fbpx

Can You Submit with Confidence?

Now you can with the Complete Submission Checklist!
For a Limited Time…

Are You Losing Your Readers?

Keep Your Readers Avidly Engaged to the End and Wanting More!
For a Limited Time…

Revise Your Manuscript Like a Publishing House Insider!

For a Limited Time…

Who You Should Be Sending Your Children's Book To

Now, normally when people ask me who they should submit their work to, I point out that they need to send their submissions to someone who is going to appreciate it. There is no point in sending a glorious, future award winning, historical fiction love story to an editor that only works on action/adventure manuscripts and has publicly said that love is a waste of time. That person is not going to like your book, no matter how good it is.

So in order to gauge a children’s book editor’s tastes, you need to do a little research on him/her.

There are several ways to do this:

  1. See if they’ve posted preferences anywhere.

    Does the children’s editor have a blog (like me) or is he/she specifically requesting a certain type of manuscript? Because that’s the best way to know your manuscript is going to someone who will actually look at it if the person says they are actively seeking something.

  2. Check the various children’s writers’ boards.

    Just because you haven’t found the blog post or announcement doesn’t mean someone else didn’t find it. Look around at places like SCBWI or Verla Kay‘s site. I know my picture book submission guidelines have been put up there in the past.

However, sometimes you won’t be able to find the information this way. Then you’ll have to be sneakier to figure out what those finicky children’s editors like. You can:

  1. Ask around.

    Perhaps you know someone who has worked with that editor before. What did he/she tell your friend about his/her preferences?

  2. Read things the editor has worked on.

    This is the method that is least precise, but probably the one you’ll most often have to rely on. After all, editors do work on projects that they haven’t acquired and that might not be to their tastes. I know I have. However, this will be your best bet on getting to know your editor when you don’t have any personal or online intel. As I’ve said before, to find out what the editor has worked on, simply go to any book that is in the same genre as yours and look at the acknowledgments page. A majority of the time, the author has thanked his/her editor. Voila. You now have a potential submission target.