www.scbwi.org

12 result(s) found.

How Do I Break Into Picture Book Illustration?

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Dear Editor…

How on earth do I become an illustrator?

Sincerely,
Troubled in Texas

Dear Troubled in Texas…

Assuming your art can compete with that being published in the current market, I recommend you try to get a literary agent who represents children’s book illustrators. She’ll constantly pitch you to editors, she’ll know about manuscripts already under contract with publishers but needing artists, and she’ll help shape your career. Do submit directly to editors and art directors, too, via postcard mailings; those folks will keep the cards on file if they like the art, but you must send new cards to stay on their radars. Also make a portfolio that shows off your style, characters, color palette, conceptual thinking, and design sense to show that you understand the opportunities of the picture book format, like page turns and perspective shifts. To learn that, study picture books in stores or take a picture book illustration course. Above all, join the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators. Its resources include how-to’s and directories of agents, editors, and courses. Your local chapter periodically hosts agents, editors, art directors, and experienced illustrators for portfolio consults, and you’ll learn the pub biz itself, not just how to break in.

Happy illustrating!
The Editor

Is Teen Too Young to Publish?

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Dear Editor…

I’m a teen and my dream is to be an author. But in the past year it has started to become more of a reality. I have written a rough draft of a novel and have begun revising. But I don’t know whether I should go on. Is it too risky being a teen in this market? Should I wait for my dream when I’m older? Thank you so much! Bye.

Just A Teen

Dear Just A Teen…

Christopher Paolini and Abigail Gibbs prove age is no reason to hit Pause. But you’re wise beyond your years to ponder the path ahead. Be of two minds: 1) Book: Craft, not age, matters. Hire a pro freelance editor to evaluate your ms for craft and market potential and guide you in honing your skills to compete with veteran writers. Or try a local college ‘extension’ class for writing. Get feedback from writing experts. 2) Business: Pubbing a book is the same as opening a business whether you self-pub or sign with a publisher. With your parents’ help, get an agent to protect your rights, manage the money, and devise safe ways to put you and your books ‘out there.’ The Literary Market Place has an agent directory, as do writers’ groups like SCBWI or SFWA. Look into your writing category’s group, read my post Too Young to Be Taken Seriously?, and KEEP WRITING! This may not become your debut novel, but you’ll be a better writer for it.

Happy writing!
The Editor

Guest Editor Eddie Gamarra re: Agents for Your Script or Book-to-Film Rights

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Dear Editor…

I was talking to my screenwriting professor about getting an agent.  He informed me that writer-directors do not get talent agents, but have to get literary agents. I have a producer already interested in my work, so I thought it might be safe if I sought representation. Is this true? How do I go about that?

Sincerely,
J.

ed_bw_headshot-1Eddie Gamarra is a literary manager/producer at The Gotham Group. He represents screenwriters, directors, animators, authors, illustrators, publishers, and animation studios around the world that specialize in children and family entertainment. His main focus is in animation and literature ranging from picture books, novels, anthologies, and graphic novels. His clients include numerous New York Times best-selling authors and illustrators, as well as Oscar, Emmy, Caldecott, Newberry, and Geisel award winners. Eddie is Executive Producer of James Dashner’s upcoming The Maze Runner film. The Gotham Group has a producing component and reps over 300 writers, authors, and publishing company clients.

Dear J….

From the Hollywood perspective, your professor is correct. Actors have “talent” agents; screenwriters and directors have “literary” agents and /or managers; and authors/illustrators have “book” agents. All reps should be working to insure the best opportunities for their clients in their specific fields of expertise and often partner with other reps (“co-reps”/ “co-agents”) when they need expert advice outside their field. If you are an author/illustrator trying to have your book optioned as a movie or TV show (TV movie, web series, etc.), OR if you are an author adapting your own work as a script, then your book agent typically partners with a “book-to-film” agent who can help you and your book agent navigate the dark forest of Hollywood. If you are strictly a screenwriter, then you can have a lit agent or manager help you sell your script.

Many book agents work with book-to-film co-reps and so you can have your book agent help you add that new member to your team. If you do not have a book agent or if your book agent does not have any relationships with co-reps, then you will have to research the best “book-to-film” rep just as you would research a book agent.  Hollywood is less transparent than publishing so the best ways to begin that search are to research Publishers Marketplace, look up reps who have spoken at SCBWI events, and also look at the websites’ of the authors/illustrators’ whose work most closely resembles yours and see if they have any reps listed on their own websites.  Ask your friends who have been through the optioning process to see who they used and liked.

In your case it is also very important to get some inside information about the producer interested in your project. While anyone can use resources like IMDb or Box Office Mojo to research a producer, it is essential to have up-to-date insider information about that producer. Their credits may be amazing, but there are any number of reasons why they may not be the right match for you or your book.

Keep in mind, if one person sees potential in your project, others might too. There may be better collaborations to be made. Your reps will help you figure it all out.

Eddie Gamarra
The Gotham Group

FREE EDIT Giveaway to Celebrate Annemarie O’Brien’s Debut, Lara’s Gift

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Dear Readers…

I’m thrilled today to host Annemarie O’Brien, DearEditor.com’s first Free Edit giveaway winner ever, whose debut MG novel LARA’S GIFT pubs this week. As far as I’m concerned, there’s only one way to celebrate that: with another FREE EDIT giveaway! Read my interview with Annemarie about her journey from idea to publication, then enter the giveaway for a free substantive edit of your fiction manuscript (novels up to 80,000 words; picture book mss ok). Good luck!

The Editor

Annemarie O’Brien has an MFA in Writing for Children & Young Adults from the Vermont College of Fine Arts. She teaches creative writing courses at UC Berkeley Extension, Stanford Continuing Studies, Pixar, and DreamWorks, as well as edits children’s books for Room to Read which advocates literacy in developing countries. Lara’s Gift is her debut middle grade novel.

LarasGift“Powerful and engrossing!” – Kirkus starred review
In 1914 Russia, Lara is being groomed by her father to be the next kennel steward for the Count’s borzoi dogs unless her mother bears a son. But Lara’s visions, suppressed by her father, suggest she has a special bond with the dogs. [book trailer]

Annemarie, I’m curious about your publication experience as well as the actual writing of Lara’s Gift. How did you connect with your agent?
Author and friend Varian Johnson introduced me to Sarah Davies at the 2009 Los Angeles SCBWI National Conference. He thought she would be a good fit for me and my manuscript, LARA’S GIFT. Sarah and I chatted and it didn’t take long before I was charmed by her lovely British accent. More importantly, I felt in my gut that Sarah was the right agent for me. What I like best about Sarah is that she’s a great communicator and responds to my emails and questions almost immediately! She is equally as strong and comfortable on the editorial side of publishing as she is on the business end. She is consummate professional and cares about all of her writers.

What was it like to get the offer from your editor?
It was a dream come true!

About ten years before I submitted my manuscript to Knopf editor Erin Clarke, my college roommate, Amy Myer, gave me a tour of Random House and showed me a room filled floor to ceiling with Knopf books. As I drooled over all the titles, I said, “I would love to get published by Knopf.” My friend responded with, “Yeah, you and everybody else!” She meant no harm by these words. She was absolutely right, but it didn’t stop me from dreaming.

Years later when I was preparing my Vermont College of Fine Arts critical thesis on the function of prologues, I was most impressed with the prologue in THE BOOK THIEF by Marcus Zusak and contacted his editor, Erin Clarke, for an interview. She was so helpful and quick to respond to my emails that I had a strong feeling she would be great to work with. So when Pacific Coast Children’s Writers Workshop director Nancy Sondel heard I couldn’t participate in her YA master class workshop, I told her I would come if she brought in Erin Clarke. Well, Nancy delivered and that was how I got the opportunity to have Erin read the opening chapter of LARA’S GIFT. She liked it and invited me to submit the full manuscript. It was painful waiting for a response, but when the good news came I was beyond thrilled!
 
You have two borzoi, and your debut novel is about borzoi. What is it about that breed of dog that connects with you?
Annemarie author photoIt was by accident that I discovered borzoi. When I graduated with an MBA in international business and landed a job in Russia, I decided I would get a true Russian dog. I figured there was no dog more Russian than a borzoi so I set out to find one. It wasn’t as easy as I thought it would be but eventually I was gifted a puppy. Her name was Dasha and she was the most amazing dog. She was not only a great companion, but she opened so many doors for me. It’s because of her that LARA’S GIFT exists. That’s the kind of impression she had on me! One so strong a book came out of it!!

Lara’s Gift is set in Imperial Russia. What was involved in researching that time and place?
I spent about ten years of my life living and working in Russia and its neighboring countries so I have a good deal of knowledge about its history, language, and culture. I also have read numerous books on its history and literature.

One book in particular that helped me better understand life on the country estates in Russia breeding borzoi dogs was OBSERVATIONS ON BORZOI by Joseph B. Thomas about his travels in the early 1900s in search of the perfect borzoi in Russia to bring back to the United States. In his book, a wolf hunt was described.

Smith College Russian Professor Alexander Woronzoff-Dashkoff also inspired the story behind LARA’S GIFT from the questions he couldn’t answer when I learned about his connection to the famous Woronzova kennel. It is his family that started the Woronzova kennel that is cited in OBSERVATIONS ON BORZOI as being one of the top three. The other two were Gatchina, owned by Tsar Nicholas, and Perchino, owned by the Grand Duke Nicolai.

I also had numerous readers—including Russian historians, borzoi historians, and writers—read my story to help me strengthen the writing and the accuracy. One such opportunity was with YOU, Deborah, when you offered a free manuscript critique when you launched your blog, DearEditor.com. That was a terrific experience! (Readers, if you’re a writer and have a manuscript you’re looking to improve, I highly recommend Deborah. She’ll see where your story needs help and articulate a good game plan to get you going. I assign her WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES to my students at UC Berkeley, Stanford, and Pixar.”)

What was it like to revise with an editor post-contract?
My big fear was that I would have to do a major revision of my story. For good or bad, I was relieved when Erin told me that she didn’t think LARA’S GIFT needed any major revisions. We primarily worked on tightening some scenes by cutting and by expanding others to tap into the emotion of the moment. She also had me change the ending a bit to one that is now much stronger than the original one I submitted to her. I have a tendency to want to protect my characters and Erin saw to it that Lara would struggle more.

I agreed with all of her suggestions and feel they made the story stronger. So I’m very grateful to Erin for her keen eye and respectful manner in asking for changes. She also let me keep the original title, DANCE WITH BORZOI, as well as Lara’s original name (Bohdana) up until the very end. It was really quite clever of her to hold off on these requested changes because it didn’t distract me from the real revision work that was needed on the story.

What’s next for you?
I am working on the companion novel to LARA’S GIFT. The working title is FROM RUSSIA WITH DASHA. It is set primarily in the Gorbachev era in both Northampton, Massachusetts, and Moscow, Russia, and told from two points of view.

Enter to win copies of Lara’s Gift and hear more from Annemarie at these stops on her blog tour:
Fido and Friend, Fiction Notes, Kissing the Earth, Quirk and Quill, Simple Saturday, Coffee with a Canine, Dog Reads, World Reads, Children’s Literature Network, Word Spelunking, Random Acts of Reading, The Hiding Spot, Beth Fish Reads

I’m giving away a FREE Substantive Edit* of one fiction manuscript. I can’t get Rafflecopter to work with my site format yet, so for this contest here are the rules and ways to enter:

  1. Your manuscript can be of ANY FICTION GENRE or FICTION CATEGORY (for adults or children, including picture books).
  2. Your manuscript must be COMPLETE.
  3. Your manuscript SHALL NOT EXCEED 80,000 WORDS.
  4. Manuscripts that do not meet these requirements will be disqualified.
  5. Deadline: MIDNIGHT, August 11, 2013, PST.
  6. Winner will be randomly selected using Randomizer.org and announced on August 12, 2013, on DearEditor.com and on the DearEditor.com Facebook and Google+ pages, and the winner will be notified directly via email.

TO ENTER:

One entry –  SEND EMAIL to DearEditor.com using the “Write to The Editor” button at the top of the blog or by clicking here. Type “Free Edit Giveaway” in the subject line. In the body of the email, include the TITLE of your manuscript and YOUR FULL NAME. DO NOT send your manuscript or any portion of it. (If you have any difficulty with the contact button, send an email entry directly to the-editor@deareditor.com.)

Bonus entry – SUBSCRIBE. DearEditor.com subscribers get a bonus entry by sending a second email with “Subscriber’s Bonus Giveaway Entry” in the subject line and your title and full name in the body. (Note: the Editor will verify!) Not a subscriber yet? Then subscribe now by clicking on the “Subscribe” button at the top of DearEditor.com and then email your second entry.

Extra bonus entries – SPREAD THE WORD. Blog, tweet, or otherwise electronically tell others about this giveaway to get additional entries. Send an email to DearEditor.com with “I Spread the Word!” in the subject line, and in the body include a link to your blog post or your Twitter address or your Facebook wall or whatever social media you used to spread the word. Don’t send screen-shots; attachments won’t be accepted. Include your title and full name in the body. Spread the word more than once? Then send an “I Spread the Word!” email for each one!

Anyone who doesn’t follow these rules will be disqualified, at the Editor’s discretion.

*In a “Substantive Edit,” the author receives general feedback about the manuscript’s overall pacing, organization, narrative voice, plot development/narrative arc, characterization, point of view, setting, delivery of background information, adult sensibility (children’s books only), and the synchronicity of age-appropriate subject matter with target audience, as the Editor determines appropriate and necessary after reviewing the entire manuscript. It is not a word-by-word, line-by-line “Line Edit.”

Disclaimer: The Editor does not share or in any other way use your contact information; it’s collected solely for winner contact purposes at the end of the giveaway.

Good luck!

What If My Agent Doesn’t Live in NYC?

Dear Editor…

In thinking about finding an agent to represent me, should location be a big consideration? Does it matter if an agent does not live in NY where I would like to submit manuscripts?

Thank you!
Lisa

Dear Lisa…

Location, location, location! may be a crucial motto for real estate, but it needs no place in your agent submission strategizing. Most business between agents and editors is conducted via email and phone, so your agent can live outside publishing’s NYC hub. And plenty do. (My agent for children’s books lives in Flagstaff, my agent for adult projects lives in San Diego, and my agent for Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies lives in Sacramento.) Those agents typically make semi-annual trips to the Big Apple, packing each day with editor meetings, and they supplement those trips with meet-ups at big industry events and conferences like Book Expo America or the Annual SCBWI Summer Conference. When you start talking representation with an agent, ask how s/he keeps ongoing relationships with editors fresh and forges new ones. This will give you a feel for the agent’s connections and networking prowess.

Happy writing!
The Editor

Newsflash: The Editor to Deliver State of Industry Keynote

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The Editor is honored to deliver the state of the children’s book industry keynote at the SCBWI 42nd Summer Conference August 2-5. She will also teach an intensive and two breakouts, as well as do one-on-one critiques. Registration for the conference just opened up. For details, read today’s full post or go straight to the SCBWI conference home page.

Dear Readers…

I’ve been speaking, teaching, and critiquing at the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators annual conference for over a decade, and I always walk away from it inspired and enlightened. If you’re writing for young people and it’s within your ability to attend this year’s conference, I wholeheartedly recommend you do so. SCBWI has lined up a knowledgeable faculty covering great topics. I’m honored to be among them. I’ll deliver the “Market Report: An Up-to-the-Minute State of the Industry” keynote, teach the intensive “How to Build Your Own Teenager: Techniques for Writing Believable MG/YA Characters,” and run two breakouts: “The Read-Aloud Factor: Achieving Rhythm without Relying on Rhyme in Picture Books” and “Setting, Wherefore Art Thou?: The Surprising Benefits and How-To’s of Setting in MG/YA Fiction.” Plus, I’m critiquing! Registration for the conference has just opened. If you attend, I hope you’ll introduce yourself to me.

Happy writing!
The Editor

News

Check here for the latest news about DearEditor.com…

June 25, 2025: Watch the Editor’s “State of the Children’s Book Market” Zoom Event

On June 26, 2025, The Editor, Deborah Halverson, will present a Zoom event called “The State of the Children’s Book Market” for SCBWI, the Society of Children’s Books Authors and Illustrators. The online event is 90 minutes long and free to SCBWI Premium members. You can register on the SCBWI website: www.SCBWI.org. This up-to-the minute, comprehensive overview of the children’s publishing industry and marketplace includes insights into market needs and acquisition trends, the launch and closure of various imprints, the influences of AI, challenges surrounding book banning, and the current landscape of the middle grade market.

April 27, 2025: Get Revision Tips from The Editor 

Join The Editor, Deborah Halverson, for her digital workshop “Novel & Picture Book Revision: 5 Ways to Translate ‘No’ to ‘Yes!'” hosted by SCBWI’s Southern California Chapter. Tired of rejections from agents and publishers? Even MORE tired of not understand WHY they rejected your manuscript? Learn five reasons that commonly appear in rejection letters for novels and picture books, translated and then followed by solutions for addressing the problem.

April 19, 2025: Writing for Teens or Tweens? The Editor’s Virtual Workshop Is For You

Whether your narrator is your young main character or an all-knowing omniscient being, there are ways to convince young readers that you understand them and their view of the world—and to hook’em good and hard in the process. Join The Editor, Deborah Halverson, for her technique-packed virtual workshop “Writing for Teens or Tweens? Then Think Like One: Crafting a Youthful Narrative Voice and Sensibility in MG/YA Fiction.” This session teaches techniques for creating a narrative sensibility and voice that reflects the way teens and tweens think, resulting in novels that “click” with young readers. Register at www.cbw-laorg.

Meet the Editor at the Big Sur Children’s Writers Workshop in February 2025

Meet The Editor, Deborah Halverson, at the Big Sur Children’s Writers Workshop on February 21-23, 2025, in Monterey, California. Hosted by Andrea Brown Literary Agency, this workshop focuses on children’s literature, from picture books to young adult, and is designed for serious writers whose work is nearly ready for publication. Participants will engage in critique groups, panel discussions with industry professionals, and have opportunities for one-on-one feedback.

Nov 2, 2025: Join The Editor and Others for a Full Day of Writing Craft How-To’s

Join The Editor, Deborah Halverson, and fellow authors of writing craft books Mary Kole and Kirsten W. Larson for SCBWI’s “Crash Course on Craft” Nov 2 on Zoom. We’ll cover picture books, middle grade, and YA. All sessions recorded for later viewing. BONUS: 3 randomly selected participants will get a free critique. Info: https://www.scbwi.org/events/crash-course-in-craft. It’s a full day of craft talk from the authors of preeminent books on writing craft.

