 

 

And Our new question section- an absolute take off of inside the actors

studio-adapted for books (how's that for a switch)

 

INSIDE THE Editors STUDIO

 

Tell us your favorite movie

I have to pick ONE?! Twilight, The Princess Bride and Moulin Rouge. Sorry!

 

Tell us your favorite protagonist-hero or heroine, your choice.

Bella Swan and Edward Cullen. And the Little Prince. And Elizabeth Bennett.

 

What is your favorite word or phrase?

“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.” (The fox, to the Little Prince)

 

least favorite word or phrase?

Currently, high fructose corn syrup is right up there with No you can’t do XYZ.

 

If you werent an editor, you would be an Olympic-level dressage rider.

 

 

 

Also...agents talk of voice. What kind of voice hooks your attention? One

that makes you laugh, cry--in your own words.

 

One that makes me so involved in the story, I lose track of reality. Sometimes through laughter, sometimes through heavy emotions, and always through a character who draws me in and doesn’t let go.

 

 

Wednesday, February 18, 2009 
Tuesday, February 03, 2009 
STOLEN FROM MY EDITORS AGENTS AND BLOGS OH MY GROUP...EMAIL TO JOIN

 

 

Interview w/Literary Agent Alyssa Eisner Henkin, Trident Media
Alyssa Eisner Henkin is a 1998 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and the Radcliffe Publishing Course. Before joining Trident, she spent over seven years as an editor in the children’s division at Simon & Schuster where she edited the New York Times bestselling Little Quack, The Theodore Seuss Geisel Award recipient, Henry and Mudge, and the acclaimed The Wedding Planner’s Daughter.
In December of 2006 Alyssa joined Trident Media Group as an agent for children’s books with an emphasis on contemporary middle grade, tween, and young adult novels. She is actively growing her client list, and seeks humorous voices, regional flavors, adventures, school stories, reality-based fantasies, tales of first love, and mysteries.

As an agent, what types of stories are you looking for at this time?
I focus on middle grade and young adult novels, and am also taking on a very select number of grownup projects.



For middle grade I’m seeking hopeful, commercial and plot-driven manuscripts. I’d love to find a textured and character-driven mystery novel in the vein of Elise Broach’s Masterpiece. An adventure novel about kids facing extraordinary circumstances, like Ingrid Law’s Savvy would be exciting to find too. A tween version of The Friday Night Knitting Club, not about knitting, but about friendships made through creative expression is definitely up my alley!



For YA, I’m actively looking for epic romances in the vein of Nicholas Spark’s The Notebook; if they’re set in the South or America’s Heartland, all the better! I also seek plot-driven “clean teen” in the vein of Ally Carter’s I’d Tell You I’d Love You but Then I’d Have to Kill You.



For adults, my wish list includes historical romance as well as contemporary-set commercial novels with great hooks in the vein of The Jane Austen Book Club. I also enjoy anything pertaining to mothers & daughters, weddings, food/cooking, and momtrepreneurs—either for fiction or nonfiction/memoir.


What have you seen too much of lately, if anything?

A lot of demon/zombie/vampire stuff has come my way and it’s not so much my thing. I’ve also seen a lot of lyrically written but “quiet”= read not very plot-driven middle grade novels that feel dated.



What is your favorite part of being an agent? Least favorite?

I love seeing the grist in the mill begin to churn—signing on a book that I believe in, doing editorial work with the author, crafting the perfect pitch, and selling it to an editor whom I can just tell will be a great advocate for the project. I also love seeing my clients get great reviews, or the day you find out B&N may take a big floor display for a series you believe in, and of course the day they give out major awards and your client is on the list! Three cheers for my Caldecott-honor winning author Jen Bryant for River of Words.

My least favorite is probably the lack of control and the “down time” that sometimes ensues, between the time I send out a project and sell it. It’s altogether antsy!



Describe your dream author? And of course....the author from Hades?

My dream author is someone who has matchless ideas, an imaginative way with words, killer plotting/pacing skills, and a desire to market his or her work through innovative and often interactive online formats. The author I would not work well with is likely a legend in his or her own mind, who isn’t receptive to new ideas, even if his or her own ideas aren’t really working.

What do you read for pleasure? Name three of your all time favorite books or
authors. I read a mixture of tween fiction, commercial women’s fiction, and entrepreneurial success stories and biographies.

My favorite titles that I’ve read in the last two years include ELEVEN by Lauren Myracle, WHEN EMMA JEAN LAZARUS FELL OUT OF A TREE by Lauren Tarshish, THE AMERICAN WIFE by Curtis Sittenfeld, and Laura Claridge’s now biography, EMILY POST.

Tell us about a few titles you have coming out you are excited about.

I am very excited about my client Lisa Greenwald’s awesome debut, MY LIFE IN PINK & GREEN, which is already an IndieBound top 10 pick for spring and releases in March. It walks the line between commercial and literary tween fiction with great deftness. I’m very pumped for my client Sarah MacLean’s YA book THE SEASON, a delightful romp in regency England for YA, as well as Sarah’s adult regency set romance trilogy, which we sold at auction to Avon/Harper Collins entitled NINE RULES TO BREAK WHEN ROMANCING A RAKE. I’m also thrilled for my client Carolyn McCullough’s ONCE A WITCH series, a tale of romance, witches, and sisters, which, we sold at auction last spring, and comes out from Houghton Mifflin this fall.



