Four Weeks: Frankfurt Book Fair Preparation from a Foreign Rights perspective

In four weeks the first wave of Agents will be flying out to Frankfurt for the Frankfurt Book Fair. Gulp.

In actual fact, we started the preparation for FBF way before today – I received the first request for a meeting on 16 June! We spend the large part of the summer filling up our schedules – one meeting every half an hour from 9:00 – 18:00 Wednesday to Friday at the Fair, then the pre-Fair meetings at the Hessischer Hof on Monday and Tuesday.

As we have so many agents attending the Fair, it is important to be strategic and plan who should meet with whom. For example, the Book Agents will want to meet with editors who publish their authors. The Foreign Rights team will meet with publishers from their territories, and we’ll always try to meet with new publishers as often as possible. After months of scheduling for 6 agents, by 14 September we are left with a beautifully busy schedule. Some could almost say a work of art. Or maybe that’s just me.

This year our summer was filled with a particularly exciting project – our shiny new Rights Guide which is now unveiled on our website. ‘H-Amazing Hattie’ (there’s no synonym for amazing beginning with H, who knew?) took charge, but collectively we all worked together to create something that will incite awe, and envy, but most importantly help us sell our books to publishers.

Sometimes we have to make cut-throat decisions: we want to make sure each and every author gets the best possible attention, but timing is crucial and sometimes that means holding off from including their book for this Fair.  Every book has its Fair, and sometimes discussing a book before it’s been delivered, or sold in the UK can scupper its chances selling internationally.

So much work and thought goes into each and every meeting and having the right tools at hand is vital! 

by the Blake Friedmann foreign rights team

Anneliese Mackintosh Debut Novel To Cape

Penguin Random House imprint Jonathan Cape has acquired a debut novel by award-winning, critically acclaimed short-story writer Anneliese Mackintosh.

Editorial Director Alex Bowler signed UK and Commonwealth rights to SO HAPPY IT HURTS by Mackintosh from Juliet Pickering at Blake Friedmann Agency, following an auction.

Bowler said: 'SO HAPPY IT HURTS is the story of a year in the life of Ottila McGregor. A particularly significant year, given that thirty-year-old Ottila has led what you might call a 'colourful life' to date. But now she's going to give up the drink and plough a monogamous furrow and become so happy it hurts. But life, of course, doesn't work like that. In this book Anneliese has conjured a remarkable, hilarious and starkly honest voice; a beautifully confused and ever-hopeful heroine, who you can't help but root for; and a book – a grangerised scrapbook of a diary, composed of receipts, emails, a boyfriend's note rescued from the bin, and various other found objects – that looks like nothing else. An infectious, one-off of a novel, from an uncategorisable young writer with the brightest of futures.'

Anneliese Mackintosh is the author of short story collection ANY OTHER MOUTH, published by Freight Books in June 2014. It won the Green Carnation Prize, and was shortlisted for the Saltire Society's First Book Award and Edge Hill Short Story Prize. The Guardian praised ANY OTHER MOUTH for being 'a fantastic, cleanly focused book that's hilarious and heartbreaking", The Independent said of Anneliese, 'Mackintosh is a real talent and ANY OTHER MOUTH is remarkable', and The List called her "one of the UK's most exciting new voices"

SO HAPPY IT HURTS is due for publication in Spring 2017. Audio rights were sold at auction to Audible.

THREE SHORT STORIES FROM JELLYFISH BY JANICE GALLOWAY TO BE BROADCAST ON BBC RADIO 4

Next Sunday at 19:45 the first of three short stories from JELLYFISH by Janice Galloway will be broadcast on BBC Radio 4. Following the success of her 'anti-memoirs' THIS IS NOT ABOUT ME and ALL MADE UP, the novelist, poet and frequent collaborator with artists and musicians, returns to short fiction with JELLYFISH, published in June by Freight Books. The title story is an exquisite tale set between childhood and independence, and is going to be read on Sunday by the author herself.

Listen to the stories on iPlayer here.