Feb 10, 2024: SCBWI-Los Angeles Writer’s Day March 9

On March 9, The Editor, Deborah Halverson, will present “The Ultimate Checklist for Submitting Your Novel to Editors” at the SCBWI Los Angeles chapter’s Writers Day, to be held the Skirball Cultural Center in L.A. There will be opportunities to pitch your book to one of five children’s lit agents, a manuscript contest, networking and socializing with other writers, and  more sessions and keynotes. About “The Ultimate Checklist for Submitting Your Novel to Editors“: Too often, YA/MG manuscripts are submitted to editors before the manuscripts are truly ready. Since you only get one chance with a particular editor, you can’t risk sending out a manuscript that’s not the best it can be. How can you know when your manuscript is really ready? Learn ten actionable tests for knowing when a novel is really, truly ready to submit . . . along with ways to whip the manuscript into shape if it fails a single one of them. For more info, visit Writers Day 2024: Bud to Blossom – How to Grow Stories and Nurture Creative Inspiration

Feb 9, 2024: The Editor at Big Sur Children’s Writers Workshop

The Editor, Deborah Halverson, is honored to be on the faculty of this year’s Big Sur Children’s Writers Workshop. Hosted by Andrea Brown Literary Agency, this three-day workshop “brings top tier professionals together with both beginner and seasoned writers.” Writers mingle and discuss their works with editors, agents, and published authors and attend small group sessions where one-on-one feedback is provided. Learn more at Big Sur Children’s Writers Workshop.

Oct 14, 2023: Publishers Weekly Reports on The Editor’s “State of the Children’s Publishing Market” Digital Event

This week, Publishers Weekly, the trade magazine for the publishing industry, gave rich coverage to The Editor’s digital event for SCBWI, “The State of the Children’s Publishing Market.” Its article, entitled “SCBWI Scopes Out Book Trends,” has been called a “must-read” across social media.

Sept 25, 2023: Watch the Editor’s State of the Children’s Book Industry & Market Report

On September 28, the Editor will be presenting a Digital Special Event for Premium members of SCBWI, the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. In this state-of-the-market and acquisition trends presentation, titled “State of the Children’s Publishing Market,” the Editor will cover what’s selling and what’s being acquired, what’s being wished for and what’s showing signs of potential upswing, and factors influencing our industry’s health and sales, including AI, book banning, social media and book discovery, diversity efforts, the sale of Simon & Schuster, imprint launches and closures, and more. With a rich understanding of their unique corner of publishing, children’s book creators can strongly position the projects they’re working on—the ones that reflect them as individual storytellers. Learn more at SCBWI.org.

May 1, 2023: Join The Editor for May 13th On-Line Picture Book Workshop

Join The Editor on May 13, 2023, for a virtual three-hour workshop “Kit and Caboodle: Crafting Irresistible Picture Books From Idea to Query,” hosted by the writing group Children’s Book Writers of Los Angeles. Learn the features of irresistible picture books and strong query letters and elevator pitches. Attendees will put pen-to-paper during the workshop, applying the learned techniques to their work-in-progress picture book manuscript(s) or to brainstorm a new project, and crafting a pitch and query letter. Current WIPs NOT required for attendance. For details and sign-up, visit the event page.

April 29, 2023: The Editor on SCBWI Podcast

The Editor enjoyed a great conversation with SCBWI Podcast host Theo Baker in the episode “From Slush Pile to Stand Out Manuscript with Deborah Halverson.” They got into the nitty-gritty of her editorial approach, the challenges and joys of writing, and her journey in publishing. Listen on your favorite podcast app, including these (click to listen): Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Podcasts.

September 14, 2022: The Editor Is Featured in Writers’ Forum Magazine

The Editor is honored to be invited to present to the Redwood Writers chapter meeting on September 17, 2022. The online event, “You’ve Written a Book, What’s Next?”, will be an hour-long webinar for beginners as well as advanced writers — published and pre-published — looking to perfect their submission package and strategy. The Redwood Writers is the largest branch of the California Writers Club.

August, 2022: The Editor Is Featured in Writers’ Forum Magazine

The Editor was honored to be Writers’ Forum magazine’s “Where I Write” feature this month. The feature focused on her writing (and editing!) visits to the San Diego Public Library’s public reading room, which is a gorgeous space. Her default writing spaces are the lake and fields by her home, but at least two days each week she picks a beautiful San Diego location like Balboa Park or the beach at the famous Hotel Del Coronado. She  chooses her locations sometimes by mood, but usually with some thematic link to what she’s writing or editing that day, then she shares photos on her social media to share the inspiration of the space. “Just give me a travel mug of hot cocoa, a beautiful space, and an engrossing project to write or edit and I’m happy.”

August 14, 2022: The Editor Talks Trends in Children’s Books with SCBWI Nebraska

The Editor spent an afternoon at a virtual meeting of SCBWI Nebraska. She talked about how the various categories of children’s books are performing, how some audience and market expectations are changing while others remain constant, and what trends seem to be playing out in the market and in acquisitions and in reader reception. Always wonderful to talk books with book folk.

June 2, 2022: The Editor Interviewed in “How Writers Write” Podcast

“How Writers Write” podcast host Host Brian Murphy and The Editor (aka Deborah Halverson) discuss what makes fiction “Young Adult Fiction,”  writing practice and process, and what it’s like to think like an editor. It’s a fabulous discussion — they dig deep into it! To listen to the podcast: Apple: https://apple.co/3m9kAhZ; Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3m8rpQR1.

December 6, 2021: The Editor Auctioning Picture Book Edit & Call for #WeNeedDiverseBooks Holiday Auction

The Editor is honored to be contributing to the #WeNeedDiverseBooks Campaign by offering a picture book edit and phone call with me in their Holiday Auction. Visit https://bit.ly/3HZPItU to bid on this and check out all the other offerings. The Holiday Auction ends 10pm Eastern 12/6/21.

October 1, 2021: Spend the Weekend with The Editor and SCBWI-SoCal Los Angeles for Writer’s Retreat 2021

Join The Editor, 2 agents, and 2 editors for a 2-day Virtual Writer’s Retreat for creatures of chapter books and middle grade/young adult fiction October 9-10, 2021. Between critique sessions with agents and editors, Deborah will do Craft Workshops on four story elements — character, plot, setting, and voice… plus revision techniques! bit.ly/3lz4Q7i

September 1, 2021: The Editor To Share How to Find the Right Editor for Your Book

Join The Editor on Sept 11, 2021, for an inspiring and informative market report and learn about new imprints and what they are requiring. She will also share her tips on researching editors to find the perfect fit for your book. Register at www.sandiego.scbwi.org.

August 22, 2021: The Editor Featured in Publishers Weekly!

Publishers Weekly covered The Editor in their article “2021 SCBWI Conference: Significant Market Transformation Due to COVID-19.” The article provides a peek into Deborah’s Market Report for the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators summer conference. http://pwne.ws/3lwpczD.

September 1, 2021: The Editor to Share How to Find the Right Editor for Your Book

Join The Editor on Sept 11, 2021, for an inspiring and informative market report and learn about new imprints and what they are requiring. She will also share her tips on researching editors to find the perfect fit for your book. Register at www.sandiego.scbwi.org.

August, 2021: The Editor at UCLA’s Writers Symposium

The Editor joined 11 amazing YA authors at UCLA’s writing symposium “The Young and the Reckless: Writing for Teens. She was in the a panel with award-winning, best-selling YA novelists Aiden Thomas and Adam Sass. “Put characters in unexpected settings to provoke surprising dialogue, unpredictable action, and stress.”-Deborah Halverson https://www.uclaextension.edu/ya-symposium

April 31, 2021: The Editor Teaches Submissions Strategies Twice in April

The Editor taught children’s book wrters and illustrators the ins and outs of submitting their manuscripts to agents and publishers twice this month. First for Children’s Books Writers of Los Angeles (CBW-LA), and then for SCBWI’s South and Central Ohio chapter. The session was called “SUBMISSION STUDIO: Writing Queries, Strategizing Submissions, and Ten Ways to Translate “No” to “Yes!”

January 15, 2021: The Editor’s Predictions for the 2021 Children’s Lit Market are Published in SCBWI INSIGHT

The Editor shared some predictions for children’s literature market in the January edition of SCBWI INSIGHT, a monthly enewsletter for members of the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators. INSIGHT features current children’s book hot topics, helpful hints, exclusive interviews and monthly contests. When talking about likelihoods for 2021, emerging trend-lines are intriguing to extend forward. The Editor appreciated the challenge and opportunity to do so. For an excerpt of the members-only article “What Will the Children’s Literature Market Look Like in 2021?: A Crystal Ball Prediction,” click here.

November 24, 2020: The Editor Edits a Book Benefitting Victims of Domestic Violence & Abuse

The Editor was honored to edit the Purple Projects picture book PENNY’S ADVENTURES IN SAN DIEGO. Sales benefit victims of domestic violence and abuse. For this book, thirteen San Diego County mayors and a deputy mayor each penned a chapter of a story about a kind-hearted purple butterfly named Penny visiting their respective cities and doing a good deed. Per the San Diego Union-Tribune,  “Deborah Halverson, an editor and publishing consultant, wrote chapter transitions and edited the book at no cost, while Danielle Ramirez created colorful illustrations…. The 85-page illustrated book, “Penny’s Adventure in San Diego,” is now available for pre-order for $25 and due for release in early December.”

October, 2020: The Editor Offering New Class for KidLit Writers

The Editor is honored to be offering a new class for Children’s Book Insider: “10 Things That Get Kidlit Manuscripts Rejected – and How to Avoid Them.” It will be 90 minutes of deep-digging writing tools for writers of picture books, chapter books, middle grade and young adult — fiction and nonfiction. The class will be live online Tuesday, Oct 13, 2020, with lifetime on-demand rewatching. Jump on over to the class page for the full details and sign-up. Children’s Book Insider is a place to take classes on all aspects of writing and publishing books for young readers.

May 29, 2020: The Editor to Offer a Digital Workshop for SCBWI (Free & Exclusive to SCBWI Members)

The Editor will present the fifth workshop in the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators‘s second Digital Workshops series. The series is for current SCBWI members, and is free — an offering for members during this unusual summer of lockdown and creative challenge. The Editor’s workshop will be “Submissions Studio: Writing Queries, Strategizing Submissions, and 10 Ways to Translate ‘No’ to ‘Yes!’” It’s for writers of all children’s book categories — beginners as well as advanced writers — looking to perfect their submission package and strategy. The workshop will include a master handout, sample query letters, and a quick-reference sheet for translating editorial feedback. Workshop date:  Thursday, July 2 , 2020, 1:00pm-2:00pm, Pacific Daylight Time. Registration opens Monday, June 29 , 2020, 10am PDT.

March 2, 2020: The Editor’s Article about E-Book Lending in SCBWI’s “Insight”

The Editor’s article “The E-Book Lending Battle Between Libraries and Macmillan, and What It Means to Authors” has been published in the March 2020 issue of  INSIGHT, the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrator‘s monthly enewsletter featuring current children’s book hot topics, helpful hints, exclusive interviews and monthly contests.

Feb 7, 2020: The Editor’s Children’s Book Publishing Overview Article in SCBWI’s “The Bulletin”

The Editor’s article “2019: A Year in Review” has been published in SCBWI’s Winter 2020 edition of THE BULLETIN, a biannual publication provided to members of the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators. The article is a children’s publishing industry overview, examining events and trends of 2019.

Jan 6, 2020:  The Editor to Ring in the New Decade with a Submissions Webinar

The Editor is excited to be asked by SCBWI – Texas: Austin to ring in the new year with a  submissions webinar. WRITING QUERIES, STRATEGIZING SUBMISSIONS, & INTERPRETING EDITORIAL FEEDBACK is for writers of all children’s book categories, and beginners as well as advanced writers looking to perfect their submission package and strategy. Deborah will do some critiques as part of the webinar: query letters, 1st 10 pages of a YA/MG novel, or a submission package of a query letter, synopsis, and 1st 10 pages.  The webinar will be January 14, 2020, 7-8:30pm CT (5-6:30pmPT, 8-9:30pmET). Details and registration at bit.ly/2N5pXNV. 

Oct 29, 2019:  The Editor to Present a YA/MG  Technique-Focused Webinar
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oin The Editor for a technique-focused, hour-long Webinar designed to make YA/MG writers stronger self-editors and novelists on Nov 14, 2019.  THE ULTIMATE CHECKLIST FOR SUBMITTING YOUR MG/YA TO EDITORS: 10 Tests Your Manuscript Must Pass to Prove It’s Ready to Submit. “How can you know when your Middle Grade/Young Adult manuscript is ready to submit to agents or editors? You think it is, but how can you know for sure? Learn ten actionable tests for knowing when a novel is really, truly ready to submit . . . along with ways to whip the manuscript into shape if it fails a single one of them.” Hosted by SCBWI-Texas: Southwest.  Details and registration at  http://bit.ly/2pnztn1 

Sept 3, 2019: Interview with the Editor and Giveaway
The fabulous resource website for teen writers TipsForTeenAuthors.com is GIVING AWAY a signed copy of The Editor’s writing craft book WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES to go with her in-depth interview about freelance editing as a career. You can read the interview and enter the giveaway at bit.ly/2lxDbrV.

June 15, 2019: The Editor to Teach YA/MG Webinar July 16, 2019
On July 16, 2019, 7-8:30pm CT (5-6:30pm PT / 8-9:30pm ET), Deborah will present the webinar Subtext & Subplots: How to Deepen and Energize Your YA/MG Fiction.” She’ll teach techniques for using subtext and subplots to build rich, satisfying stories and fix common storytelling “problems.” She’ll also be critiquing for those who choose that additional item for the event. It will bosted by SCBWI-Texas: Austin. Details & registration at bit.ly/2ZgH2bs.

June 10, 2019: The Editor Teaches YA all day at SCBWI-Florida’s Orlando Mid-Year Workshop June 7-8, 2019
The Editor was honored to be in Orlando presenting a full-day YA workshop with editor Hannah Milton of Little, Brown Books for Young Readers and author/agent Eric Smith of P. S. Literary. The workshop had additional tracks for middle grade fiction, picture books, and illustration, plus full-day intensives and one-on-one critiques.

April 1, 2019: The Editor to Critique and Consult at SCBWI-Nebraska’s Writing Retreat Sept 27-29 2019
The Editor will be meeting with attendees and critiquing manuscripts for this wonderful weekend of writing and industry talk in beautiful Mahoney State Park. Cabins, a stunning park, and book talk–SCBWI’s Nebraska chapter is putting on an inspiring, supportive event for writers of picture books and middle grade/young adult fiction.

March 2, 2019: The Editor Celebrates Read Across America Day with 4th Graders
2019’s Read Across America Day was a blast for kids and their readers across the country. The Editor
read to two 4th-grade classes at a local elementary school as part of that school’s celebration. In fact, she was doubly honored: Not only was she asked to read to them that special day, the kids asked her to read one of her works-in-progress. Huzzah!

February 20, 2019: The Editor to Be a Guest Reader for NEA’s Read Across America Day 2019
On Saturday, March 2, 2019, schools, libraries, and communities across America will celebrate literacy with the National Education Association’s Read Across America Day. The Editor will be an honored Guest Reader at an elementary school in San Diego the Friday before.

October 18, 2018: The Editor Guest Posts a Character Development Tip at Cynsations Blog
The Editor is honored to be a Guest Blogger on the amazing Cynsations blog today, with her post “Deborah Halverson on Viewing Narrative Beats as ‘Revelatory’ Beats in MG/YA Fiction.” A snippet: “Perhaps we writers drop in those generic actions because we’re so focused on getting the first scenes in place; perhaps we’re just not seeing those beats for the opportunities they are. ‘Oh, what treasure troves those little actions can be!'”

October 14, 2018: New Look for DearEditor.com
The Editor and her website designer have been hard at work all summer, and today they unveil the fruits of labor: a fresh new look for DearEditor.com. To celebrate, The Editor is giving away a free edit of a picture book manuscript and a free partial edit of a novel manuscript via Rafflecopter — the giveaway entry deadline is October 22, 2018. 

September 8, 2018: The Editor Spoke at SCBWI-San Diego about the State of the Children’s Book Industry
In an hour-long up-to-the-minute report, The Editor shared insights and information about the state of the children’s book industry with the members and guests of the San Diego chapter of the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators. 

April 3, 2018: The Editor on Faculty at SCBWI Southern Breeze WIK ’18
The Editor will present two sessions at the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators‘ Annual Summer Conference in L.A. August 3-6, 2018:

  • “Up-to-the-Minute Market Report: Industry Updates, Submissions, and New Imprints”
  • “Subplots & Subtext: How to Deepen and Energize Your MG/YA Fiction”

She’ll also critique manuscripts one-on-one. Conference registration opens April 17th @10am PT. Manuscript Consults are limited so if you’re interested, register asap on the 17th.

March 12, 2018: The Editor on Faculty at SCBWI Southern Breeze WIK ’18
The Editor was honored be a part of the faculty at SCBWI-Southern Breeze’s 2018 writing-and-illustrating for kids (WIK) conference, presenting sessions on non-rhyming picture books, revising young-adult and middle-grade novels for submission, and the state of the children’s book industry. The Southern Breeze chapter of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators offers support to writers and illustrators in Alabama, Georgia, and the Florida panhandle. It’s an amazing group of creative and supportive people, attendees and conference organizers alike. If you live in that area and write/illustrate for young people, do yourself a solid and check out the group.  

September 23, 2017: The Editor Interview in New MG/YA Online Writing Course at Children’s Book Insider
The Editor is proud to contribute an interview called “Writing for Tweens, Teens and New Adults” to Children’s Book Insider’s Blueprint series, for their new Middle Grade/Young Adult Writing Blueprint. CBI always presents great content. Other fabulous interviews are a part of the new Blueprint — editor Mary Kole and author Matthew J. Kirby. Author Alice Kuipers is the instructor. You can check it out at writing blueprints.com

March 22, 2017: The Editor in Faculty at SCBWI 46th Annual Summer Conference July 7-10, 2017
The Editor is excited to present the annual Market Survey as well as a 3-hr writing intensive “How to Talk Like a Teen When You’re So Not One: Writing Dialogue in YA/MG Fiction” at SCBWI’s 46th Annual Summer Conference in LA. She will also be doing one-on-one critiques throughout the conference.

