Dear Bread Loafer,
The form below asks you to choose your your top choices of agents and editors to meet with while on campus, if desired.
To prepare for your agent/editor meeting, please read the Guest Meetings Overview and FAQ below.
Bread Loaf Writers' Guest Meetings Overview and FAQ
Many Bread Loaf participants have found meeting with publishing professionals to be a very positive and helpful experience during their time at Bread Loaf. The editors and agents also enjoy these conversations very much. Our purpose in providing these meetings is to give you a chance to understand the publishing process a little more clearly by hearing from people directly involved in the industry. Many participants have told us that these personalized meetings have allowed them to deal with matters of publication in a matter-of-fact way, with more understanding and less apprehension.
These meetings also give editors and agents the opportunity to meet you. The meetings are not “tests,” just early introductions, and gathering information is the primary goal. The guests are here for only a couple of days or so, and we have not asked them to offer editorial feedback on written work, so they are not expecting to read your work here at the conference. If they are interested, they will let you know that they would like you to submit a sample or a manuscript, but in general they are just looking to give you some concrete advice according to the stage you are at with your writing. Therefore there should not be any sense of disappointment on either side if the meeting does not lead to an invitation to submit work.
You will receive a sheet in your registration packet upon arrival to Bread Loaf on Wednesday, August 16 that lists your meeting details.
Here are some common questions.
How can I make use of my time with an agent or editor from a publishing house? What can I accomplish?
PLEASE COME PREPARED: Participants should come prepared with questions for the guest with whom they are meeting, whether the questions are about a particular project that the writer is trying to advance or about the publishing world in general.
If you have a finished manuscript or are in the process of developing one you may share your working pitch with the agent or editor. They can help you refine it and give you a better understanding of what is important in the presentation of your work. Or you can ask questions about publishing and get feedback about where you are in your writing process. For instance, a guest might be able to comment about whether or not you are ready to send out a manuscript; about your concept for a book; about the submission process at their particular agency or publishing house.
How should I prepare for a meeting with a magazine editor?
PLEASE COME PREPARED: Participants should come prepared with questions for the guest with whom they are meeting, whether the questions are about a particular project that the writer is trying to advance or about the magazine publishing world in general. Your meeting with the editor is an opportunity for you to have a conversation that will be useful to you, whether you’re new to submitting or have published in magazines before.
It’s a good idea to familiarize yourself with their magazine first. One option is to have a conversation with the editor about specific pieces in the magazine. This can help you to understand that magazine’s particular character and what the editor is looking for in a submission. You could also ask about the submission process if you wish. You might want feedback about previous submission experiences, or to talk about whether you’re ready to submit your work.
This year's guests are:
Ibrahim Ahmad, Executive Editor, Viking Penguin
Miriam Altshuler, Agent, DeFiore & Company
Ian Bonaparte, Agent, Janklow & Nesbit
Kevin Craft, Editor, Poetry Northwest
Henry Dunow, Agent, Dunow, Carlson & Lerner Literary Agency
Emily Everett, Managing Editor, The Common
Lindsay Garbutt, Interim Co-Editor, Poetry
Hafizah Geter, Agent, Janklow & Nesbit
Carmen Giménez, Director and Publisher, Graywolf Press
Amy Hundley, VP & Executive Editor, Grove Atlantic
Jenna Johnson, Executive Editor, Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Lisa Lucas, SVP and Publisher, Pantheon & Schocken at Penguin
Gerald Maa, Director and Editor, Georgia Review
Calvert Morgan, Executive Editor, Riverhead
Ethan Nosowsky, Editorial Director, Graywolf Press
Ladette Randolph, Editor-in-Chief, Ploughshares
Martha Rhodes, Publisher and Executive Editor, Four Way Books
Leslie Sainz, Managing Editor, New England Review
Janet Silver, Agent and Senior Partner, Aevitas Creative Management
Anjali Singh, Agent, Ayesha Pande Literary
Ashley E. Wynter, Editor, Copper Canyon Press
Jenny Xu, Editor, Ecco/Harper Collins
Thank you,
Noreen Cargill and Jason Lamb