In this sparkling and powerful new collection, Janice Galloway takes on David Lodge's assertion – ‘Literature is mostly about having sex and not much about having children; life's the other way round’ and scent-marks her multi-layered fiction with what she believes to be the greater truth. JELLYFISH contains razor-sharp tales of two of the most powerful human experiences from one of our most acclaimed authors. The collection has been longlisted for the Frank O’Connor Short Story Prize 2015.

Janice Galloway was born in Ayrshire in 1955. She is the author of three novels, two collections of short stories and, most recently, two memoirs. She has won and been shortlisted for numerous literary prizes, including the Whitbread First Novel and Scottish Book of the Year. Her radio work includes two series for BBC (LIFE AS A MAN and IMAGINED LIVES) and programmes on music and musicians. 

Praise for JELLYFISH:

‘Foreboding floats through the fourteen tales … Reminiscent of Sylvia Plath in its black humour and visceral imagery … These deft short stories show why publishers should have more faith in the form … Exquisite similes and witty metaphors rise up and sting the senses like the eponymous jellyfish. With this electrifying volume Galloway proves herself a truly powerful writer who deserves to be much better known.’ – The Independent

‘An exquisite short-story collection … Previously very much a city writer, here the natural world encroaches on Galloway’s work from the title onwards, both indifferent and essential.’ – The Guardian

'This is a short story collection to savour, by one of the foremost Scottish writers of her generation.' – Irish Times

DAVID GILMAN’S DEFIANT UNTO DEATH PUBLISHED IN PAPERBACK TODAY BY HEAD OF ZEUS

DEFIANT UNTO DEATH, by the award-winning screenwriter and author David Gilman, is out today in paperback from Head of Zeus. This action-packed sequel to Amazon #1 bestseller MASTER OF WAR follows the adventures of Thomas Blackstone, a stonemason-turned-archer during the Hundred Years' War.

It is six years since Thomas Blackstone fought at Calais and his reputation is now established, with two children and a fortified manor house in Normandy from which he offers protection to his villagers. King John II sees conspiracy at every corner, the French–English truce has broken down and the war continues, with the Prince of Wales devastating the South. When Blackstone helps take control of a vital castle for the English allies and enrages the King, he finds himself in conflict with an old enemy, a vicious mercenary, known as le prêtre sanguinaire – the Savage Priest. This is a man who once pursued his wife, Christiana, and a terrible secret Blackstone has kept from her is revealed. From a last ditch defence on the blood-soaked field of Poitiers, to single combat high in the Alps, Blackstone might yet defy death but he cannot defy his destiny.

The MASTER OF WAR series has been sold  in Brazil, Hungary, Spain and the Czech Republic.

 

Praise for the MASTER OF WAR series:

‘Move over Bernard Cornwell!  Historical fiction at its best’ – Historical Novel Society

‘A violent, tempestuous, glorious novel. I was gripped from the very beginning and the book never once let go of me until its end, by which point I was exhausted by its intensity, thrills and trauma. Among my top historical fiction reads of 2015.' – For Winter Nights

 ‘See-saw drama at its best… so many reasons why, when life tried to encourage me to put the book down, I resisted stridently. This is writing that twists around seldom seen hist-fict depth.’ – Ani Johnson, The Bookbag

 ‘If you only read one historical debut this year, make it this one. The prose is sharper than a bodkin arrow, the pace faster than thought and to be honest it was a book that I just couldn’t put down. Great stuff.’ – Gareth Wilson, Falcata Times

 Visit David’s Website

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JANICE AND JOY (AND JULIET)

Literary agent Juliet Pickering looks again at THE TRICK IS TO KEEP BREATHING, recently published as a Vintage Classic. What do you ask the author who has been asked everything? Not only do we find out, but we get to hear Janice Galloway's brilliant response in this special dual blog.