Expand your skills regarding Craft, Storytelling, Character, Genre Studies, Getting an Agent, Getting Published and Revision. The Editor’s sessions: “Crafting a Youthful Narrative Voice and Authentic Dialogue for Young Adult Fiction,” “Writing Riveting New Adult Fiction”, and “Panel: Connecting With Middle-Grade and Young Adult Readers.”

Sept 28, 2016: Join The Editor at Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conf Oct 28-30, 2016
Please join The Editor at Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference October 28-30 in LA. Expand your skills regarding Craft, Storytelling, Character, Genre Studies, Getting an Agent, Getting Published and Revision. The Editor’s sessions: “Crafting a Youthful Narrative Voice and Authentic Dialogue for Young Adult Fiction,” “Writing Riveting New Adult Fiction”, and “Panel: Connecting With Middle-Grade and Young Adult Readers.”

June 8, 2016: The Editor on YA Author Panel June 11 at Barnes & Noble in Santee, CA
The Editor will be a part of a YA author panel at Santee, California, Barnes & Nobel Saturday, June 11, at 2pm. The panel is “Writing a Book Is Like Riding a Roller Coaster!” Fellow panelists—fabulous YA writers—and The Editor will share stories of our writing ups and downs, and answer questions about writing and publishing: Debra Driza (MILO 2.0 series), Barrie Summy (I SO DON’T DO series and THE DISAPPEARANCE OF EMILY H.), Karri Thompson (MIRROR X, ASCENDENCY), and Matthew Ward (THE FANTASTIC FAMILY WHIPPLE, THE WAR OF THE WORLD RECORDS). Come join them!

May 30, 2016: The Editor Contributes “Believable Dialogue” Chapter to New Writer’s Digest Book 
The Editor is proud to have contributed Chapter 10 “Believable Dialogue” to Writer’s Digest’s new book CRAFTING DYNAMIC DIALOGUE, a comprehensive guide to writing compelling, authentic dialogue in fiction. The craft book is filled with advice and instruction from best-selling authors and instructors like Deborah Halverson (The Editor), Nancy Kress, Elizabeth Sims, Steven James, James Scott Bell, Donald Maass, Cheryl St. John, and many others. Covered in the book: bend the rules to create a specific effect; understand the role of dialogue in reader engagement; use dialect and jargon effectively; give every character a believable, unique voice; set the pace and tone; reveal specific character background details; generate tension and suspense; and utilize internal dialogue.

May 3, 2016: Join the Editor at SCBWI 2016 Summer Conference
Join The Editor at the SCBWI 2016 Summer Conference in Los Angeles July 29-31 (optional craft intensive a on Aug 1). She’ll be presenting the breakout “Crafting Swoon-Worthy Young Adult Romantic Relationships”, the “An Up-to-the-Minute Market Report” on the main stage, and the craft intensive “Crafting Plots that Push, Pull, and Provoke Characters… and Readers, Too.” She will also do 1-on-1 critiques.

August 26, 2015: Rave Review of WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES on SCBWI Blog
Author/blogger Lee Wind is well known for caring deeply about writers, so his recommendation of WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES on the SCBWI blog makes The Editor especially proud: “Deborah Halverson (who I’m always so impressed with) has put together a really useful guide… Her book is packed with good stuff.”

August 10, 2015: The Editor’s WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION wins San Diego Book Award
The Editor’s book WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION won the San Diego Book Award for 2014 Best Published Business Book. To celebrate, she is giving away a Free Full Manuscript Edit on DearEditor.com August 10, 2015 – August 14, 2015, with the winner to be announced on DearEditor.com August 15, 2015. Click over to the DearEditor.com announcement post for entry details.

April 3, 2015: The Editor to Present Market Report at SCBWI Annual Conference
The Editor will be at the 44th Annual SCBWI Summer Conference in Los Angeles July 31- August 2.  She’ll be presenting the “Up to the Minute Market Report,” the breakout sessions “Techniques in New Adult Fiction for YA Writers” and “The Ultimate Checklist for Submitting Your MG/YA Novel to Editors,” the 3-hr intensive “Voice in MG/YA: How To Create an Authentic Teen Narrator,” and critiques. Registration opens April 9. For more info: http://www.scbwi.org/2015-summer-conference-in-los-angeles/

April 1, 2015: The Editor to Talk NA Fiction with Librarians
The Editor is looking forward to talking about New Adult fiction and its distinct traits and marketplace at the Mid America Library Alliance’s Workshop on New Adult Fiction on April 28. Librarians looking to be as informed as possible for the sake of their patrons. Love it!

Feb 12, 2015: The Editor Interviewed on Adventures in YA Publishing Blog
The Editor is honored to be featured on the fabulous blog Adventures in YA Publishing this week. The blog covers Young Adult Fiction in general, gives away YA books (several giveaways going on this week!), features advice from YA authors, and shares writing tips, and publishing information. Here’s an excerpt from the interview: “With the current enthusiasm for contemporary realistic stories, I see too many manuscripts that showcase above-average writing but fail to deliver a fresh angle on the contemporary teen experience. What makes your story about a regular kid in high school stand out from all those other well written stories about regular kids in high schools? I want to see more great writers find their distinct angles so that they can find publishers and places on bookstore shelves.

Jan 15, 2015: The Editor to Lead Simi Valley Writing Retreat January 16-18
The Editor is leading a fun and informative three-day intensive for SCBWI Cen-Cal Writers’ Retreat: An Editor’s Strategies for Reaching Fabulous Final Drafts. This intensive will consist of lectures, hands-on exercises, informal discussions, and the option of a small group critique session. For an additional fee, you can register for a manuscript critique and private consultation with The Editor.

Oct 8, 2014: Blog Tour and Tourwide Free Full Manuscript Edit Giveaway
The blog tour celebrating the publication of Writing New Adult Fiction is under way! From October 6 – 31, bloggers will be posting reviews of the book, interviews with The Editor, and guest blog posts written by The Editor covering craft, promotion, and the business of publishing New Adult fiction. All of the posts have giveaways, and there’s a tourwide giveaway of a free full manuscript edit. Here’s the link for the tour schedule, updated with excerpts and direct links as each post goes live: https://www.deareditor.com/?p=6644 And here’s the link for the free manuscript edit giveaway’s Rafflecopter entry form: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/5440a354204/.

Oct 3, 2014: Be a Writing New Adult Fiction Blog Tour Host
The Editor is honored to be featured at literary agent Jill Corcoran’s blog, discussing what makes NA different from YA fiction: ““What’s the difference between ‘new’ adult and ‘young’ adult? My answer usually starts with a single word: sensibility.” Plus, Jill is running a contest for the feature, the winner of a signed copy of WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION being chosen by October 15, 2014.

Sept 17, 2014: Be a Writing New Adult Fiction Blog Tour Host
Want to be a host on The Editor’s WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION blog tour, featuring reviews, author interviews, spotlights, guest posts, and giveaways? The tour runs Oct 6-31. Sign up: http://bit.ly/1v19GIK

Sept 15, 2014: Interview with The Editor and Signed Book Giveaway on KC Maguire’s Blog
Stop by KC Maguire’s blog for an interview with The Editor and to enter the giveaway for a free signed copy of The Editor’s new book WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION. From the interview: “NA has become established and is pushing for a greater range of stories and thematic exploration, there seems to be a call for fiction that doesn’t necessarily get into the nitty gritty of body parts and movements. After all, not everyone who wants to read about the NA experience wants such graphic detail, and not every writer is comfortable writing it. Ultimately, the details of the sex acts aren’t necessary in order to explore love at this stage of life. Serve up emotionally satisfying relationships. Craft stories that build up sexual anticipation through love denied, teased, and toyed with. A much-anticipated kiss can be more dramatically powerful than a perfunctory graphic groping. That’s why I dedicate a full chapter of my book to the crafting believable, satisfying romance. And it’s why I say that explicit sex scenes are currently expected but maybe not so essential in the long run. The degree of explicitness in NA fiction is an evolving element.”

Sept 2, 2014: The Editor Joins Faculty of  SCBWI-Missouri Fall Conference Sept 6-7, 2014
The Editor will present the “State of the Market” and lead the intensive “How to Build Your Own Teenager” at the SCBWI-Missouri Fall Conference in St. Charles, Missouri, September 6-7, 2014.

Sept 2, 2014: The Editor’s Article “NA Fiction for the YA Writer” in Sept/Oct Issue of SCBWI’s The Bulletin
“Writers see an overlap between ‘mature YA’ and NA and wonder what it means for their own stories about older teens…. There are essential differences in story content, though, and knowing those can help you determine if your mature YA is actually an NA offering.” From The Editor’s article in the Sept/Oct issue of SCBWI’s THE BULLETIN. If you’re an SCBWI member and want to read it, log into your profile page and click on resource library, then on Bulletin in the dropdown menu.

July 1, 2014: The Editor to Join Faculty of  Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference Aug 15-17, 2014
Join The Editor for her 3-hour Boot Camp “Writing Riveting New Adult Fiction” and her 1-hour breakout session “How to Hide the Seams for Smooth, Flowing Fiction” at the Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza – Los Angeles August 15-17. For details about the sessions and other award-winning, bestselling authors and publishing professionals at the Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference, click here.

May 12, 2014: The Editor’s Interview about the SCBWI Conference, Uses for Setting, and the Difference Between NA and YA Fiction
“Saying NA fiction is just YA with sex is akin to saying YA fiction is just stories of high school romance.” Insightful interviewer Lee Wind asks The Editor about being on the faculty of SCBWI’s upcoming summer conference in Los Angeles (Aug 1-4) and also about the difference between “voice” and “sensibility” in writing, characteristics of New Adult Fiction, and other writing advice. Check out the full interview here.

April 18, 2014: The Editor Presenting Market Keynote at SCBWI 43rd Annual Summer Conference in Los Angeles, Aug 1 – 4
Join the Editor and other authors, agents, and publishing professionals at the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators annual info-packed 4-day summer conference. In addition to presenting the market keynote, the Editor will present the session “New Adult Fiction for the Young Adult Writer” and the intensive “Crafting a Youthful Narrative Voice and Sensibility in MG/YA Fiction.” She’s also available for one-on-one critiques. Join the fun! Registration opens Monday, April 21, 10am PST. Intensives fill up FAST.

December 6, 2013: Meet the Editor at the New Adult Sleepover Weekend in Savannah, GA, December 6 – 8
Check out the inaugural New Adult Sleepover Weekend, an event for readers and authors of New Adult fiction. Panels about NA characters and publishing, swag, meet-and-greets, parties . . . a fun and informative weekend! The Editor will be there, meeting and greeting and taking in all things NA. Savannah Riverfront Marriott, 100 General McIntosh Boulevard, Savannah, GA 31401.

November 22, 2013: Meet the Editor on YA Panel at San Diego’s Mira Mesa B&N on November 22
As part of Barnes & Noble’s Discovery Friday event Friday, November 22, at 6pm, the Editor will be part of a lively panel about books for young people with Shannon Messenger, author of the middle grade series Keeper of the Lost Cities and the teen trilogy Let the Sky Fall, and Debra Driza, author of the YA thriller Mila 2.0, the first in a series currently being developed as a series for ABC. The panel will be moderated by fabulous Full Circle Literary agent Taylor Martindale. It’s Discovery Friday at the B&N that day, so there will be giveaways all day, including Catching Fire posters, John Green posters, Legos, etc. There will also be a special musical performance by Stacey Leathersich at 8:30. B&N: 10775 Westview Pkwy, San Diego, CA 92126.

August 22, 2013: The Editor Interview Delves Into How Writers Can Succeed in Publishing
In an interview by N.W. Harris, author of Joshua’s Tree, which currently tops the Goodreads 2013 Summer Reading list, The Editor talks about writing fiction versus nonfiction, her path to publication and editorial career, and three things new writers must do to compete in the current, highly competitive publishing industry: “Publishing is an industry, as unartful as it is to admit that, and writers who want their books out there for readers to buy must consider themselves players rather than pawns.” Full the full interview, visit NWHarrisBooks.

August 5, 2013: The Editor Presents State of the Market Keynote at SCBWI Summer Conference
Publishers Weekly included The Editor in its coverage of the 42nd Annual SCBWI Summer Conference: “Deborah Halverson, founder of DearEditor.com, delivered a keynote titled Market Report: An Up-to-the-Minute State of the Industry, which compiled the results of interviews with 17 publishing insiders…. Halverson reported that sales are up for picture books, but editors are still cautious about the category. Chapter books and early readers remain challenging….” For more highlights from The Editor’s keynote, click over to PW’s article.

May 7, 2013: The Editor to Pen ‘New Adult Fiction’ Craft Book
The Editor will publish Writing and Selling New Adult Fiction with Writer’s Digest Books in Fall 2014. Writing and Selling New Adult Fiction is a hands-on guide featuring essential information, steps, and techniques necessary to turn a clever concept into a top-notch novel for 18- to 26-year-olds as well as the teen and adult crossover audience. The book will include advice on self-publishing into the New Adult marketplace, insider tips for finding the right agent and/or editor and preparing a stand-out submission package for traditional publishers, and an extensive chapter on self-marketing to help writers move boldly into the realm of self-promotion.

April 20, 2013: The Editor to Deliver Keynote at SCBWI 42nd Summer Conference
The Editor will deliver the “Market Report: An Up-to-the-Minute State of the Industry” keynote at the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators 42nd Summer Conference in Los Angeles August 2 – 5, 2013. She will also teach an intensive called “How to Build Your Own Teenager: Techniques for Writing Believable MG/YA Characters, and two one-hour breakout sessions called “The Read-Aloud Factor: Achieving Rhythm without Relying on Rhyme in Picture Books” and “Setting, Wherefore Art Thou?: The Surprising Benefits and How-To’s of Setting in MG/YA Fiction.” For information about attending the conference, click over to the conference home page.

March 18, 2013: Susan Stevens Crummel Joins Revision Week Lineup
The Editor is thrilled to announce that award-winning picture book author Susan Stevens Crummel will be joining the Revision Week lineup! Loved for her solo books as well as her collaborations with author/illustrator (and sister!) Janet Stevens, Susan will shed light on the ins and outs of working through a highly collaborative revision process.

March 15, 2013: Announcing DearEditor.com’s Revision Week 2013, March 24-30
It’s almost time for DearEditor.com’s second annual Revision Week. March 24-30 The Editor will host five authors—who have published a combined 270 best-selling and award-winning books—for a week of revision tips, insights, and stories from the trenches at DearEditor.com. Who’s stopping by? Bestselling and award-winning authors Laura Griffin (romance novels), Matthew J. Kirby (YA novels), Bruce Hale (chapter book series and picture books), Peter Economy (non-fiction), and Larry Dane Brimner (picture books, chapter books, easy readers, nonfiction… you name it!), that’s who! The Editor will add to the excitement with daily drawings for Free Partial Edits and a grand prize Full Manuscript Edit giveaway.

Jan 26, 2013: OnText Blog Features DearEditor.com
DearEditor.com gets the thumbs up in the OnText blog feature “Writing Children’s or Young Reader Books? Great Source of Publishing Help.” OnText is hosted by ghostwriter Maryan Pelland. Pelland calls The Editor “a wealth of information for writers, authors, and ghostwriters to ask questions about the craft of writing or about the very confusing and frustrating publishing industry. Her answers are concise and pull-no-punches.”

Dec 1, 2012: The Editor Celebrates Her First Picture Book with a FREE EDIT Giveaway
The Editor believes writers should celebrate every milestone—and she’s got a milestone to celebrate with her readers. Her first picture book, Letters to Santa, has just published and she’s feting it by giving away a FREE edit of a picture book manuscript up to 2,000 words. Deadline: December 4, 2012. Read the giveaway post for full entry details.

Oct 17, 2012: The Editor Announces Three New Books
The Editor’s three books for Rubicon’s Remix struggling readers series have launched! Brave New World: Cyber World, Brave New World: Meltdown, and Brave New World: Robotic World. To page through previews of the books electronically, visit the Remix: Brave New World series page.

Sept 17, 2012: Finding Bliss Blog Hosts the The Editor, Holds Free Book Giveaway
Excerpt: “Revision can be daunting. . . . Why not give your brain a break by breaking your task into focused chunks? With this approach, you’d pick a writing element, say plot, and ignore everything but that. Working Big Picture chunks to small detail chunks rather than page by page, you’d focus not on revising the story but on honing single elements. Gone is that scattered, overwhelmed feeling.” Read the rest of The Editor’s guest post “Chunking Your Revision” on Laura Howard’s blog Finding Bliss, and enter her giveaway for a free copy of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies.

August 27, 2012: An Interview with The Editor
Excerpt: “The trick is to make something big happen in the story to create a big emotional impact that would raise the emotional temperature of the story and keep it from being too quiet.” You can the full interview with The Editor on Natasha Yim’s blog “I Must Be a Masochist – A Writer’s Life.”

August 23, 2012: Coverage of The Editor’s SCBWI conference Market Trends Keynote
The Editor complied the “2012 SCBWI Market Survey: Publishers of Books For Young Readers” report for the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, and gave a keynote at the recent SCBWI Summer Conference about what she learned from her survey – giving attendees the current market needs and trends. To read coverage of her keynote, click over to “SCBWI Summer Conference: Market Keynote Follow-Up with Deborah Halverson” on the SCBWI Blog.

June 28, 2012: The Editor Advises How to Use Subtext as a tool on Quirk and Quill
The Editor’s advice about using subtext to puff up a “flat” fiction manuscript is featured today on Quirk and Quill, a blog hosted by 10 alumni of the Vermont College of Fine Arts writing program. To read the post, click over to “Serving Up Subtext” on Quirk and Quill.

May 25, 2012: The Editor Visits Stanford…Virtually
The Editor talked books and writing during an online chat session today with a Stanford writing class that uses her Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies as their text. The Editor is honored that schools continue to adopt the book for their classes.

Mar 23, 2012: Join The Editor at SCBWI National Conference in L.A. Aug 3-6
The Editor will be at SCBWI’s 2012 Summer Conference in Los Angeles Aug 3-6. She’ll be presenting the Current Market Report keynote, a breakout session on writing dialogue, an intensive on revising your MG/YA novel, and an intensive on creating youthful narrative sensibility. Registration starts April 18 at 10am. Check out the full info on the SCBWI conference page.

