Prologue
A novel is finished. Eight months later, a printed book appears on shelves. What happens in those eight months?
A limited-run podcast following See You in the Cosmos from manuscript to printed book, featuring interviews with the publishing insiders who worked on it. Listen below, on Apple Podcasts, or your favorite podcasting app. There’s an RSS feed too.
A novel is finished. Eight months later, a printed book appears on shelves. What happens in those eight months?
The manuscript is attached to an email, and that email is sent to editors at various publishing houses. The person sending it? The literary agent.
Even before See You in the Cosmos was sold to US and UK publishers, it was sold in Germany. Here's how it happened.
See You in the Cosmos was jointly acquired by two editors, one in the US and UK. We meet those two editors.
We go deeper in the editing process with Jess Garrison and Anthea Townsend, and talk about the differences between young adult and middle grade.
We talk with art director Jacqui McDonough about designing the cover.
As See You in the Cosmos launches this week in the US, UK, and rest of the English-speaking world, we look back on the internal launches that took place within the publishing houses roughly one year ago.
We've come back to where we began our story: roughly eight months out from publication. We pause for a moment before digging into the even more behind-the-scenes – and invisible – aspects of the publishing process.
You’ve met my editors; now meet my copyeditors.
We've already talked about the cover. Now we talk to designer Jason Henry about the book's interior.
See You in the Cosmos was born out of audio; this week, we talk to producer Karen Dziekonski about the making of the audiobook.
They say that everything's bigger in Texas. That's especially the case with libraries. I bring my microphone to the Texas Library Association's annual conference.
Media coverage around this book and others like it don’t happen by accident; they come as a result of the persistent efforts of the book publicist.
See You in the Cosmos is on the shelves of most bookstores in the English-speaking world. Convincing them to stock it is in large part the responsibility of the publisher sales rep.
We’ve talked a bit about marketing in past episodes; this week we go more in depth with Julia Teece from Penguin Random House (UK) and Alexis Watts from Penguin Young Readers (US).
This week we talk once again with our Penguin Young Readers publicists Lindsay Boggs and Kaitlin Kneafsey, and with our sales rep John Dennany, about putting together the book tour.
In our finale to the podcast, we talk to one last person at the publishing house: the publisher. We speak to Lauri Hornik, president and publisher of Dial Books for Young Readers.
A few updates from 2021, and a sample of my new podcast, BookSmitten.