Juliet

I was introduced to THE TRICK IS TO KEEP BREATHING when I began working with Janice, in my mid-twenties, and what I found in it then was a certain amount of comfort. Here was a woman, Joy Stone, who was as confused about life and what it offered as I was. There is great sadness in the novel, but also great humour. Hardly any other book I’d read unpicked the mind of a woman in a way that felt so authentic and challenging (although THE YELLOW WALLPAPER is up there). As we learn of Joy's situation, piece by piece, Janice uses small excerpts of text that sit in the margins to take us occasionally out of the narrative, reflecting Joy’s more erratic thoughts, and this felt – and still feels – an innovative way of using her words – a different way of reading them that reminds the reader so effectively of Joy’s mental state. One of the many reasons I admire Janice is for this bold originality and imagination, and for using words to portray something extra to the reader in an entirely natural way; she’s unafraid to write as she feels, rather than to the conventions of a regular text.

On re-reading THE TRICK IS TO KEEP BREATHING I was surprised by how strongly I felt about Joy and her story, all over again. THE TRICK… is ageless. It keeps coming to mind in odd moments: the particular dynamics of Joy’s relationship with her sister, and how resonant this is of many strained familial ties; the brief comfort a new (or old) relationship can offer when we are lonely, no matter how troubled that relationship might be; the idiosyncracies of many colleagues and bureaucrats, who fail to understand any personal complexities, but often view a person in terms of problems and solutions. The novel offers a wry, real account of a young woman's breakdown as she tries to cope with the death of a lover. We see the struggle to get through each day alone – very alone – and how Joy tries to help herself, even as she’s often helpless. When it comes to finding this help she needs elsewhere, people aren’t always kind or responsive.

Eight years after first reading the novel I am struck by the alone-ness of each of us, that we really have to forge our own way through life, often despite those around us, and that a little kindness goes a long way. Joy’s survival felt more tender, more fragile, this time around. But Joy emerges resilient, and alive. If being alive is all she is capable of in the middle of everything happening to her, it feels like a real achievement. Perhaps we should all stop and consider that just being alive in the midst of our lives is an achievement for us, too.

I wondered what I might ask Janice about her first novel that she hadn't been asked before (a probably impossible task, since THE TRICK is now on school curriculums and Janice does regular school visits!). One of the questions I had was what Janice might say to Joy, if she met her now. Would it be only "the trick is to keep breathing", or would there be some other crumb of advice that Joy might respond to? If we meet a Joy, could we say anything to them that might go some small way to helping, when they need it most?

Janice

This is difficult to respond to! I guess it has been hard enough for you to go first because we’re used to being private with a book. That’s one of the luxuries books offer – one-to-one sharing of ideas and complex feelings, with a stranger who will never see you blush. In some ways, Joy's kind of a stranger to me too, certainly after decades.

I hope it doesn’t sound odd to say I didn’t make her up: she was somewhere fully formed and I wrote her down. Chekhov: 'The task of a writer is not to solve the problem but to state the problem correctly.' It’s up to me to describe a character accurately, whoever he or she is. Joy learns 'the trick is to keep breathing' from a literal truth; i.e. you can’t swim till you learn to breathe while you’re doing it. Through literalism comes simplicity: the most basic recognitions can transform the complexities we would otherwise talk ourselves into. Metaphors refresh perspective. Managing to keep going is the first step in everything, and a first step is a start. It’s not the saying of it, or the reading of it that makes it true: you don’t learn much from simply reading, for crying out loud! You learn from thinking about experience and a book is a presentation of life experience. Plots, my ass. Plot is a thread through the labyrinth, that’s all. Recognition is what makes someone love a book, not the unravelling of a satisfactory device.

What I want to do is to write enough to draw a reader in enough to let it feel real, so that a reader works hard to make decisions about what they’d do. It’s great to hear dramatically different things about characters from readers – it means they’ve used their own thoughts, their own experience, to have their own opinion. Chekhov: 'Don't tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass.' My job’s to make stuff – er – visceral. Felt.

What would I say if I met her!? Nothing – she’s a book! The reader has to reach their own conclusions! And if you meet a Joy (my guess is you have), wait till she speaks first. We’re throwing out lifelines all the time: just catch.

(Originally published on the Vintage Books blog)