Mar 4, 2012: DearEditor.com’s Revision Week with 8 Bestselling, Award-Winning Authors
DearEditor.com brings together eight prolific, bestselling, award-winning authors for Revision Week, 7 days of revision tips, insights, and stories from the trenches. Learn from writers who turn first drafts into lauded books every day:

  • Cynthia Leitich Smith, bestselling YA gothic novelist, picture book writer, short story writer, and popular children’s lit blogger.
  • Kathleen Krull, author of more than 60 books, especially picture books and biographies for young readers.
  • R.L. LaFevers, author of the 13 novels for young people.
  • Henry Winkler, Lin Oliver, and Theo Baker, popular chapter book collaborators.
  • Mark A. Clements, horror/suspense author, screenwriter, and prolific ghostwriter.
  • Nathan Bransford, top blogger and former literary agent-turned-author of the Jacob Wonderbar middle grade books.
  • Rachel Caine, New York Times, USA Today, and internationally bestselling author of more than 30 novels.

Feb 26, 2012: DearEditor.com Now on Google+
DearEditor.com is pleased to announce the DearEditor.com Google+ page, sharing industry news, creative inspirations, and writing tips to keep you in the publishing know. The new page complements the DearEditor.com Facebook page and the @Dear_Editor Twitter feed.

Feb 26, 2012: DearEditor.com Goes Mobile
DearEditor.com is now mobile-friendly. With the new mobile design, you can easily read new posts and comments on your mobile device of choice, and you can post your own comments on-the-go. With a simple click on the arrow at the top of your mobile display, you can access archives, categories, and any page on the DearEditor.com website.

The Editor to appear on “Writers Voices” Radio Feb 17, 2012
The Editor will appear live on “Writers Voices” 1-2pm CST, Feb 17, 2012. “Writers Voices” airs on KRUU FM 100.1, an open source, solar-powered community radio station that broadcasts to the larger Fairfield, Iowa, area and has worldwide listenership via the web. Each week they air an hour-long interview with a writer, agent, editor, publisher, or someone else connected to the world of writing. To listen to the show live, tune in to KRUU FM radio or go to online at http://www.writersvoices.com. Hear the rebroadcast Monday Feb 20 8 AM on KRUU FM or download it from the archives: http://www.writersvoices.com or http://www.kruufm.com/station/archives/61.

Free Online Workshop with The Editor Feb 21-23, 2012
The Institute of Children’s Literature website is hosting an online YA workshop featuring The Editor. The drop-in Q&A-format workshop takes place on the ICL’s message board, which anyone can read (no registration required). If you want to post a question, you do need to register (for FREE) by sending email to jan.fields@forums.institutechildrenslit.com with the username you want. Check out the ICL’s Guest Speaker archives while you’re there.

Feb 7, 2012:The Editor on “How to Promote Your Book” Podcast
As part of her blog tour for her book How to Promote Your Children’s Books, author/illustrator Katie Davis focused her regular podcast on “Promoting Your Book.” The Editor has a guest appearance. See the episode description here: http://katiedavis.com/how-to-promote-your-book/. Or click here to hear it directly.

Feb 6, 2012:DearEditor.com to host How to Promote Your Children’s Book Blog Tour
Author/illustrator Katie Davis is a tireless promoter whose 9 children’s books have sold over 250,000 copies. On February 6, 2012, Katie shares what she’s learned about promoting books–and she’s giving away a free download of her new eBook How to Promote Your Children’s Book: Tips, Tricks and Secrets to Create a Bestseller. Follow Katie’s full blog tour for more promo insights & giveaways:

Dec 4, 2011:YA Fusion blog Interviews The Editor
YA Fusion, a blog written by YA fiction writers about the amazing world of young adult fiction, interviewed The Editor and hosted a giveaway of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies. The interviews spans the writing, editing, and reading realm, and offers tips to writers about gauging market trends and walking the line in “edgy” fiction. http://bit.ly/viGL8O

Oct 19, 2011:More Spotlight Week at The Writing Nut: An Interview with The Editor
Spotlight Week at The Writing Nut blog cointinues with an interview with The Editor, covering what makes YA fiction so popular, what aspiring writers should do, and what young readers should know: http://bit.ly/qEOyqs.

Oct 17, 2011:The Editor Featured During Spotlight Week at The Writing Nut
The Writing Nut blog features The Editor and her book Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies all week. Stop by for a review of the book, an interview with The Editor—aka Deborah Halverson—and a giveaway: http://bit.ly/r0l1Ht

Sept 25, 2011:San Diego Union-Tribune Dubs Writing YA Fiction For Dummies “Tremendously Helpful”
The San Diego Union-Tribune dubbed The Editor’s new Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies a Recommended Read, calling it, “Fun, insightful and tremendously helpful.”

Sept 24, 2011:The Editor Presenting at San Diego Public Library Book Festival Oct 1
The Editor is honored to be a part of the SAN DIEGO COUNTY LIBRARY BOOK FESTIVAL Saturday, Oct 1, at the Encinitas Library. Speakers include YA great Ellen Hopkins, bestseller Lisa See, and Skinny Bitch series author Kim Barnouin. The Editor will be presenting in the community room 5 to 6pm. Check out the festival website for a full list of great speakers.

Sept 24, 2011:The Editor Teaches YA at SCWC Conf in Newport Beach Sept 24
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be presenting “Writing for Teens? Then Think Like One” at the Southern California Writers’ Conference – LA on Sept 24, 2011. Here’s her session description: “Whether your narrator is your young main character or an all-knowing omniscient being, there are ways to convince young readers that you understand them and their view of the world—and to hook’em good and hard in the process. This session teaches techniques for creating a narrative sensibility that reflects the way teens think, resulting in teen fiction that “clicks” with young readers.” Click on over to the SCWC website for details about this conference, which runs Sept 23-25.

August 3, 2011: The Editor featured on Writing on the Sidewalk Blog
The Editor,aka Deborah Halverson, talks writing, Legos, and banging on drums in “Writing on the Sidewalk”, the blog of authors Suzanne Santillan and Sarah Wones Tomp.

August 3, 2011: The Editor on The League of Extraordinary Writers Blog
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, is an interview guest on The League of Extraordinary Writers, a blog hosted by dystopian authors Jeff Hirsch, Elana Johnson, Julia Karr, Beth Revis, and Angie Smibert. With Q-and-A about the most common pitfalls for writers, the current rise in YA lit, a list of must-reads for writers, and the viability of self-publishing as an alternative pub path for writers, this interview is full of great information. Check it out!

June 11, 2011: Announcing WYAFFD Blog Tour
Please drop in on this 8-stop blog tour celebrating the publication of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies. Interviews, guest blog posts on craft, promotion, and chapter books, and a grand finale free webinar. Full schedule:

July 18: Shrinking Violet Promotions
July 19: SCBWI Children’s Market blog
July 20: QueryTracker.net
July 21: Elizabeth O. Dulemba Blog
July 22: Cheryl Rainfield Blog
July 25: Story Connection
July 26: The Got Story Countdown
July 27: Free “Meet the Editor” webinar w/ Katie Davis

June 29, 2011: Interviews, Guest Blogs, Podcasts, & Giveaways in Support of the WYAFFD Virtual Book Launch
Visit these websites and blogs for exclusive content and giveaways in support of the Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummiea Virtual Book Launch from June 29 to July 5 here on DearEditor.com:

June 29, 2011: Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies Virtual Book Launch Begins!
Celebrate the publication of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies from June 29 to July 5 here on DearEditor.com with daily “Free First Chapter Critique” giveaways, free downloads, excerpts from the book, and profiles of the 13 amazing authors, editors, and agents who so generously contributed sidebars to the book. As the grand finale, The Editor is giving away a “Free Full Manuscript Edit” on the final day. Click here for details about the 7-Day Virtual Book Launch.

June 21, 2011: Announcing the Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies Virtual Book Launch
Celebrate the publication of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies from June 29 to July 5 here on DearEditor.com with daily “Free First Chapter Critique” giveaways, free downloads, excerpts from the book, and profiles of the 13 amazing authors, editors, and agents who so generously contributed sidebars to the book. As the grand finale, The Editor is giving away a “Free Full Manuscript Edit” on the final day. Click here for details about the 7-Day Virtual Book Launch.

June 20, 2011: Video Writing Tip from The Editor
Click over to Tina Nichols Coury’s blog Tales from the Rushmore Kid for a one-minute video tip from The Editor. The topic: Checking to see if your protagonist has completed a full character arc.

June 8, 2011: Free Webinar with The Editor July 27, 2011
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be conducting a free webinar with author Katie Davis on July 27, 2011, 9:00-10:oo pm EST. For details or to sign up, visit the webinar information page!

June 6, 2011: Writing YA Fiction for Dummies Virtual Book Launch June 29-July 5
DearEditor.com will be the site of a huge 7-day virtual book launch for the publication of The Editor’s new book WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES. Visit every day for exclusive free downloads, book excerpts, profiles of lauded MG/YA author contributors, and daily Free Critique/Full MS Edit Giveaways. More details to come!

June 6, 2011:The Editor to Critique at SCBWI-LA National Summer Conf.
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be critiquing manuscripts at the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators 40th Annual Summer Conference in Los Angeles, August 5-8, 2011. Click on over to SCBWI’s conference site for details about this incredible event.

May 16, 2011:The Editor Gives Setting Tips in Hunger Mountain
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, is honored to have an article featured in the summer 2011 issue of HUNGER MOUNTAIN, the Vermont College of Fine Arts’ wonderful journal of the arts. In “Where the Teens Are: 5 Ways to Freshen Up YA Fiction’s Favorite Settings,” Deborah offers writers tips for making familiar teen fiction settings like school and the main character’s room feel provocative instead of inevitable. Click on over to Hunger Mountain for more.

May 11, 2011:The Editor Featured in Anderson Valley Post
Anderson Valley Post, the local paper of Anderson Valley, California, ran an article featuring The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, and her co-faculty for the Cottonwood Intensive Revision Workshop. To read about Edgar Award-winning author Charlie Price, author/illustrator Dr. Mira Reisberg, and Deborah, click over to Anderson Valley Post. To learn more about the May 21, 2011, conference, go to the conference website.

April 11, 2011:Registration Now Open for Cottonwood Intensive Revision Workshop
Registration is open for the Cottonwood Intensive Revision Workshop, to be held May 21, 2011, in Cottonwood, CA (17 miles south of Redding, CA, and approx. 2 hours from Sacramento). The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be teaching at the event, which is dedicated to helping children’s book writers revise their young adult novels and picture books. The 1-day workshop is hosted by SCBWI‘s California North/Central chapter, with Edgar Mystery Award nominee author Charlie Price and award-winning picture book illustrator, art director, designer, and educator Dr. Mira Reisberg filling out the faculty. For more information or to register (deadline May 1, 2011), contact scbwicanorthcentral@gmail.com or go to the Conference website.

Mar 2, 2011:SCBWI Chapter Features The Editor in Kite Tales
The Editor (Deborah Halverson) lays down some scene advice in the 2011 Spring Issue of Kite Tales, the newsletter for the SCBWI Tri-Regions of Southern California. The chapter has shared a link to the newsletter, which is full of fantastic information: Kite Tales, Spring 2011. For more information about SCBWI (Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators), go to SCBWI.org.

Jan 26, 2011:The Editor to Talk to Teachers about Supporting Young Writers
June 20-23, 2011, teachers earning their MAs will gather at the 32nd San Diego State University Summer Conference, and The Editor (Deborah Halverson) will be there with them. Her session, “BIF! BAM! POW!: Helping Young Writers Release Their Inner Heroes,” focuses on helping young writers tap into the heroes within themselves in order to write about characters who overcome their fears and flaws for heroic outcomes.

Jan 25, 2011:The Editor at Cottonwood Revision Intensive
On May 21, 2011, The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be helping children’s book writers revise their young adult novels and picture books at the Cottonwood Revision Intensive in Cottonwood, California. The 2-day workshop is hosted by SCBWI‘s California North/Central chapter, with author Charlie Price filling out the faculty. For more information or to register, contact scbwicanorthcentral@gmail.com

Nov 29, 2010:The Editor Goes In Between Scenes for FictionNotes
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, wrote a guest post today about why it’s crucial that a writer knows what happens in the white space between scenes for author Darcy Pattison’s information-loaded blog “Fiction Notes.” Darcy is a writing teacher and the author of The Book Trailer Manual (www.booktrailermanual.com), several picture books, and the teen fantasy novel The Wayfinder.

Nov 29, 2010:Author Mary E. Pearson Becomes 1st Guest Editor for the Day
As DearEditor.com’s first Guest Editor for the Day, author Mary E. Pearson stepped in to help a frustrated writer battle back against writer’s block. Mary is the award-winning author of five novels for teens, including the new The Miles Between.

Nov 27, 2010:New Feature Added to DearEditor.com – Guest Editor for the Day
DearEditor.com is adding a new feature: Guest Editor for the Day. Starting Monday, November 29, The Editor will occasionally hand over her editorial pen to a publishing colleague who will field a question that falls within his or her realm of expertise. In this way The Editor hopes to add to the depth of the knowledge bandied about DearEditor.com. The more voices we hear, the wiser we become. First up: award-winning author Mary E. Pearson.

Nov 24, 2010:The Editor Answers Callers’ Questions on “Brain Burps About Books” Podcast
Deborah Halverson, aka The Editor, answered listeners’ questions about publishing children’s books on author Katie Davis‘s podcast Brain Burps About Books.” If you’ve got a question you’d like Deborah to answer in a follow-up podcast, call Katie’s toll free line at 888-522-1929 and leave a message.

Nov 11, 2010:One Week to Phone In Questions to The Editor
On November 18th, author Katie Davis will tape an interview with Deborah Halverson, aka The Editor, for Katie’s podcast “Brain Burps About Books.” If you’ve got a question you’d like Deborah to answer in the podcast, call Katie’s toll free line at 888-522-1929 by November 18th and leave a message. DearEditor.com will post an update when that podcast is available for listening.

Oct 11, 2010:Six-Month Free Picture Book Edit Giveaway Winner Announced
Congratulations to Jennifer Carson, the winner of the FREE EDIT giveaway celebrating DearEditor.com’s first six months. Jennifer’s manuscript is entitled Stinking Beauty. To the rest of DearEditor.com’s readers, thanks for a fun first half year. Keep those questions, comments, and anecdotes coming! The more we hear, the more we learn.

Sept 20, 2010:GIVEAWAY! a FREE EDIT of one Picture Book Manuscript
The Editor is giving away a FREE EDIT of one picture book manuscript to celebrate the six-month anniversary of DearEditor.com. To enter more than once, spread the word! See the DearEditor.com giveaway announcement for rules and to enter. Deadline: October 10, 2010.

July 29, 2010: The Editor to Write “Writing Young Adult Fiction for Dummies”
The Editor, Deborah Halverson, has signed on to write “Writing Young Adult Fiction for Dummies” for Wiley Publishers’ For Dummies… line, to hit stores June 2011. To learn more about the For Dummies… books, go to www.ForDummies.com.

June 18, 2010: The Editor Guest Posts about Setting in Novels on “Cynsations”The Editor, Deborah Halverson, wrote a guest post today about setting in novels on author Cynthia Leitich Smith’s fabulous blog “Cynsations.” Cynthia is a New York Times and Publishers Weekly best-selling author of YA Gothic fantasies, including Tantalize and Eternal, as well as several picture books for children. Here’s a teaser from Deborah’s guest post, “Setting, Wherefore Art Thou?“: “We need setting in our stories. We need the richness that makes up setting, the sensual engagement that can only come from hearing the crunch of frosty grass under the protagonist’s bare feet, or feeling the sudden whispery kiss of a spider’s web dangling from the eaves. We’d just have a girl walking across a lawn and a creepy old house. Where’s the joy in that?” Check out Cynthia’s blog for the whole post. To learn more about Cynthia, go to CynthiaLeitichSmith.com.

May 31, 2010: The Editor’s Article about Teen Fiction & Melodrama Appears in “The Inside Story

The Editor, Deborah Halverson, wrote the feature article “Melodrama Isn’t a Four-Letter Word” for this month’s “The Inside Story”, a monthly newsletter by Bruce Hale, author of two hilarious chapter book series—the Chet Gecko series, and the Underwhere series. Here’s a teaser from Deborah’s article: “So, you’re thirty-something writing a teen novel, and you want your narrative voice to sound convincingly youthful? That’s an outstanding goal. A believable voice makes all the difference in the success of a manuscript. But how do you actually do it? The answer might surprise you.” To subscribe to “The Inside Story” and read Deborah’s full article, go to http://bit.ly/b3yXd5. To learn more about Bruce Hale, go to BruceHale.com.

May 25, 2010: The Editor Interviewed for SCBWI’s “Industry PROfiles
The Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators has just posted an on-line interview with DearEditor.com’s resident Editor, Deborah Halverson. The interview focuses on Deborah’s literary journey from playroom to publishing house to author’s chair, and explores how she balances her roles as Author/Editor/Mom. The full interview appears in SCBWI’s “Industry PROfiles.”

May 3, 2010: The Editor to Speak at SCBWI-San Diego Chapter Meeting
The Editor, Deborah Halverson, will present “How Do You Know Your Manuscript Is Ready for Submission?” at the season-opening meeting of the SCBWI-San Diego chapter, on September 11, 2010, from 2-4pm, in Hahn Nursing Hall on the University of San Diego campus. For details about the meeting and the chapter, visit their website.

April 15, 2010: One-Month Anniversary Edit Giveaway Winner Announced
Congratulations to Annemarie O’Brien, winner of the giveaway of a free substantive edit of a YA/MG manuscript. Annemarie’s manuscript is an upper middle grade novel titled Dance with Borzois. Congratulations, Annemarie! To the rest of DearEditor.com’s readers, there will definitely be more giveaways like this in the future. Thanks for your enthusiastic support during DearEditor.com’s inaugural month!

April 7, 2010:GIVEAWAY! a FREE Substantive Edit of one YA or MG Fiction Manuscript
The Editor is giving away a FREE Substantive Edit of one Young Adult or Middle Grade fiction manuscript to celebrate the one-month anniversary of DearEditor.com. To enter more than once, spread the word! See DearEditor.com home page for rules and to enter. Deadline: April 14, 2010.

April 6, 2010:The Editor Interviewed on SellingBooks.com
The Editor, Deborah Halverson, talks writing, editing, and why half of females aged 18 – 25 want to be run over by a truck in a new interview on SellingBooks.com. Check it out!

