Asked and Answered

In this month’s Asked and Answered feature, the Early Career Committee answered the following question: “What book are you most looking forward to in 2018?” Check out their answers below!

I can’t wait for Grim Lovelies, by Megan Shepherd! All her books are must-purchases, but this dark, magical tale set in opulent contemporary Paris is an absolute standout.  –Hannah Allaman, Assistant Editor, Disney-Hyperion

I am so looking forward to Angela Cervantes’ Me, Frida, and the Secret of the Peacock Ring (Scholastic, March 2018). I love middle grade artsy mysteries that draw from real-life figures and legends. After visiting Mexico for the first time in the last few years and getting a tour of Frida and Diego’s Casa Azul, I have grown all the more enamored with the iconic Frida Kahlo. I’m eager to find out how this mystery unfolds–and what threads might be woven in from Frida’s life. Plus, the cover is stunning! – Jessica Anderson, Assistant Editor, Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group

The book I am most looking forward to reading in 2018 is The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin. There is nothing I love more than family sagas, especially ones with siblings that couldn’t be more different from each other and this one has a very interesting twist to it! –Lauren Carr, Publicity Coordinator, Scholastic

In 2018, I am most looking forward to Peter Brown’s The Wild Robot EscapesThe Wild Robot is one of my top ten favorite books of all time, so I preordered its sequel back in May!  The first book was a beautiful take on friendship, community, and finding one’s purpose, and I can’t wait to see our heroine, the robot Roz, in a new environment, faced with new challenges. –Stevie Durocher (Chair), School & Library Marketing Coordinator, Random House Children’s Books

Like so many other readers, I cannot wait for the publication of Cynthia Rylant’s first standalone novel in 20 years, Rosetown. There is a sense of nostalgia for book lovers, young and old, and while the book takes place in the early 1970s, the problems main character Flora faces will ring true to anyone who has dealt with divorce and making new friends. –Jessica Harold, Marketing Assistant, Simon & Schuster Children’s Books

In 2018, I’m really looking forward to On the Come Up by Angie Thomas because I loved The Hate U Give and I’m also looking forward to Aru Shah and the End of Time by Roshani Chokshi because I loved Indian folk lore as a kid and I’m excited to see what the first book from Rick Riordan’s new imprint is like. –Aneeka Kalia, Editorial Assistant, Penguin Young Readers

I’m really looking forward to reading From Twinkle, with Love by Sandhya Menon. Her first book, When Dimple Met Rishi was such a fun, adorable, and relatable read, and I can’t wait to see what’s in store in her latest book! –Shifa Kapadwala (CBC Liaison), Publicity Manager, The Children’s Book Council and Every Child a Reader

Sadie by Courtney Summers—I saw the cover reveal the other day and knew instantly that I had to have it! Can’t wait for September! –Elizabeth Lynch, Assistant Editor, HarperCollin’s Children’s Books

To say I’m looking forward to reading Puddin’ by Julie Murphy is an understatement. I loved Dumplin’, and I’ve just finished reading Murphy’s last novel, Ramona Blue. I want more! May 2018 can’t come soon enough. –Angela Taldone, Design Assistant, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Q&A with Rich Thomas, VP, Publishing Director at HarperCollins Children’s Books


Tell us a little about your role at Harper. What’s your elevator pitch for what you do within the Children’s editorial department—and how does it differ from what other Harper teams do?

The simplest way to sum it up is to say that I lead a team of editors whose goal is to get kids reading using familiar characters, popular brands and inventive formats. We strongly believe that these kinds of books can be gateways for reluctant readers as well as quality reading experiences for avid ones. Our team is different in that the model requires a real varied kind of editorial approach. A relatively small number of the books on our list come from agents. Instead, we partner with licensors and identify writers and, working with design, artists, who are comfortable with a work for hire model, where they don’t hold any rights. We also, through our IP team, HarperInk, develop concepts and characters here in house, and then hire writers and artists to help us develop them into books. For the celebrity books we publish, it’s a matter of identifying up and coming or overnight success stories and approaching them.  Finally, the HarperFestival team is committed to publishing quality novelty books, and this requires contacts with packagers and foreign publishers who have expertise in everything from paper engineering to book-plus and product design. So, the main difference is how we source our content. But the editorial process can be different, too—we sometimes write books in house because we can’t share sensitive licensed materials with an outside author, or because we know better than anyone else what our licensors want to see.