How does one submit to you and do you accept equeries? How about conference you will be attending this year?

I strongly encourage e-mail submissions to ahenkin@tridentmediagroup.com Please include a description of your book, any relevant work, writing, platform-building and promotional experience, a synopsis of your book, and the fist five pages in the text body of the e-mail. If it seems like a right fit I will then request more to be sent as an attachment.



In a year, what is your typical percentage of signing new writers? Do they come from slush or referral or conferences? Roughly 5 to 10%-- I would say about 2/3 of that number come from client and editor referrals or my own research, and the remaining 1/3 is unsolicited.




and our new question section- an absolute take off of inside the actors
studio-adapted for books (how's that for a switch)

INSIDE THE Agents STUDIO

Tell us your favorite movie

It’s a toss-up between When Harry Met Sally, Crossing Delancey, and Gone with the Wind.


Tell us your favorite protagonist-hero or heroine, your choice.

I would go with Madeline in Ludwig Bemelmans’s books. Anna Quindlen says, and I concur, that Madeline will grow up to be “the French Minister of Culture or the owner of a stupendous couture house, sending her children off to Miss Clavel's to be educated” And the fact that you can envision that merely from the way she stands up to the tigers in the zoo, and endures an operation without her parents by her side, makes her quite heroic.


What is your favorite word or phrase?

An ounce of pretension’s worth a pound of manure—Steel Magnolias


least favorite word or phrase?

The next big thing—it’s so elusive and loaded.

If you werent an agent, you would be an entrepreneur like Pleasant T. Rowland who founded the American Girl company________.


Also...agents talk of voice. What kind of voice hooks your attention? One
that makes you laugh, cry--in your own words.



For me, the first sentence of Pride & Prejudice “It’s a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of good fortune, must be in want of a wife” is exhibit A. For one thing, I can quote it from memory nearly two decades after having first attempted the novel in seventh grade. For another thing it’s funny and biting, and hooks you--clearly it’s going to be a good story right from the start!

THANKS SO MUCH!!!

BRYNN/ RR SMYTHE

Monday, February 02, 2009 
Hi all. Bride of Blackbeard is up for Book of the Year over at Long and Short Reviews. If you read it, and liked it, I could use your vote.
Thanks...from a weary, superbowl tired PITTSBURGH  native
http://www.longandshortreviews.com/LASR/BB2008.htm
Thursday, January 15, 2009 
Tuesday, December 02, 2008 
Friday, October 31, 2008 

from the group i run...editors agents and blogs oh my

 

http://eablogsohmy.livejournal.com/

 

clickareno.

Monday, October 20, 2008 

Touring the 200 year old Yin Yu Tang and Nathaniel Hawthorne's House of the Seven Gables. Pictures included @ live journal site

http://chapmansmythe.livejournal.com/

Thursday, October 16, 2008 

Take your pick...I've been a blogging fool.

Here is the Leah Hultenschmidt interview http://eablogsohmy.livejournal.com/

and here is "Ambling through Historic Massachusetts" pics included-http://chapmansmythe.livejournal.com/

 

thanks!! also Blackbeard is up for a video covey award if youre interested.

http://thenewcoveytrailerawards.blogspot.com/

Saturday, October 11, 2008 

HI! If you get a moment--Blackbeard is up for best book of the week over at Long and short reviews...if you liked it go and click eh?

http://www.longandshortreviews.com/LASR/recentrev.htm

here is the review
The Bride of Blackbeard by Brynn Chapman is what I refer to as  a 'beefy' read.  It's a romance sandwiched between historical facts and a personal growth story. 

Constanza is a great heroine.  She is strong willed with a purpose.  But unlike so many historical romances that plop a 2008 woman into the past, Constanza's 'Stanza' is  believable and very well defined.  A childhood filled with unspeakable nightmares has forced her to be stronger and more self reliant than most women of her time. Even her escape is tainted.  Stanza's loyalty to her brother, Will, and especially to her sister, Katrina, is both a blessing and curse.  Nothing comes easy for Stanza but she keeps moving forward toward that happily ever after.

Where Constanza is a woman not molded in the traditional time setting, Lucian is.  As a hero restricted by the mind set of the 1700's his character is often at odds with Stanza.  Lucian is a man of good heart and nature, something Constanza hasn't been lucky enough to have in her life. While the personal barriers he must overcome are different than Stanza's, Lucian's growth as a character is as heart wrenching as Constanza's.

The final barrier to their happiness is the same - Edward Teach, a.k.a. Black Beard.  Ms. Chapman does an excellent job building up the suspense around this final threat to their happily ever after ending, that I wondered if it was going to happen….but the story was so well written I was willing to accept the ending either way.  And I did find the ending complete - surprising - but complete.

The secondary characters of Hopkins offer plenty of chances to see the real personalities of Lucian and Constanza.  They are hopelessly selfish people.  Her sister, Katrina, is the prodding force in many of the things in Constanza's life, rarely positive.

Bride of Blackbeard contains many fascinating historical facts woven into the plot.   This is not like reading a history book.  The characters are engaging and the pacing is excellent.
 
 
****************

ITs also up at the covey awards...the book video site...

http://thenewcoveyawards.blogspot.com/

thanks..I have so many Mass. pios...they are fantastic...and the history is oozing out my ears right now!!!

rr