March 13, 2010:Interview on Writers’ Waiting Room about the Creation of DearEditor.com
An interview with The Editor, Deborah Halverson, was posted today on Writers’ Waiting Room. The interview focuses on the creation of DearEditor.com. The Writers’ Waiting Room was launched on the premise that all writers are waiting for something–the next idea, an agent, a publishing contract or the type of quiet that happens when the kids go to bed. It is run by writer Tami Casias, who interviews authors to get their take on living a writer’s life.

March 24, 2010: The Editor to Present Workshop at SCBWI’s Summer 2010 Conference
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be presenting a workshop at the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators’ 39th annual summer conference, which will be held at the Century Hyatt in Los Angeles July 30 through August 2, 2010. Deborah’s session is “The Ultimate Checklist for Submitting to Editors: 10 Tests a Novel Must Pass to Prove It’s REALLY Ready for Submission to Editors.” Registration for the conference starts April 28th at www.scbwi.org.

March 3, 2010: DearEditor.com Utters Its First Tweet
DearEditor.com just tweeted its first Gr8 1st Line: “The way I see it, being dead is not terribly far off from being on a cruise ship.” from Stiff by Mary Roach. For more DearEditor.com tweets, go to http://twitter.com/Dear_Editor or just tweet to @Dear_Editor.

March 3, 2010: DearEditor.com Launches
DearEditor.com has just gone live! The first post answers a writer’s question about how to sound like a teenager. Special thanks to this site’s designer, Theresa Stanton at Blogs for Photogs, who took the vision for DearEditor.com to a fantastic new level.

May 10, 2023: Listen to the Editor on the How Writers Write podcast

The Editor was interviewed on the writing craft podcast HOW WRITERS WRITE – Episode 111. She and host Brian T. Murphy talked YA fiction, establishing productive writing routines, and getting yourself unstuck when writers block strikes. Brian’s traditional end-of-interview Six Questions are wonderfully creative, so you don’t want to miss those. Question #3: “If you could pick a spirit book—this is the book you would choose to be reincarnated as—what book would it be?” How would YOU answer that? Here’s the link to the podcast to hear what book The Editor would be: https://bit.ly/3WEcApq. Or type How Writers Write episode 111 in your favorite podcast app.

May 1, 2023: Join The Editor for May 13th On-Line Picture Book Workshop

Join The Editor on May 13, 2023, for a virtual three-hour workshop “Kit and Caboodle: Crafting Irresistible Picture Books From Idea to Query,” hosted by the writing group Children’s Book Writers of Los Angeles. Learn the features of irresistible picture books and strong query letters and elevator pitches. Attendees will put pen-to-paper during the workshop, applying the learned techniques to their work-in-progress picture book manuscript(s) or to brainstorm a new project, and crafting a pitch and query letter. Current WIPs NOT required for attendance. For details and sign-up, visit the event page.

April 29, 2023: The Editor on SCBWI Podcast

The Editor enjoyed a great conversation with SCBWI Podcast host Theo Baker in the episode “From Slush Pile to Stand Out Manuscript with Deborah Halverson.” They got into the nitty-gritty of her editorial approach, the challenges and joys of writing, and her journey in publishing. Listen on your favorite podcast app, including these (click to listen): Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Podcasts.

September 14, 2022: The Editor Is Featured in Writers’ Forum Magazine

The Editor is honored to be invited to present to the Redwood Writers chapter meeting on September 17, 2022. The online event, “You’ve Written a Book, What’s Next?”, will be an hour-long webinar for beginners as well as advanced writers — published and pre-published — looking to perfect their submission package and strategy. The Redwood Writers is the largest branch of the California Writers Club.

August, 2022: The Editor Is Featured in Writers’ Forum Magazine

The Editor was honored to be Writers’ Forum magazine’s “Where I Write” feature this month. The feature focused on her writing (and editing!) visits to the San Diego Public Library’s public reading room, which is a gorgeous space. Her default writing spaces are the lake and fields by her home, but at least two days each week she picks a beautiful San Diego location like Balboa Park or the beach at the famous Hotel Del Coronado. She  chooses her locations sometimes by mood, but usually with some thematic link to what she’s writing or editing that day, then she shares photos on her social media to share the inspiration of the space. “Just give me a travel mug of hot cocoa, a beautiful space, and an engrossing project to write or edit and I’m happy.”

August 14, 2022: The Editor Talks Trends in Children’s Books with SCBWI Nebraska

The Editor spent an afternoon at a virtual meeting of SCBWI Nebraska. She talked about how the various categories of children’s books are performing, how some audience and market expectations are changing while others remain constant, and what trends seem to be playing out in the market and in acquisitions and in reader reception. Always wonderful to talk books with book folk.

June 2, 2022: The Editor Interviewed in “How Writers Write” Podcast

“How Writers Write” podcast host Host Brian Murphy and The Editor (aka Deborah Halverson) discuss what makes fiction “Young Adult Fiction,”  writing practice and process, and what it’s like to think like an editor. It’s a fabulous discussion — they dig deep into it! To listen to the podcast: Apple: https://apple.co/3m9kAhZ; Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3m8rpQR1.

December 6, 2021: The Editor Auctioning Picture Book Edit & Call for #WeNeedDiverseBooks Holiday Auction

The Editor is honored to be contributing to the #WeNeedDiverseBooks Campaign by offering a picture book edit and phone call with me in their Holiday Auction. Visit https://bit.ly/3HZPItU to bid on this and check out all the other offerings. The Holiday Auction ends 10pm Eastern 12/6/21.

October 1, 2021: Spend the Weekend with The Editor and SCBWI-SoCal Los Angeles for Writer’s Retreat 2021

Join The Editor, 2 agents, and 2 editors for a 2-day Virtual Writer’s Retreat for creatures of chapter books and middle grade/young adult fiction October 9-10, 2021. Between critique sessions with agents and editors, Deborah will do Craft Workshops on four story elements — character, plot, setting, and voice… plus revision techniques! bit.ly/3lz4Q7i

September 1, 2021: The Editor To Share How to Find the Right Editor for Your Book

Join The Editor on Sept 11, 2021, for an inspiring and informative market report and learn about new imprints and what they are requiring. She will also share her tips on researching editors to find the perfect fit for your book. Register at www.sandiego.scbwi.org.

August 22, 2021: The Editor Featured in Publishers Weekly!

Publishers Weekly covered The Editor in their article “2021 SCBWI Conference: Significant Market Transformation Due to COVID-19.” The article provides a peek into Deborah’s Market Report for the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators summer conference. http://pwne.ws/3lwpczD.

September 1, 2021: The Editor to Share How to Find the Right Editor for Your Book

Join The Editor on Sept 11, 2021, for an inspiring and informative market report and learn about new imprints and what they are requiring. She will also share her tips on researching editors to find the perfect fit for your book. Register at www.sandiego.scbwi.org.

August, 2021: The Editor at UCLA’s Writers Symposium

The Editor joined 11 amazing YA authors at UCLA’s writing symposium “The Young and the Reckless: Writing for Teens. She was in the a panel with award-winning, best-selling YA novelists Aiden Thomas and Adam Sass. “Put characters in unexpected settings to provoke surprising dialogue, unpredictable action, and stress.”-Deborah Halverson https://www.uclaextension.edu/ya-symposium

April 31, 2021: The Editor Teaches Submissions Strategies Twice in April

The Editor taught children’s book wrters and illustrators the ins and outs of submitting their manuscripts to agents and publishers twice this month. First for Children’s Books Writers of Los Angeles (CBW-LA), and then for SCBWI’s South and Central Ohio chapter. The session was called “SUBMISSION STUDIO: Writing Queries, Strategizing Submissions, and Ten Ways to Translate “No” to “Yes!”

January 15, 2021: The Editor’s Predictions for the 2021 Children’s Lit Market are Published in SCBWI INSIGHT

The Editor shared some predictions for children’s literature market in the January edition of SCBWI INSIGHT, a monthly enewsletter for members of the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators. INSIGHT features current children’s book hot topics, helpful hints, exclusive interviews and monthly contests. When talking about likelihoods for 2021, emerging trend-lines are intriguing to extend forward. The Editor appreciated the challenge and opportunity to do so. For an excerpt of the members-only article “What Will the Children’s Literature Market Look Like in 2021?: A Crystal Ball Prediction,” click here.

November 24, 2020: The Editor Edits a Book Benefitting Victims of Domestic Violence & Abuse

The Editor was honored to edit the Purple Projects picture book PENNY’S ADVENTURES IN SAN DIEGO. Sales benefit victims of domestic violence and abuse. For this book, thirteen San Diego County mayors and a deputy mayor each penned a chapter of a story about a kind-hearted purple butterfly named Penny visiting their respective cities and doing a good deed. Per the San Diego Union-Tribune,  “Deborah Halverson, an editor and publishing consultant, wrote chapter transitions and edited the book at no cost, while Danielle Ramirez created colorful illustrations…. The 85-page illustrated book, “Penny’s Adventure in San Diego,” is now available for pre-order for $25 and due for release in early December.”

October, 2020: The Editor Offering New Class for KidLit Writers

The Editor is honored to be offering a new class for Children’s Book Insider: “10 Things That Get Kidlit Manuscripts Rejected – and How to Avoid Them.” It will be 90 minutes of deep-digging writing tools for writers of picture books, chapter books, middle grade and young adult — fiction and nonfiction. The class will be live online Tuesday, Oct 13, 2020, with lifetime on-demand rewatching. Jump on over to the class page for the full details and sign-up. Children’s Book Insider is a place to take classes on all aspects of writing and publishing books for young readers.

May 29, 2020: The Editor to Offer a Digital Workshop for SCBWI (Free & Exclusive to SCBWI Members)

The Editor will present the fifth workshop in the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators‘s second Digital Workshops series. The series is for current SCBWI members, and is free — an offering for members during this unusual summer of lockdown and creative challenge. The Editor’s workshop will be “Submissions Studio: Writing Queries, Strategizing Submissions, and 10 Ways to Translate ‘No’ to ‘Yes!’” It’s for writers of all children’s book categories — beginners as well as advanced writers — looking to perfect their submission package and strategy. The workshop will include a master handout, sample query letters, and a quick-reference sheet for translating editorial feedback. Workshop date:  Thursday, July 2 , 2020, 1:00pm-2:00pm, Pacific Daylight Time. Registration opens Monday, June 29 , 2020, 10am PDT.

March 2, 2020: The Editor’s Article about E-Book Lending in SCBWI’s “Insight”

The Editor’s article “The E-Book Lending Battle Between Libraries and Macmillan, and What It Means to Authors” has been published in the March 2020 issue of  INSIGHT, the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrator‘s monthly enewsletter featuring current children’s book hot topics, helpful hints, exclusive interviews and monthly contests.

Feb 7, 2020: The Editor’s Children’s Book Publishing Overview Article in SCBWI’s “The Bulletin”

The Editor’s article “2019: A Year in Review” has been published in SCBWI’s Winter 2020 edition of THE BULLETIN, a biannual publication provided to members of the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators. The article is a children’s publishing industry overview, examining events and trends of 2019.

Jan 6, 2020:  The Editor to Ring in the New Decade with a Submissions Webinar

The Editor is excited to be asked by SCBWI – Texas: Austin to ring in the new year with a  submissions webinar. WRITING QUERIES, STRATEGIZING SUBMISSIONS, & INTERPRETING EDITORIAL FEEDBACK is for writers of all children’s book categories, and beginners as well as advanced writers looking to perfect their submission package and strategy. Deborah will do some critiques as part of the webinar: query letters, 1st 10 pages of a YA/MG novel, or a submission package of a query letter, synopsis, and 1st 10 pages.  The webinar will be January 14, 2020, 7-8:30pm CT (5-6:30pmPT, 8-9:30pmET). Details and registration at bit.ly/2N5pXNV. 

Oct 29, 2019:  The Editor to Present a YA/MG  Technique-Focused Webinar
J
oin The Editor for a technique-focused, hour-long Webinar designed to make YA/MG writers stronger self-editors and novelists on Nov 14, 2019.  THE ULTIMATE CHECKLIST FOR SUBMITTING YOUR MG/YA TO EDITORS: 10 Tests Your Manuscript Must Pass to Prove It’s Ready to Submit. “How can you know when your Middle Grade/Young Adult manuscript is ready to submit to agents or editors? You think it is, but how can you know for sure? Learn ten actionable tests for knowing when a novel is really, truly ready to submit . . . along with ways to whip the manuscript into shape if it fails a single one of them.” Hosted by SCBWI-Texas: Southwest.  Details and registration at  http://bit.ly/2pnztn1 

Sept 3, 2019: Interview with the Editor and Giveaway
The fabulous resource website for teen writers TipsForTeenAuthors.com is GIVING AWAY a signed copy of The Editor’s writing craft book WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES to go with her in-depth interview about freelance editing as a career. You can read the interview and enter the giveaway at bit.ly/2lxDbrV.

June 15, 2019: The Editor to Teach YA/MG Webinar July 16, 2019
On July 16, 2019, 7-8:30pm CT (5-6:30pm PT / 8-9:30pm ET), Deborah will present the webinar Subtext & Subplots: How to Deepen and Energize Your YA/MG Fiction.” She’ll teach techniques for using subtext and subplots to build rich, satisfying stories and fix common storytelling “problems.” She’ll also be critiquing for those who choose that additional item for the event. It will bosted by SCBWI-Texas: Austin. Details & registration at bit.ly/2ZgH2bs.

June 10, 2019: The Editor Teaches YA all day at SCBWI-Florida’s Orlando Mid-Year Workshop June 7-8, 2019
The Editor was honored to be in Orlando presenting a full-day YA workshop with editor Hannah Milton of Little, Brown Books for Young Readers and author/agent Eric Smith of P. S. Literary. The workshop had additional tracks for middle grade fiction, picture books, and illustration, plus full-day intensives and one-on-one critiques.

April 1, 2019: The Editor to Critique and Consult at SCBWI-Nebraska’s Writing Retreat Sept 27-29 2019
The Editor will be meeting with attendees and critiquing manuscripts for this wonderful weekend of writing and industry talk in beautiful Mahoney State Park. Cabins, a stunning park, and book talk–SCBWI’s Nebraska chapter is putting on an inspiring, supportive event for writers of picture books and middle grade/young adult fiction.

March 2, 2019: The Editor Celebrates Read Across America Day with 4th Graders
2019’s Read Across America Day was a blast for kids and their readers across the country. The Editor
read to two 4th-grade classes at a local elementary school as part of that school’s celebration. In fact, she was doubly honored: Not only was she asked to read to them that special day, the kids asked her to read one of her works-in-progress. Huzzah!

February 20, 2019: The Editor to Be a Guest Reader for NEA’s Read Across America Day 2019
On Saturday, March 2, 2019, schools, libraries, and communities across America will celebrate literacy with the National Education Association’s Read Across America Day. The Editor will be an honored Guest Reader at an elementary school in San Diego the Friday before.

October 18, 2018: The Editor Guest Posts a Character Development Tip at Cynsations Blog
The Editor is honored to be a Guest Blogger on the amazing Cynsations blog today, with her post “Deborah Halverson on Viewing Narrative Beats as ‘Revelatory’ Beats in MG/YA Fiction.” A snippet: “Perhaps we writers drop in those generic actions because we’re so focused on getting the first scenes in place; perhaps we’re just not seeing those beats for the opportunities they are. ‘Oh, what treasure troves those little actions can be!'”

October 14, 2018: New Look for DearEditor.com
The Editor and her website designer have been hard at work all summer, and today they unveil the fruits of labor: a fresh new look for DearEditor.com. To celebrate, The Editor is giving away a free edit of a picture book manuscript and a free partial edit of a novel manuscript via Rafflecopter — the giveaway entry deadline is October 22, 2018. 

September 8, 2018: The Editor Spoke at SCBWI-San Diego about the State of the Children’s Book Industry
In an hour-long up-to-the-minute report, The Editor shared insights and information about the state of the children’s book industry with the members and guests of the San Diego chapter of the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators. 

April 3, 2018: The Editor on Faculty at SCBWI Southern Breeze WIK ’18
The Editor will present two sessions at the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators‘ Annual Summer Conference in L.A. August 3-6, 2018:

  • “Up-to-the-Minute Market Report: Industry Updates, Submissions, and New Imprints”
  • “Subplots & Subtext: How to Deepen and Energize Your MG/YA Fiction”

She’ll also critique manuscripts one-on-one. Conference registration opens April 17th @10am PT. Manuscript Consults are limited so if you’re interested, register asap on the 17th.

March 12, 2018: The Editor on Faculty at SCBWI Southern Breeze WIK ’18
The Editor was honored be a part of the faculty at SCBWI-Southern Breeze’s 2018 writing-and-illustrating for kids (WIK) conference, presenting sessions on non-rhyming picture books, revising young-adult and middle-grade novels for submission, and the state of the children’s book industry. The Southern Breeze chapter of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators offers support to writers and illustrators in Alabama, Georgia, and the Florida panhandle. It’s an amazing group of creative and supportive people, attendees and conference organizers alike. If you live in that area and write/illustrate for young people, do yourself a solid and check out the group.  

September 23, 2017: The Editor Interview in New MG/YA Online Writing Course at Children’s Book Insider
The Editor is proud to contribute an interview called “Writing for Tweens, Teens and New Adults” to Children’s Book Insider’s Blueprint series, for their new Middle Grade/Young Adult Writing Blueprint. CBI always presents great content. Other fabulous interviews are a part of the new Blueprint — editor Mary Kole and author Matthew J. Kirby. Author Alice Kuipers is the instructor. You can check it out at writing blueprints.com

March 22, 2017: The Editor in Faculty at SCBWI 46th Annual Summer Conference July 7-10, 2017
The Editor is excited to present the annual Market Survey as well as a 3-hr writing intensive “How to Talk Like a Teen When You’re So Not One: Writing Dialogue in YA/MG Fiction” at SCBWI’s 46th Annual Summer Conference in LA. She will also be doing one-on-one critiques throughout the conference.

Expand your skills regarding Craft, Storytelling, Character, Genre Studies, Getting an Agent, Getting Published and Revision. The Editor’s sessions: “Crafting a Youthful Narrative Voice and Authentic Dialogue for Young Adult Fiction,” “Writing Riveting New Adult Fiction”, and “Panel: Connecting With Middle-Grade and Young Adult Readers.”

