Manuscript Wishlist

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Last Updated: January 2nd, 2024

Well, dear writer friends. It’s that time.

I’m back open to queries at P.S. Literary, and here’s what I’m hoping to find in 2024. My major wishlist items have some of the same things from last year, and a few new tidbits.

But remember, just because an agent says they’re looking for something specific, it doesn’t mean they aren’t looking for something else.

  • Stories that celebrate neurodiversity, from authors who are themselves neurodivergent, both in fiction and non-fiction, Middle Grade, Young Adult, and Adult.

  • Joyful novels and memoirs about the adoptee experience, written by adoptees.

  • More in-verse projects! I was lucky enough to work with Kate Fussner on her debut, The Song of Us, and I’d love to find more books like that.

  • Genre-blending upmarket and literary fiction! This is a sweet spot for me in my agent life (see authors like Mike Chen, Alison Stine, Leslie J. Anderson, and Erica Boyce), so keep sending it to me.

  • High concept rom-coms! I read a lot of romantic comedy, and I’m eager to find more projects that go a bit out of the box! Tiana Smith’s upcoming The Spy and I and M.K. England’s All Fired Up are great examples.

To get an idea of what I like to read, my ten favorite books in 2023 were Olivia A. Cole’s Where the Lockwood Grows, Tehlor Kay Meija’s Sammy Espinoza’s Last Review, Carlyn Greenwald’s Sizzle Reel, Ashley Poston’s The Seven Year Slip, Jiordan Castle’s Disappearing Act, Wendy Xu’s The Infinity Particle, Jennifer Herrera’s The Hunter, Chloe Gong’s Immortal Longings, and Alix E. Harrow’s Starling House.

And of course, the books I’ve worked on in my agent life, which you can check out here.

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Genre Blending Literary & Adult Commercial Fiction

I'm looking for genre-blending fiction... books that pull a bit of genre into the literary. This is an evergreen request. Some of my favorites in that space include Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel, The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, and The Last One by Alexandra Olivia.

Great examples in my agent life include the books by Mike Chen, Alison Stine, Leslie K. Anderson, and Erica Boyce… stunning genre-blending literary novels, which dig into time travel, secret societies, cults, superheroes, climate disasters, and more, while tackling heavy themes around family and relationships. Make me cry, while surprising me chapter after chapter.

I’m also really hungry to find some great rom-coms. A few of my clients are working on them, and I’d just love to find some unique, high-concept romances, like I said above.

So… give me literary fiction that genre blends, commercial fiction that takes me somewhere unknown, and rom-coms that make me laugh and swoon.

Select Science Fiction & Fantasy

I'm a bit picky when it comes to sci-fi and fantasy novels. I love them. I read a ton of them. But they have to be accessible. What does that mean? It means that readers who don't traditionally pick up much sci-fi or fantasy, can pick up one of these novels, and enjoy it.

Some of my favorite sci-fi and fantasy reads include The Book of M by Peng Shepherd and Good Morning Midnight by Lily Brooks-Dalton. I also love anything Chuck Wendig, Kat Howard, Fran Wilde, and Delilah S. Dawson writes.

Select Non-Fiction

I’m a little all over the place in non-fiction, but specifically I’m trying to find more memoirs, essay collections, pop history, and wellness books. Please note, I’m not really looking for cookbooks anymore.

With memoir, I’m best suited for projects that read like a collection of essays. James Tate Hill’s Blind Man’s Bluff is a great example of a project I worked on in that space. Also Steven Underwood’s forthcoming Forever for the Culture.

When it comes to wellness, I’m looking for platformed writers who are experts in their respective topics, writing books in that space. For example, the projects I’ve done with Sophie Saint Thomas, circulating around sexuality, witchcraft, and cannabis, and Tawny Lara, and the work she does in the sobriety space.

Young Adult Fiction + Non-Fiction

I'm always hungry to find bright new voices in YA.

As for what I'm specifically looking for, that's a hard thing to pin down. I read widely in YA, and enjoy just about every genre in it. I love moving contemporary reads, thrilling sci-fi, and lush fantasy. I love diverse and inclusive Young Adult novels that reflect the world, and what the world could be.

My favorite YA novel of all time is a toss up between Hero by Perry Moore and The Rest of Us Just Live Here by Patrick Ness.

When it comes to my favorite YA authors, I've read every book by Becky Albertalli, Adam Silvera, Nova Ren Suma, Mindy McGinnis, Jeff Zentner, Brandy Colbert, Meg Medina, Bryan Bliss, Lamar Giles, Ashley Poston, and Nina LaCour.

I'd also love to see more YA non-fiction hit my inbox. Memoir, essay collections, you name it. My client Mary Kenney’s Game Changers, a collection of essays on overlooked women in the video game industry, is a good example of what I like.

Middle Grade Fiction + Nonfiction

I’m open to a bit of everything in the MG fiction and non-fiction space. To get an idea of what I’m looking for in MG non-fiction, check out the work my clients Robin Stevenson and Margeaux Weston are doing.

As for my taste, well, I’ve loved all the Middle Grade novels by Preeti Chhibber, Victoria Schwab, Roshani Choskhi, Erin Entrada Kelly, and Ashley Herring-Blake.

What I'm Not Looking For

And now, a quick rundown of what I'm not looking for, to save everyone's time. This isn’t meant to be harsh, just a list of what I don’t really enjoy, and would be a bad fit for.

  • Picture Books (pitch my colleague Maria or Adria!)

  • Angel & demon love stories, Heaven / Hell stories.

  • Adult epic fantasy or sci-fi. I’m not right for doorstoppers.

  • Military sci-fi.

  • Douglas-Adams-esque sci-fi.

  • Non-fiction about sports or politics.

  • Novels about suicide.

  • Your thriller about some white guy fighting terrorists. It’s bad. I’m gonna hate it.

  • Portals.

  • Main character is Death.

  • Novellas.

  • Main character is a bigot and learns a lesson at the expense of marginalized people.

  • Redemptive story arcs for abusers. Nope.

  • New Adult books.

  • Anything comped as "Lovecraftian" (he was racist, not interested)

  • Anything comped to Orson Scott Card (if I have to explain this, we can't work together)

  • Commercial fiction about sports (exceptions made for sports YA, I love sports YA!)

And that’s about it!

I hope this breakdown was helpful, and I wish you best of luck in your querying. Hopefully I’m a good fit!