Sept 28, 2016: Join The Editor at Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conf Oct 28-30, 2016
Please join The Editor at Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference October 28-30 in LA. Expand your skills regarding Craft, Storytelling, Character, Genre Studies, Getting an Agent, Getting Published and Revision. The Editor’s sessions: “Crafting a Youthful Narrative Voice and Authentic Dialogue for Young Adult Fiction,” “Writing Riveting New Adult Fiction”, and “Panel: Connecting With Middle-Grade and Young Adult Readers.”

June 8, 2016: The Editor on YA Author Panel June 11 at Barnes & Noble in Santee, CA
The Editor will be a part of a YA author panel at Santee, California, Barnes & Nobel Saturday, June 11, at 2pm. The panel is “Writing a Book Is Like Riding a Roller Coaster!” Fellow panelists—fabulous YA writers—and The Editor will share stories of our writing ups and downs, and answer questions about writing and publishing: Debra Driza (MILO 2.0 series), Barrie Summy (I SO DON’T DO series and THE DISAPPEARANCE OF EMILY H.), Karri Thompson (MIRROR X, ASCENDENCY), and Matthew Ward (THE FANTASTIC FAMILY WHIPPLE, THE WAR OF THE WORLD RECORDS). Come join them!

May 30, 2016: The Editor Contributes “Believable Dialogue” Chapter to New Writer’s Digest Book 
The Editor is proud to have contributed Chapter 10 “Believable Dialogue” to Writer’s Digest’s new book CRAFTING DYNAMIC DIALOGUE, a comprehensive guide to writing compelling, authentic dialogue in fiction. The craft book is filled with advice and instruction from best-selling authors and instructors like Deborah Halverson (The Editor), Nancy Kress, Elizabeth Sims, Steven James, James Scott Bell, Donald Maass, Cheryl St. John, and many others. Covered in the book: bend the rules to create a specific effect; understand the role of dialogue in reader engagement; use dialect and jargon effectively; give every character a believable, unique voice; set the pace and tone; reveal specific character background details; generate tension and suspense; and utilize internal dialogue.

May 3, 2016: Join the Editor at SCBWI 2016 Summer Conference
Join The Editor at the SCBWI 2016 Summer Conference in Los Angeles July 29-31 (optional craft intensive a on Aug 1). She’ll be presenting the breakout “Crafting Swoon-Worthy Young Adult Romantic Relationships”, the “An Up-to-the-Minute Market Report” on the main stage, and the craft intensive “Crafting Plots that Push, Pull, and Provoke Characters… and Readers, Too.” She will also do 1-on-1 critiques.

August 26, 2015: Rave Review of WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES on SCBWI Blog
Author/blogger Lee Wind is well known for caring deeply about writers, so his recommendation of WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES on the SCBWI blog makes The Editor especially proud: “Deborah Halverson (who I’m always so impressed with) has put together a really useful guide… Her book is packed with good stuff.”

August 10, 2015: The Editor’s WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION wins San Diego Book Award
The Editor’s book WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION won the San Diego Book Award for 2014 Best Published Business Book. To celebrate, she is giving away a Free Full Manuscript Edit on DearEditor.com August 10, 2015 – August 14, 2015, with the winner to be announced on DearEditor.com August 15, 2015. Click over to the DearEditor.com announcement post for entry details.

April 3, 2015: The Editor to Present Market Report at SCBWI Annual Conference
The Editor will be at the 44th Annual SCBWI Summer Conference in Los Angeles July 31- August 2.  She’ll be presenting the “Up to the Minute Market Report,” the breakout sessions “Techniques in New Adult Fiction for YA Writers” and “The Ultimate Checklist for Submitting Your MG/YA Novel to Editors,” the 3-hr intensive “Voice in MG/YA: How To Create an Authentic Teen Narrator,” and critiques. Registration opens April 9. For more info: http://www.scbwi.org/2015-summer-conference-in-los-angeles/

April 1, 2015: The Editor to Talk NA Fiction with Librarians
The Editor is looking forward to talking about New Adult fiction and its distinct traits and marketplace at the Mid America Library Alliance’s Workshop on New Adult Fiction on April 28. Librarians looking to be as informed as possible for the sake of their patrons. Love it!

Feb 12, 2015: The Editor Interviewed on Adventures in YA Publishing Blog
The Editor is honored to be featured on the fabulous blog Adventures in YA Publishing this week. The blog covers Young Adult Fiction in general, gives away YA books (several giveaways going on this week!), features advice from YA authors, and shares writing tips, and publishing information. Here’s an excerpt from the interview: “With the current enthusiasm for contemporary realistic stories, I see too many manuscripts that showcase above-average writing but fail to deliver a fresh angle on the contemporary teen experience. What makes your story about a regular kid in high school stand out from all those other well written stories about regular kids in high schools? I want to see more great writers find their distinct angles so that they can find publishers and places on bookstore shelves.

Jan 15, 2015: The Editor to Lead Simi Valley Writing Retreat January 16-18
The Editor is leading a fun and informative three-day intensive for SCBWI Cen-Cal Writers’ Retreat: An Editor’s Strategies for Reaching Fabulous Final Drafts. This intensive will consist of lectures, hands-on exercises, informal discussions, and the option of a small group critique session. For an additional fee, you can register for a manuscript critique and private consultation with The Editor.

Oct 8, 2014: Blog Tour and Tourwide Free Full Manuscript Edit Giveaway
The blog tour celebrating the publication of Writing New Adult Fiction is under way! From October 6 – 31, bloggers will be posting reviews of the book, interviews with The Editor, and guest blog posts written by The Editor covering craft, promotion, and the business of publishing New Adult fiction. All of the posts have giveaways, and there’s a tourwide giveaway of a free full manuscript edit. Here’s the link for the tour schedule, updated with excerpts and direct links as each post goes live: https://www.deareditor.com/?p=6644 And here’s the link for the free manuscript edit giveaway’s Rafflecopter entry form: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/5440a354204/.

Oct 3, 2014: Be a Writing New Adult Fiction Blog Tour Host
The Editor is honored to be featured at literary agent Jill Corcoran’s blog, discussing what makes NA different from YA fiction: ““What’s the difference between ‘new’ adult and ‘young’ adult? My answer usually starts with a single word: sensibility.” Plus, Jill is running a contest for the feature, the winner of a signed copy of WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION being chosen by October 15, 2014.

Sept 17, 2014: Be a Writing New Adult Fiction Blog Tour Host
Want to be a host on The Editor’s WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION blog tour, featuring reviews, author interviews, spotlights, guest posts, and giveaways? The tour runs Oct 6-31. Sign up: http://bit.ly/1v19GIK

Sept 15, 2014: Interview with The Editor and Signed Book Giveaway on KC Maguire’s Blog
Stop by KC Maguire’s blog for an interview with The Editor and to enter the giveaway for a free signed copy of The Editor’s new book WRITING NEW ADULT FICTION. From the interview: “NA has become established and is pushing for a greater range of stories and thematic exploration, there seems to be a call for fiction that doesn’t necessarily get into the nitty gritty of body parts and movements. After all, not everyone who wants to read about the NA experience wants such graphic detail, and not every writer is comfortable writing it. Ultimately, the details of the sex acts aren’t necessary in order to explore love at this stage of life. Serve up emotionally satisfying relationships. Craft stories that build up sexual anticipation through love denied, teased, and toyed with. A much-anticipated kiss can be more dramatically powerful than a perfunctory graphic groping. That’s why I dedicate a full chapter of my book to the crafting believable, satisfying romance. And it’s why I say that explicit sex scenes are currently expected but maybe not so essential in the long run. The degree of explicitness in NA fiction is an evolving element.”

Sept 2, 2014: The Editor Joins Faculty of  SCBWI-Missouri Fall Conference Sept 6-7, 2014
The Editor will present the “State of the Market” and lead the intensive “How to Build Your Own Teenager” at the SCBWI-Missouri Fall Conference in St. Charles, Missouri, September 6-7, 2014.

Sept 2, 2014: The Editor’s Article “NA Fiction for the YA Writer” in Sept/Oct Issue of SCBWI’s The Bulletin
“Writers see an overlap between ‘mature YA’ and NA and wonder what it means for their own stories about older teens…. There are essential differences in story content, though, and knowing those can help you determine if your mature YA is actually an NA offering.” From The Editor’s article in the Sept/Oct issue of SCBWI’s THE BULLETIN. If you’re an SCBWI member and want to read it, log into your profile page and click on resource library, then on Bulletin in the dropdown menu.

July 1, 2014: The Editor to Join Faculty of  Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference Aug 15-17, 2014
Join The Editor for her 3-hour Boot Camp “Writing Riveting New Adult Fiction” and her 1-hour breakout session “How to Hide the Seams for Smooth, Flowing Fiction” at the Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza – Los Angeles August 15-17. For details about the sessions and other award-winning, bestselling authors and publishing professionals at the Writer’s Digest Novel Writing Conference, click here.

May 12, 2014: The Editor’s Interview about the SCBWI Conference, Uses for Setting, and the Difference Between NA and YA Fiction
“Saying NA fiction is just YA with sex is akin to saying YA fiction is just stories of high school romance.” Insightful interviewer Lee Wind asks The Editor about being on the faculty of SCBWI’s upcoming summer conference in Los Angeles (Aug 1-4) and also about the difference between “voice” and “sensibility” in writing, characteristics of New Adult Fiction, and other writing advice. Check out the full interview here.

April 18, 2014: The Editor Presenting Market Keynote at SCBWI 43rd Annual Summer Conference in Los Angeles, Aug 1 – 4
Join the Editor and other authors, agents, and publishing professionals at the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators annual info-packed 4-day summer conference. In addition to presenting the market keynote, the Editor will present the session “New Adult Fiction for the Young Adult Writer” and the intensive “Crafting a Youthful Narrative Voice and Sensibility in MG/YA Fiction.” She’s also available for one-on-one critiques. Join the fun! Registration opens Monday, April 21, 10am PST. Intensives fill up FAST.

December 6, 2013: Meet the Editor at the New Adult Sleepover Weekend in Savannah, GA, December 6 – 8
Check out the inaugural New Adult Sleepover Weekend, an event for readers and authors of New Adult fiction. Panels about NA characters and publishing, swag, meet-and-greets, parties . . . a fun and informative weekend! The Editor will be there, meeting and greeting and taking in all things NA. Savannah Riverfront Marriott, 100 General McIntosh Boulevard, Savannah, GA 31401.

November 22, 2013: Meet the Editor on YA Panel at San Diego’s Mira Mesa B&N on November 22
As part of Barnes & Noble’s Discovery Friday event Friday, November 22, at 6pm, the Editor will be part of a lively panel about books for young people with Shannon Messenger, author of the middle grade series Keeper of the Lost Cities and the teen trilogy Let the Sky Fall, and Debra Driza, author of the YA thriller Mila 2.0, the first in a series currently being developed as a series for ABC. The panel will be moderated by fabulous Full Circle Literary agent Taylor Martindale. It’s Discovery Friday at the B&N that day, so there will be giveaways all day, including Catching Fire posters, John Green posters, Legos, etc. There will also be a special musical performance by Stacey Leathersich at 8:30. B&N: 10775 Westview Pkwy, San Diego, CA 92126.

August 22, 2013: The Editor Interview Delves Into How Writers Can Succeed in Publishing
In an interview by N.W. Harris, author of Joshua’s Tree, which currently tops the Goodreads 2013 Summer Reading list, The Editor talks about writing fiction versus nonfiction, her path to publication and editorial career, and three things new writers must do to compete in the current, highly competitive publishing industry: “Publishing is an industry, as unartful as it is to admit that, and writers who want their books out there for readers to buy must consider themselves players rather than pawns.” Full the full interview, visit NWHarrisBooks.

August 5, 2013: The Editor Presents State of the Market Keynote at SCBWI Summer Conference
Publishers Weekly included The Editor in its coverage of the 42nd Annual SCBWI Summer Conference: “Deborah Halverson, founder of DearEditor.com, delivered a keynote titled Market Report: An Up-to-the-Minute State of the Industry, which compiled the results of interviews with 17 publishing insiders…. Halverson reported that sales are up for picture books, but editors are still cautious about the category. Chapter books and early readers remain challenging….” For more highlights from The Editor’s keynote, click over to PW’s article.

May 7, 2013: The Editor to Pen ‘New Adult Fiction’ Craft Book
The Editor will publish Writing and Selling New Adult Fiction with Writer’s Digest Books in Fall 2014. Writing and Selling New Adult Fiction is a hands-on guide featuring essential information, steps, and techniques necessary to turn a clever concept into a top-notch novel for 18- to 26-year-olds as well as the teen and adult crossover audience. The book will include advice on self-publishing into the New Adult marketplace, insider tips for finding the right agent and/or editor and preparing a stand-out submission package for traditional publishers, and an extensive chapter on self-marketing to help writers move boldly into the realm of self-promotion.

April 20, 2013: The Editor to Deliver Keynote at SCBWI 42nd Summer Conference
The Editor will deliver the “Market Report: An Up-to-the-Minute State of the Industry” keynote at the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators 42nd Summer Conference in Los Angeles August 2 – 5, 2013. She will also teach an intensive called “How to Build Your Own Teenager: Techniques for Writing Believable MG/YA Characters, and two one-hour breakout sessions called “The Read-Aloud Factor: Achieving Rhythm without Relying on Rhyme in Picture Books” and “Setting, Wherefore Art Thou?: The Surprising Benefits and How-To’s of Setting in MG/YA Fiction.” For information about attending the conference, click over to the conference home page.

March 18, 2013: Susan Stevens Crummel Joins Revision Week Lineup
The Editor is thrilled to announce that award-winning picture book author Susan Stevens Crummel will be joining the Revision Week lineup! Loved for her solo books as well as her collaborations with author/illustrator (and sister!) Janet Stevens, Susan will shed light on the ins and outs of working through a highly collaborative revision process.

March 15, 2013: Announcing DearEditor.com’s Revision Week 2013, March 24-30
It’s almost time for DearEditor.com’s second annual Revision Week. March 24-30 The Editor will host five authors—who have published a combined 270 best-selling and award-winning books—for a week of revision tips, insights, and stories from the trenches at DearEditor.com. Who’s stopping by? Bestselling and award-winning authors Laura Griffin (romance novels), Matthew J. Kirby (YA novels), Bruce Hale (chapter book series and picture books), Peter Economy (non-fiction), and Larry Dane Brimner (picture books, chapter books, easy readers, nonfiction… you name it!), that’s who! The Editor will add to the excitement with daily drawings for Free Partial Edits and a grand prize Full Manuscript Edit giveaway.

Jan 26, 2013: OnText Blog Features DearEditor.com
DearEditor.com gets the thumbs up in the OnText blog feature “Writing Children’s or Young Reader Books? Great Source of Publishing Help.” OnText is hosted by ghostwriter Maryan Pelland. Pelland calls The Editor “a wealth of information for writers, authors, and ghostwriters to ask questions about the craft of writing or about the very confusing and frustrating publishing industry. Her answers are concise and pull-no-punches.”

Dec 1, 2012: The Editor Celebrates Her First Picture Book with a FREE EDIT Giveaway
The Editor believes writers should celebrate every milestone—and she’s got a milestone to celebrate with her readers. Her first picture book, Letters to Santa, has just published and she’s feting it by giving away a FREE edit of a picture book manuscript up to 2,000 words. Deadline: December 4, 2012. Read the giveaway post for full entry details.

Oct 17, 2012: The Editor Announces Three New Books
The Editor’s three books for Rubicon’s Remix struggling readers series have launched! Brave New World: Cyber World, Brave New World: Meltdown, and Brave New World: Robotic World. To page through previews of the books electronically, visit the Remix: Brave New World series page.

Sept 17, 2012: Finding Bliss Blog Hosts the The Editor, Holds Free Book Giveaway
Excerpt: “Revision can be daunting. . . . Why not give your brain a break by breaking your task into focused chunks? With this approach, you’d pick a writing element, say plot, and ignore everything but that. Working Big Picture chunks to small detail chunks rather than page by page, you’d focus not on revising the story but on honing single elements. Gone is that scattered, overwhelmed feeling.” Read the rest of The Editor’s guest post “Chunking Your Revision” on Laura Howard’s blog Finding Bliss, and enter her giveaway for a free copy of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies.

August 27, 2012: An Interview with The Editor
Excerpt: “The trick is to make something big happen in the story to create a big emotional impact that would raise the emotional temperature of the story and keep it from being too quiet.” You can the full interview with The Editor on Natasha Yim’s blog “I Must Be a Masochist – A Writer’s Life.”

August 23, 2012: Coverage of The Editor’s SCBWI conference Market Trends Keynote
The Editor complied the “2012 SCBWI Market Survey: Publishers of Books For Young Readers” report for the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, and gave a keynote at the recent SCBWI Summer Conference about what she learned from her survey – giving attendees the current market needs and trends. To read coverage of her keynote, click over to “SCBWI Summer Conference: Market Keynote Follow-Up with Deborah Halverson” on the SCBWI Blog.

June 28, 2012: The Editor Advises How to Use Subtext as a tool on Quirk and Quill
The Editor’s advice about using subtext to puff up a “flat” fiction manuscript is featured today on Quirk and Quill, a blog hosted by 10 alumni of the Vermont College of Fine Arts writing program. To read the post, click over to “Serving Up Subtext” on Quirk and Quill.

May 25, 2012: The Editor Visits Stanford…Virtually
The Editor talked books and writing during an online chat session today with a Stanford writing class that uses her Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies as their text. The Editor is honored that schools continue to adopt the book for their classes.

Mar 23, 2012: Join The Editor at SCBWI National Conference in L.A. Aug 3-6
The Editor will be at SCBWI’s 2012 Summer Conference in Los Angeles Aug 3-6. She’ll be presenting the Current Market Report keynote, a breakout session on writing dialogue, an intensive on revising your MG/YA novel, and an intensive on creating youthful narrative sensibility. Registration starts April 18 at 10am. Check out the full info on the SCBWI conference page.

Mar 4, 2012: DearEditor.com’s Revision Week with 8 Bestselling, Award-Winning Authors
DearEditor.com brings together eight prolific, bestselling, award-winning authors for Revision Week, 7 days of revision tips, insights, and stories from the trenches. Learn from writers who turn first drafts into lauded books every day:

  • Cynthia Leitich Smith, bestselling YA gothic novelist, picture book writer, short story writer, and popular children’s lit blogger.
  • Kathleen Krull, author of more than 60 books, especially picture books and biographies for young readers.
  • R.L. LaFevers, author of the 13 novels for young people.
  • Henry Winkler, Lin Oliver, and Theo Baker, popular chapter book collaborators.
  • Mark A. Clements, horror/suspense author, screenwriter, and prolific ghostwriter.
  • Nathan Bransford, top blogger and former literary agent-turned-author of the Jacob Wonderbar middle grade books.
  • Rachel Caine, New York Times, USA Today, and internationally bestselling author of more than 30 novels.

Feb 26, 2012: DearEditor.com Now on Google+
DearEditor.com is pleased to announce the DearEditor.com Google+ page, sharing industry news, creative inspirations, and writing tips to keep you in the publishing know. The new page complements the DearEditor.com Facebook page and the @Dear_Editor Twitter feed.

Feb 26, 2012: DearEditor.com Goes Mobile
DearEditor.com is now mobile-friendly. With the new mobile design, you can easily read new posts and comments on your mobile device of choice, and you can post your own comments on-the-go. With a simple click on the arrow at the top of your mobile display, you can access archives, categories, and any page on the DearEditor.com website.

The Editor to appear on “Writers Voices” Radio Feb 17, 2012
The Editor will appear live on “Writers Voices” 1-2pm CST, Feb 17, 2012. “Writers Voices” airs on KRUU FM 100.1, an open source, solar-powered community radio station that broadcasts to the larger Fairfield, Iowa, area and has worldwide listenership via the web. Each week they air an hour-long interview with a writer, agent, editor, publisher, or someone else connected to the world of writing. To listen to the show live, tune in to KRUU FM radio or go to online at http://www.writersvoices.com. Hear the rebroadcast Monday Feb 20 8 AM on KRUU FM or download it from the archives: http://www.writersvoices.com or http://www.kruufm.com/station/archives/61.

Free Online Workshop with The Editor Feb 21-23, 2012
The Institute of Children’s Literature website is hosting an online YA workshop featuring The Editor. The drop-in Q&A-format workshop takes place on the ICL’s message board, which anyone can read (no registration required). If you want to post a question, you do need to register (for FREE) by sending email to jan.fields@forums.institutechildrenslit.com with the username you want. Check out the ICL’s Guest Speaker archives while you’re there.

Feb 7, 2012:The Editor on “How to Promote Your Book” Podcast
As part of her blog tour for her book How to Promote Your Children’s Books, author/illustrator Katie Davis focused her regular podcast on “Promoting Your Book.” The Editor has a guest appearance. See the episode description here: http://katiedavis.com/how-to-promote-your-book/. Or click here to hear it directly.

Feb 6, 2012:DearEditor.com to host How to Promote Your Children’s Book Blog Tour
Author/illustrator Katie Davis is a tireless promoter whose 9 children’s books have sold over 250,000 copies. On February 6, 2012, Katie shares what she’s learned about promoting books–and she’s giving away a free download of her new eBook How to Promote Your Children’s Book: Tips, Tricks and Secrets to Create a Bestseller. Follow Katie’s full blog tour for more promo insights & giveaways:

Dec 4, 2011:YA Fusion blog Interviews The Editor
YA Fusion, a blog written by YA fiction writers about the amazing world of young adult fiction, interviewed The Editor and hosted a giveaway of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies. The interviews spans the writing, editing, and reading realm, and offers tips to writers about gauging market trends and walking the line in “edgy” fiction. http://bit.ly/viGL8O

Oct 19, 2011:More Spotlight Week at The Writing Nut: An Interview with The Editor
Spotlight Week at The Writing Nut blog cointinues with an interview with The Editor, covering what makes YA fiction so popular, what aspiring writers should do, and what young readers should know: http://bit.ly/qEOyqs.

Oct 17, 2011:The Editor Featured During Spotlight Week at The Writing Nut
The Writing Nut blog features The Editor and her book Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies all week. Stop by for a review of the book, an interview with The Editor—aka Deborah Halverson—and a giveaway: http://bit.ly/r0l1Ht

Sept 25, 2011:San Diego Union-Tribune Dubs Writing YA Fiction For Dummies “Tremendously Helpful”
The San Diego Union-Tribune dubbed The Editor’s new Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies a Recommended Read, calling it, “Fun, insightful and tremendously helpful.”

Sept 24, 2011:The Editor Presenting at San Diego Public Library Book Festival Oct 1
The Editor is honored to be a part of the SAN DIEGO COUNTY LIBRARY BOOK FESTIVAL Saturday, Oct 1, at the Encinitas Library. Speakers include YA great Ellen Hopkins, bestseller Lisa See, and Skinny Bitch series author Kim Barnouin. The Editor will be presenting in the community room 5 to 6pm. Check out the festival website for a full list of great speakers.

Sept 24, 2011:The Editor Teaches YA at SCWC Conf in Newport Beach Sept 24
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be presenting “Writing for Teens? Then Think Like One” at the Southern California Writers’ Conference – LA on Sept 24, 2011. Here’s her session description: “Whether your narrator is your young main character or an all-knowing omniscient being, there are ways to convince young readers that you understand them and their view of the world—and to hook’em good and hard in the process. This session teaches techniques for creating a narrative sensibility that reflects the way teens think, resulting in teen fiction that “clicks” with young readers.” Click on over to the SCWC website for details about this conference, which runs Sept 23-25.

August 3, 2011: The Editor featured on Writing on the Sidewalk Blog
The Editor,aka Deborah Halverson, talks writing, Legos, and banging on drums in “Writing on the Sidewalk”, the blog of authors Suzanne Santillan and Sarah Wones Tomp.

August 3, 2011: The Editor on The League of Extraordinary Writers Blog
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, is an interview guest on The League of Extraordinary Writers, a blog hosted by dystopian authors Jeff Hirsch, Elana Johnson, Julia Karr, Beth Revis, and Angie Smibert. With Q-and-A about the most common pitfalls for writers, the current rise in YA lit, a list of must-reads for writers, and the viability of self-publishing as an alternative pub path for writers, this interview is full of great information. Check it out!

June 11, 2011: Announcing WYAFFD Blog Tour
Please drop in on this 8-stop blog tour celebrating the publication of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies. Interviews, guest blog posts on craft, promotion, and chapter books, and a grand finale free webinar. Full schedule:

July 18: Shrinking Violet Promotions
July 19: SCBWI Children’s Market blog
July 20: QueryTracker.net
July 21: Elizabeth O. Dulemba Blog
July 22: Cheryl Rainfield Blog
July 25: Story Connection
July 26: The Got Story Countdown
July 27: Free “Meet the Editor” webinar w/ Katie Davis

June 29, 2011: Interviews, Guest Blogs, Podcasts, & Giveaways in Support of the WYAFFD Virtual Book Launch
Visit these websites and blogs for exclusive content and giveaways in support of the Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummiea Virtual Book Launch from June 29 to July 5 here on DearEditor.com:

June 29, 2011: Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies Virtual Book Launch Begins!
Celebrate the publication of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies from June 29 to July 5 here on DearEditor.com with daily “Free First Chapter Critique” giveaways, free downloads, excerpts from the book, and profiles of the 13 amazing authors, editors, and agents who so generously contributed sidebars to the book. As the grand finale, The Editor is giving away a “Free Full Manuscript Edit” on the final day. Click here for details about the 7-Day Virtual Book Launch.

June 21, 2011: Announcing the Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies Virtual Book Launch
Celebrate the publication of Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies from June 29 to July 5 here on DearEditor.com with daily “Free First Chapter Critique” giveaways, free downloads, excerpts from the book, and profiles of the 13 amazing authors, editors, and agents who so generously contributed sidebars to the book. As the grand finale, The Editor is giving away a “Free Full Manuscript Edit” on the final day. Click here for details about the 7-Day Virtual Book Launch.

June 20, 2011: Video Writing Tip from The Editor
Click over to Tina Nichols Coury’s blog Tales from the Rushmore Kid for a one-minute video tip from The Editor. The topic: Checking to see if your protagonist has completed a full character arc.

June 8, 2011: Free Webinar with The Editor July 27, 2011
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be conducting a free webinar with author Katie Davis on July 27, 2011, 9:00-10:oo pm EST. For details or to sign up, visit the webinar information page!

June 6, 2011: Writing YA Fiction for Dummies Virtual Book Launch June 29-July 5
DearEditor.com will be the site of a huge 7-day virtual book launch for the publication of The Editor’s new book WRITING YOUNG ADULT FICTION FOR DUMMIES. Visit every day for exclusive free downloads, book excerpts, profiles of lauded MG/YA author contributors, and daily Free Critique/Full MS Edit Giveaways. More details to come!

June 6, 2011:The Editor to Critique at SCBWI-LA National Summer Conf.
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be critiquing manuscripts at the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators 40th Annual Summer Conference in Los Angeles, August 5-8, 2011. Click on over to SCBWI’s conference site for details about this incredible event.

May 16, 2011:The Editor Gives Setting Tips in Hunger Mountain
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, is honored to have an article featured in the summer 2011 issue of HUNGER MOUNTAIN, the Vermont College of Fine Arts’ wonderful journal of the arts. In “Where the Teens Are: 5 Ways to Freshen Up YA Fiction’s Favorite Settings,” Deborah offers writers tips for making familiar teen fiction settings like school and the main character’s room feel provocative instead of inevitable. Click on over to Hunger Mountain for more.

May 11, 2011:The Editor Featured in Anderson Valley Post
Anderson Valley Post, the local paper of Anderson Valley, California, ran an article featuring The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, and her co-faculty for the Cottonwood Intensive Revision Workshop. To read about Edgar Award-winning author Charlie Price, author/illustrator Dr. Mira Reisberg, and Deborah, click over to Anderson Valley Post. To learn more about the May 21, 2011, conference, go to the conference website.

April 11, 2011:Registration Now Open for Cottonwood Intensive Revision Workshop
Registration is open for the Cottonwood Intensive Revision Workshop, to be held May 21, 2011, in Cottonwood, CA (17 miles south of Redding, CA, and approx. 2 hours from Sacramento). The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be teaching at the event, which is dedicated to helping children’s book writers revise their young adult novels and picture books. The 1-day workshop is hosted by SCBWI‘s California North/Central chapter, with Edgar Mystery Award nominee author Charlie Price and award-winning picture book illustrator, art director, designer, and educator Dr. Mira Reisberg filling out the faculty. For more information or to register (deadline May 1, 2011), contact scbwicanorthcentral@gmail.com or go to the Conference website.

Mar 2, 2011:SCBWI Chapter Features The Editor in Kite Tales
The Editor (Deborah Halverson) lays down some scene advice in the 2011 Spring Issue of Kite Tales, the newsletter for the SCBWI Tri-Regions of Southern California. The chapter has shared a link to the newsletter, which is full of fantastic information: Kite Tales, Spring 2011. For more information about SCBWI (Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators), go to SCBWI.org.

Jan 26, 2011:The Editor to Talk to Teachers about Supporting Young Writers
June 20-23, 2011, teachers earning their MAs will gather at the 32nd San Diego State University Summer Conference, and The Editor (Deborah Halverson) will be there with them. Her session, “BIF! BAM! POW!: Helping Young Writers Release Their Inner Heroes,” focuses on helping young writers tap into the heroes within themselves in order to write about characters who overcome their fears and flaws for heroic outcomes.

Jan 25, 2011:The Editor at Cottonwood Revision Intensive
On May 21, 2011, The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be helping children’s book writers revise their young adult novels and picture books at the Cottonwood Revision Intensive in Cottonwood, California. The 2-day workshop is hosted by SCBWI‘s California North/Central chapter, with author Charlie Price filling out the faculty. For more information or to register, contact scbwicanorthcentral@gmail.com

Nov 29, 2010:The Editor Goes In Between Scenes for FictionNotes
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, wrote a guest post today about why it’s crucial that a writer knows what happens in the white space between scenes for author Darcy Pattison’s information-loaded blog “Fiction Notes.” Darcy is a writing teacher and the author of The Book Trailer Manual (www.booktrailermanual.com), several picture books, and the teen fantasy novel The Wayfinder.

Nov 29, 2010:Author Mary E. Pearson Becomes 1st Guest Editor for the Day
As DearEditor.com’s first Guest Editor for the Day, author Mary E. Pearson stepped in to help a frustrated writer battle back against writer’s block. Mary is the award-winning author of five novels for teens, including the new The Miles Between.

Nov 27, 2010:New Feature Added to DearEditor.com – Guest Editor for the Day
DearEditor.com is adding a new feature: Guest Editor for the Day. Starting Monday, November 29, The Editor will occasionally hand over her editorial pen to a publishing colleague who will field a question that falls within his or her realm of expertise. In this way The Editor hopes to add to the depth of the knowledge bandied about DearEditor.com. The more voices we hear, the wiser we become. First up: award-winning author Mary E. Pearson.

Nov 24, 2010:The Editor Answers Callers’ Questions on “Brain Burps About Books” Podcast
Deborah Halverson, aka The Editor, answered listeners’ questions about publishing children’s books on author Katie Davis‘s podcast Brain Burps About Books.” If you’ve got a question you’d like Deborah to answer in a follow-up podcast, call Katie’s toll free line at 888-522-1929 and leave a message.

Nov 11, 2010:One Week to Phone In Questions to The Editor
On November 18th, author Katie Davis will tape an interview with Deborah Halverson, aka The Editor, for Katie’s podcast “Brain Burps About Books.” If you’ve got a question you’d like Deborah to answer in the podcast, call Katie’s toll free line at 888-522-1929 by November 18th and leave a message. DearEditor.com will post an update when that podcast is available for listening.

Oct 11, 2010:Six-Month Free Picture Book Edit Giveaway Winner Announced
Congratulations to Jennifer Carson, the winner of the FREE EDIT giveaway celebrating DearEditor.com’s first six months. Jennifer’s manuscript is entitled Stinking Beauty. To the rest of DearEditor.com’s readers, thanks for a fun first half year. Keep those questions, comments, and anecdotes coming! The more we hear, the more we learn.

Sept 20, 2010:GIVEAWAY! a FREE EDIT of one Picture Book Manuscript
The Editor is giving away a FREE EDIT of one picture book manuscript to celebrate the six-month anniversary of DearEditor.com. To enter more than once, spread the word! See the DearEditor.com giveaway announcement for rules and to enter. Deadline: October 10, 2010.

July 29, 2010: The Editor to Write “Writing Young Adult Fiction for Dummies”
The Editor, Deborah Halverson, has signed on to write “Writing Young Adult Fiction for Dummies” for Wiley Publishers’ For Dummies… line, to hit stores June 2011. To learn more about the For Dummies… books, go to www.ForDummies.com.

June 18, 2010: The Editor Guest Posts about Setting in Novels on “Cynsations”The Editor, Deborah Halverson, wrote a guest post today about setting in novels on author Cynthia Leitich Smith’s fabulous blog “Cynsations.” Cynthia is a New York Times and Publishers Weekly best-selling author of YA Gothic fantasies, including Tantalize and Eternal, as well as several picture books for children. Here’s a teaser from Deborah’s guest post, “Setting, Wherefore Art Thou?“: “We need setting in our stories. We need the richness that makes up setting, the sensual engagement that can only come from hearing the crunch of frosty grass under the protagonist’s bare feet, or feeling the sudden whispery kiss of a spider’s web dangling from the eaves. We’d just have a girl walking across a lawn and a creepy old house. Where’s the joy in that?” Check out Cynthia’s blog for the whole post. To learn more about Cynthia, go to CynthiaLeitichSmith.com.

May 31, 2010: The Editor’s Article about Teen Fiction & Melodrama Appears in “The Inside Story

The Editor, Deborah Halverson, wrote the feature article “Melodrama Isn’t a Four-Letter Word” for this month’s “The Inside Story”, a monthly newsletter by Bruce Hale, author of two hilarious chapter book series—the Chet Gecko series, and the Underwhere series. Here’s a teaser from Deborah’s article: “So, you’re thirty-something writing a teen novel, and you want your narrative voice to sound convincingly youthful? That’s an outstanding goal. A believable voice makes all the difference in the success of a manuscript. But how do you actually do it? The answer might surprise you.” To subscribe to “The Inside Story” and read Deborah’s full article, go to http://bit.ly/b3yXd5. To learn more about Bruce Hale, go to BruceHale.com.

May 25, 2010: The Editor Interviewed for SCBWI’s “Industry PROfiles
The Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators has just posted an on-line interview with DearEditor.com’s resident Editor, Deborah Halverson. The interview focuses on Deborah’s literary journey from playroom to publishing house to author’s chair, and explores how she balances her roles as Author/Editor/Mom. The full interview appears in SCBWI’s “Industry PROfiles.”

May 3, 2010: The Editor to Speak at SCBWI-San Diego Chapter Meeting
The Editor, Deborah Halverson, will present “How Do You Know Your Manuscript Is Ready for Submission?” at the season-opening meeting of the SCBWI-San Diego chapter, on September 11, 2010, from 2-4pm, in Hahn Nursing Hall on the University of San Diego campus. For details about the meeting and the chapter, visit their website.

April 15, 2010: One-Month Anniversary Edit Giveaway Winner Announced
Congratulations to Annemarie O’Brien, winner of the giveaway of a free substantive edit of a YA/MG manuscript. Annemarie’s manuscript is an upper middle grade novel titled Dance with Borzois. Congratulations, Annemarie! To the rest of DearEditor.com’s readers, there will definitely be more giveaways like this in the future. Thanks for your enthusiastic support during DearEditor.com’s inaugural month!

April 7, 2010:GIVEAWAY! a FREE Substantive Edit of one YA or MG Fiction Manuscript
The Editor is giving away a FREE Substantive Edit of one Young Adult or Middle Grade fiction manuscript to celebrate the one-month anniversary of DearEditor.com. To enter more than once, spread the word! See DearEditor.com home page for rules and to enter. Deadline: April 14, 2010.

April 6, 2010:The Editor Interviewed on SellingBooks.com
The Editor, Deborah Halverson, talks writing, editing, and why half of females aged 18 – 25 want to be run over by a truck in a new interview on SellingBooks.com. Check it out!

March 13, 2010:Interview on Writers’ Waiting Room about the Creation of DearEditor.com
An interview with The Editor, Deborah Halverson, was posted today on Writers’ Waiting Room. The interview focuses on the creation of DearEditor.com. The Writers’ Waiting Room was launched on the premise that all writers are waiting for something–the next idea, an agent, a publishing contract or the type of quiet that happens when the kids go to bed. It is run by writer Tami Casias, who interviews authors to get their take on living a writer’s life.

March 24, 2010: The Editor to Present Workshop at SCBWI’s Summer 2010 Conference
The Editor, aka Deborah Halverson, will be presenting a workshop at the Society of Children’s Books Writers & Illustrators’ 39th annual summer conference, which will be held at the Century Hyatt in Los Angeles July 30 through August 2, 2010. Deborah’s session is “The Ultimate Checklist for Submitting to Editors: 10 Tests a Novel Must Pass to Prove It’s REALLY Ready for Submission to Editors.” Registration for the conference starts April 28th at www.scbwi.org.

March 3, 2010: DearEditor.com Utters Its First Tweet
DearEditor.com just tweeted its first Gr8 1st Line: “The way I see it, being dead is not terribly far off from being on a cruise ship.” from Stiff by Mary Roach. For more DearEditor.com tweets, go to http://twitter.com/Dear_Editor or just tweet to @Dear_Editor.

March 3, 2010: DearEditor.com Launches
DearEditor.com has just gone live! The first post answers a writer’s question about how to sound like a teenager. Special thanks to this site’s designer, Theresa Stanton at Blogs for Photogs, who took the vision for DearEditor.com to a fantastic new level.

Submitting to Amazon Children’s Publishing

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Dear Editor…

Amazon started a children’s book publishing imprint. I can’t find information about how to submit my manuscript to them. Are they accepting submissions?

R.

Dear R.…

Tim Ditlow, Associate Publisher of Amazon Children’s Publishing, spoke about his months-old program at the 2012 SCBWI Summer Conference last week. While official submission guidelines are still being created, he said ACP is indeed accepting unsolicited submissions. For now, send a query email to acp-submit@amazon.com. Attach your full picture book ms or the first 3 chapters of your MG/YA fiction as pdfs or Word documents. There’s no time frame for responses yet. See ACP’s list of picture books, chapter books, and MG/YA fiction at http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=1000775681. Note that for now, ACP appears to function like any traditional publisher, reviewing submissions and then putting acquired books through the full production cycle, which can take a year+ for novels and 18 months for picture books. Proposals for books for adult readers can be submitted to Amazon Publishing at manuscript-submissions@amazon.com.

Happy Writing!
The Editor

Newsflash: SCBWI Summer Conference with The Editor

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Dear Readers…

SCBWI’s 2012 Summer Conference registration opens tomorrow, April 18, at 10am! DearEditor.com readers are getting this alert because a lot of you write for young people and this important annual 3-day event sells out—and the intensives on the extra day fill up almost immediately. If you were planning on registering, don’t delay. As you peruse the amazing schedule, note that The Editor will be there presenting the Current Market Report keynote, a breakout session on writing dialogue, an intensive on revising your MG/YA novel, and an intensive on creating youthful narrative sensibility. Read the rest of today’s DearEditor.com newsflash for details on her presentations; check out the full info on the SCBWI conference page.

Join The Editor for her 1.5-hour breakout session or her two 3.5-hour intensives at the 2012 SCBWI Summer Conference

Breakout Session – How to Talk Like a Teen When You’re So Not One: Writing Dialogue in YA/MG Fiction
Teen readers want to hear directly from the teen characters in their books. The dialogue you write must be able to entertain your young readers, intrigue them, inform them, comfort them, and, depending on which characters are moving their lips, sound like them. By applying the techniques in this session, you can craft successful dialogue for young adult fiction.

Intensive –  Going from Good to Great: Revising Your MG/YA Novel
This workshop teaches you how to analyze your YA/MG manuscript and arms you with techniques for revising the elements you find lacking. Participants must have completed a draft of a YA or MG novel.

Intensive – Writing for Teens? Then Think Like One
This workshop teaches strategies for creating a narrative sensibility that reflects the way teens and tweens think, and outlines techniques for writing that sensibility into a narrative voice that “clicks” with young readers. Participants must have completed at least three chapters of a YA or MG novel and should bring 3 copies of a brief (2 to 4 pages) excerpt from the manuscript to use in hands-on exercises.

Revision Week: Co-Authors Lin Oliver, Henry Winkler, & Theo Baker

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Dear Readers…

DearEditor.com’s Revision Week continues with co-authors Lin Oliver, Henry Winkler, and Theo Baker. All three authors team up today to discuss the part collaboration plays in the revision of series and chapter books for young readers.

Please join Lin, Henry, Theo, and The Editor for Day 4 of Revision Week, and find out how to win today’s “Free Partial Edit” from The Editor.

Lin Oliver has written several series with her co-authors—17 best-selling “Hank Zipzer” books and now three best-selling “Ghost Buddy” books with Henry Winkler, and the brand new “Sound Bender” series with Theo Baker—plus a series of her own, the “Who Shrunk Daniel Funk?” series. These prolific co-authors have learned a thing or two about revision. They’ve joined forces once again in an insightful tag-team interview for Revision Week.

*After the interview are instructions for entering today’s Free Partial Edit Giveaway.

How does revision work within a collaboration?

LIN:  The first step in revising with a collaborator is to agree on what you want to revise. Even when working with someone with whom you’re very attuned, you will always have differences of opinion, or differences in ear—how you hear the words. A lot of back and forth conversation is involved in deciding what changes you want to make in your manuscript, and often, one of the two partners has to compromise. It helps to know each other’s strengths and weaknesses, so you can fairly adjudicate your differences of opinion. Working with Theo on Sound Bender, he thinks I tend to go for the funny rather than the dramatic. He’s right, and knowing that helps us realize my limitations. I think he’s sometimes too long-winded, so I always want to trim his material. (He calls me Dr. Scissorhands.) You have to be very flexible in your negotiations so both parties come away feeling ownership of the final draft, and also very sensitive not to make it a critique of your partner’s talents but a decision of what works best at any given moment in the manuscript.

THEO: It’s completely different than working alone. For one thing, you always have a nominally sympathetic reader waiting for pages—so there’s no need to put drafts in a drawer to try to forget about them before revising. But while revision is sometimes much more difficult flying solo, revising with a collaborator can often be much more painful! If something doesn’t work for your partner—even if it’s something you love—it skips the drawer and goes directly into the garbage can.

When you’re writing a series, you know your characters well. How many drafts are needed once you get a series established? What kinds of things are you refining at that level?

LIN:  The first book in a series is always the most difficult because you are discovering your characters’ voices, peculiarities, habits, backstory. Many drafts are necessary to deepen your understanding and portrayal of your characters. I find that several books into the series, the voices come very naturally and require less conscious effort. However, plot is always a sticky point for me, and that always requires revision and tweaking to keep the tension going and the scenes relevant. I also find that in series, you have to be a strict cutter, because when you know the characters so well, it’s easy to let them ramble on a bit, and those digressions—although interesting—can really stall the story.

THEO: Though I’ve only written two books about the same characters, writing one book is enough to get to know your characters well. Too well, in fact. In writing Sound Bender 2, I just plodded along with my boys (and girls), and then after the fact, we went back and established most of the major characters so our readers wouldn’t be quite so lost! Readers may read books in a series continually, or they may space out the books by years. I think most readers, even very good ones, are mostly confused most of the time. So we try to help them as much we can with character info early and often. Makes the reading experience a little less tense.

How early does your editor come into each new book?

HENRY and LIN: Our editors are always involved in the concept phase—both formulating the concept for the series and in a conversation about the plot line in general. Usually, we have to submit a title early on in the process, for marketing purposes, so the title often helps define the concept. Then we go away and write the book, and the editor comes back to us with notes after we submit the first draft. Often there is a second set of notes, usually much more specific in nature, and we make those adjustments. That pass allows us to do a line polish of our own, having had some time and distance from the manuscript. That’s when we go through and take out a weak joke, an unnecessary adjective, a flabby verb, an unnecessary line of dialogue.

THEO: The editors come in at the very earliest stages—and are usually the ones who remind you that you owe them another book, and for the love of coffee, you should probably get started on it. They usually want a brief outline or synopsis up front—just to know that you’ve got a sound map to follow, so they can sleep at night. Editors are great at this stage; they read so much and in such a particular way that they can see problems way down the road. Once they’ve helped you with your map, then they leave you alone for several months—ostensibly so you can write.

Henry, the Ghost Buddy series is a new one for you and Lin. Did the first manuscript fall into place quickly, or did it take a few rounds to settle into the new characters and voices?

HENRY: As I remember, because we are now happily on our third Ghost Buddy, it did take a little longer than usual to do the first book in the series. Billy Broccoli and The Hoove, our main characters, were pretty clear. It was the supporting characters that needed to become fully alive to us. We also worked really hard on the rules of having a ghost in the story—to set a clear and consistent set of rules and hold ourselves to them. This is not an easy task. (Watch Henry and Lin talk about writing the Ghost Buddy series here.)

Lin, your new supernatural series “Sound Bender” (with Theo) is for older readers and has an edgier, more adventurous tone than your books with Henry. How has working with a new collaborator on a new project for a new audience affected your approach to shaping a story?

LIN: Well, it’s important to note that my new collaborator is also my son, which complicates the interaction in both blissful and complex ways. We have to work hard not to make this a mother-son relationship, but an interaction between two colleagues of equal ability. Theo has a great sense of adventure and is always very close to what our key readers … tween boys … are interested in. I always defer to him in those areas. I am a bear about staying on story, keeping the tension high, making sure each scene serves a purpose in advancing the story, keeping things pacey. Theo, I think, is willing to tolerate a more meditative pace. We bump into each other a lot on that spectrum…how fast to move the story, how much digression to include, how much scientific and historical fact to highlight. The happy news is that I believe both Sound Bender books have benefitted from our collaboration and specifically from our having to work out this very issue. They are deeper than they would have been if I had written them alone, and quicker than they might have been had Theo written them alone. I think this is one instance when compromise resulted in a better all around book.

Do you share your manuscripts with kids to test them out?

HENRY: No, we don’t. If we laugh in the room, it goes in the book. If the rhythms we come up with in telling the story land easily on the ear, it goes in the book. If the theme moves us emotionally, it becomes the book.

THEO: I share them with my inner child, but no actual kids. I was a tough and discerning eleven-year-old—most of them are; they can spot lies and phoniness a mile away. My inner child will respond right away to anything fake with a devastating eye-roll and a sarcastic, “Yeah right, that’s so stupid.” He’s tough, and it hurts every time.

Lin, do you use critique partners when you write your “Who Shrunk Daniel Funk?” series, which is not a collaboration?

LIN: I don’t use critique partners, but I have several first readers who are central to me. I always talk through the plot with Steve Mooser, my SCBWI partner of the last 40 years. He is invaluable when it comes to hearing a story and foretelling whether it will work. Plot is always the area where I need the most help. When it comes to actually writing the scenes, I’m pretty sure-footed with my particular comedic voice. However, I’m about to begin doing research on a new kind of novel for me, a multi-generational historical saga, and I’m hoping to use critique partners there. It’s a brand new tone for me, and I’m sure I’ll need smart feedback.

Can you share an experience of having a story problem you didn’t think you could solve but eventually did?

LIN: My story problems are always in the Second Act. I usually know the First Act, establishing the problem. And I usually know the Third Act, solving the problem. Where I stumble is in the middle, trying to create complications that are relevant to the story and build tension. In the second Sound Bender, which Theo and I just finished, we really struggled with the middle. Our hero, Leo, has to find the other half of a mysterious Siamese twin mask from Borneo. He uses his sound bending powers to do so. The middle of the story involves a trip to Borneo, and a journey down the river into the jungle (an homage to Conrad’s Heart of Darkness). What was really tough was how to make all the adventures on the river build tension and not be just exciting episodic events. In the end, we had to cut that act by at least half, to get rid of those scenes that were temporarily exciting but did not really contribute to the building of tension. It was miserable work, getting through that Second Act. We got lost on that damn river so many times before we could paddle our way out.

THEO: There’re so few rules in writing that I’ll latch onto anything that seems wise or helpful. One aphorism I like (and have no clue to its origin) is: If the narrative seems slow, that means you’re not focusing on the right things. (paraphrased)

If a story isn’t working, it seems flat, lifeless. And the reason why it feels lifeless is almost always because the main character is so overwhelmed with story and narrative beats that he can’t be himself, and can’t respond like a living person.

When I’m staring at a lifeless scene, one thing I like to do is what I call an “emotional draft.” When revising, it’s easy to get so bogged down in the weeds of language, story development, the “way it should be” that it can feel suffocating—both for you and the character. So the “emotional draft” is a blank page draft, where I just focus solely on what the characters are actually feeling in the moment, while momentarily forgetting about all the other work on that scene I’ve already done. It’s a very safe and playful exercise, and a great way to add life into empty words.

What’s the most drastic thing you’ve done to a story while revising?

HENRY and LIN: We usually have a very concise and clear outline before we start writing. What amazes us each time we write a book is that the story itself has a mind of its own and when we’re trying to go right, it often goes to the left. We have learned to faithfully follow, even if the result is a drastic change from the original plan.

LIN’s additional note: I often find I have to cut a character completely. I love to build in supporting roles, and on many occasions, have fallen in love with a character who doesn’t really have a vital role to play. I let myself write that character in the first draft, and then have to examine whether or not they’re just taking up space, no matter how charming I think they might be. I have an imaginary room in my house where those characters live. They’re all banging on the door trying to get into the next book. Some of them make it.

THEO: Short of incinerating entire drafts while sobbing, we’ve cut whole characters, whole finished chapters, whole subplots, etc. In our latest book, Sound Bender 2, we took a 140-page section and crunched it down into twenty-five compact pages. Lin says there’s nothing wasted in writing, but I think she’s full of it.

How do you know you’ve got the final draft?

HENRY and LIN: We know it’s done when we literally have come to the end of the story. Then we send it to our editors and get their thoughts. We carefully go over every thought and decide which ones resonate intellectually and emotionally. In the nineteen novels we have written together, we have never really had a major disagreement with our publishers that required us to change anything about what the book is that we imagined it to be.

LIN’s additional note: I have never read a published book of mine where I didn’t wince from wanting to go back and change it. I think this supports my belief that a book isn’t really done, it’s due. And thank goodness for that, or we’d just go on revising and tinkering forever.

THEO: There is no final draft. There are no endings, only countless beginnings. Just try to do your best work in the time you have, then beg and plead for another extension.

TODAY’S GIVEAWAY:

The Editor is giving away yet another FREE PARTIAL EDIT of your manuscript. Note that the winner of today’s giveaway IS eligible for Saturday’s grand prize Full Manuscript Edit Giveaway. Here are the rules, with a bonus entry available to DearEditor.com subscribers:

  1. Your manuscript can be of ANY GENRE or CATEGORY (for adults or children, fiction or non-fiction), including picture books.
  2. The partial edit will cover the FIRST CHAPTER of your manuscript. In the case of a picture book entry, the edit will cover the entire manuscript—but the manuscript cannot exceed 7 double-spaced, 12-pt font pages.
  3. Deadline: MIDNIGHT tonight, March 8, 2012, PST.
  4. Winner will be randomly selected using Randomizer.org and announced on March 9, 2012, in the DearEditor.com comments section and on the DearEditor.com Facebook page, and the winner will be notified directly via email.

TO ENTER:

One entry –  SEND EMAIL to DearEditor.com using the “Write to The Editor” button at the top of the blog or by clicking here. Type “Free Partial Edit Giveaway” in the subject line. In the body of the email, include the TITLE of your manuscript and YOUR FULL NAME. (If you have any difficulty with the contact button, send an email entry directly to dear-editor@hotmail.com.) Do not attach or embed any part of your manuscript in the entry.

Bonus entry – SUBSCRIBE. DearEditor.com subscribers get a bonus entry by sending a second email with “Subscriber’s Bonus Giveaway Entry” in the subject line and your title and full name in the body. (Note: the Editor will verify!) Not a subscriber yet? Then subscribe now by clicking on the “Subscribe” button at the top of DearEditor.com and then email your second entry.

Anyone who doesn’t follow these rules will be disqualified, at the Editor’s discretion.

Disclaimer: The Editor does not share or in any other way use your contact information; it’s collected solely for winner contact purposes at the end of the giveaway.

Good luck!

News: Dummies, Revision Workshop, FREE EDIT Giveaway

Dear Readers…

I’ve got great news about Writing Young Adult Fiction for Dummies, a revision workshop, and a FREE EDIT GIVEAWAY. Read on for the details…

Dear Readers…

On Monday I received an email from my editor for Writing Young Adult Fiction for Dummies saying, “You’re done!” All the words and periods are in place and the manuscript is now moving into production, headed for pub date July 5, 2011. This means three things:

1. It’s time for a new Free Edit Giveaway
Because that’s how I like to celebrate (well, that and chocolate). Check DearEditor.com on Friday (4/15/11) for the giveaway details.

2. My editorial hiatus is over
I am officially picking up my red pen again. You can read more about what and how I edit on this page or you can print this pdf which describes my services.

3. Announcing a revision workshop
Registration is open for the Cottonwood Intensive Revision Workshop, to be held May 21, 2011, in Cottonwood, CA (17 miles south of Redding, CA, and approx. 2 hours from Sacramento). I’ll be teaching at the event, which is dedicated to helping children’s book writers revise their young adult novels and picture books. The 1-day workshop is hosted by SCBWI’s California North/Central chapter, with Edgar Mystery Award nominee author Charlie Price and award-winning picture book illustrator, art director, designer, and educator Dr. Mira Reisberg filling out the faculty. For more information or to register (deadline May 1, 2011), contact scbwicanorthcentral@gmail.com, go to the conference website, or click here to view the conference flyer.

Okay, that covers this news break. Off now to get ready for the Free Edit Giveaway….

Happy writing!

The Editor

I Wrote It . . . Now What?

Dear Editor…

I have written several childrens stories and am seeking publication. Most are picture book style, two for YA. Some rhyme, giving an opportunity for interaction. My manuscripts are ready. I’m unsure of how to proceed. Any suggestions?

Sincerely,

Claudia

Dear Claudia…

You’ve done the work, now it’s time to do the homework. Study the Literary Market Place to figure out which publishers handle your kind of material—your themes, storytelling styles, and genres. Study books in stores to see which houses published the ones most like yours. Do the same for agents, if you decide to go that route, as agents are in the LMP and are often mentioned in a book’s acknowledgments. Then join the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators: www.scbwi.org. This national organization’s resources, forums, chapter speakers, and national conference presentations will educate you about the biz, the rules, and the players as you move into this next phase. Attend their chapter meetings and conferences to network with other writers and, potentially, agent and editor guest speakers. Your submission path will become clear as you immerse yourself in the children’s book community.

Happy writing!
The Editor