What does your day to day look like?

Lots of meetings! 😊 Kidding aside, it depends on the day. Sometimes it’s a day brainstorming new novelty concepts or IP ideas; others it’s meeting with a production team on a film or TV show to get a sense of the DNA of their property so we can carry that over into our books; and every so often I still have an opportunity to edit, which are some of my favorite days! I do spend a lot of time sharing creative guidance with the team, and working with them and Harper’s fantastic design team. I’m always looking at our list to make sure we’re staying true to the philosophy that we’re committed to, which is publishing quality commercial books that’ll get the greatest number of kids hooked on reading. We also have to be nimble—especially with the celebrity and licensed publishing pieces of the job—so I try to spend at least a part of every day reading the trades, watching what’s trending in the social/streaming landscape, and generally keeping my finger on the pulse of pop culture.

What was your first job in publishing? How did you end up doing what you do now?

My first job in publishing was as an Editorial Assistant at the Princeton Review Publishing, which was part of a test-prep company that would give you strategies on how to beat the SATs. Our books were published by Random House so I got my first taste of big league publishing early on. The first books I worked on were AMERICA’S TOP INTERNSHIPS and THE INTERNSHIP BIBLE. I was going to school (undergrad) full time and working about 30ish hours a week. It was exhausting but I found I really loved the editorial process and decided that when I graduated I wanted to stay in publishing. I always loved kids books and comic books / graphic novels, and ultimately wanted to land there. But my first full time job out of college was with Macmillan, where I worked on reference books about pets—dogs, cats, birds, fish, horses, and my favorite—tarantulas! After about two years with Macmillan I moved over to Disney, then to DC Comics and finally back to Disney which is where, of course, I acquired all my kids experience. It was great because we published books on our own, but also licensed books to most of the Big 5 and smaller publishers, so I got to work with people all over the industry at so many different houses. After about 20 years, I found myself here at Harper which given the rich history and amazing frontlist has been a real dream come true.

How do you determine what’s going to work and what isn’t in today’s children’s book market? What have you found are the best ways to strengthen that muscle and develop your own taste?

So much of what we do in this group in particular is watching trends –even outside of publishing—and seeing where our culture in general is going and responding to that. Or, better than that, the holy grail, catch something right before it becomes huge and riding that wave of success. The question of taste is an interesting one as it applies to this kind of publishing: As a child of the 70’s and 80’s I often have to check myself and say, yeah, YOU think this is really cool, but what would the 8 year old reader you’re publishing for think? Those are sobering, and often very depressing moments! 😊

What advice would you give to a young professional in the industry?

I’ll make a pretty blanket statement here, but in my experience you know– intuitively and unambiguously– very early on if this is where you want to be taking your professional life. It won’t always be easy, you’ll have difficult projects, agents, authors, illustrators, and coworkers. But if you know you want to do it then stick with it. Even taking all of those complexities I mentioned into account, I don’t think there’s ever been a night in my whole career where I left the office and asked myself why I chose to do this for a living. On the other hand, if you’re not sure this is what you want to be doing, or if you know this isn’t what you want to be doing, then you might want to evaluate shifting gears while you’re still young. The more entrenched you become in this very tight knit industry the more difficult it becomes to escape it—bwahahahaha!

Just for fun—what’s the one book you wish you had published?

It’s not really a book, so apologies if that’s cheating, but I think it would have been the first Spider-Man comic book, Amazing Fantasy #15. It was an example of one of those rare moments where a throwaway 12-page story turned an entire genre on its head and disrupted and upended an entire industry. And I do believe the kind of story it told—relatable, everyday characters, living in the real world with real problems but finding themselves in extraordinary circumstances—changed the way we tell stories in popular culture not just in books, but across all media. I’d love to do that here at Harper, break new ground, do something that’s not been done before, and set the tone for years or decades to come. The team here is so talented, creative, hard-working and driven that if there’s anywhere something like that could happen it would be here.

Littler Women: A Modern Retelling

My mom and I have always loved Little Women. She tried so hard when I was young to share her favorites from her own childhood—namely, Nancy Drew and Little House on the Prairie—but I never took to any of them like I did Little Women. We both periodically reread it (though there is one part that we always skip for being too boring—ten points if you can guess which part), and when I saw that Simon & Schuster was publishing this middle grade retelling, I had to tell my mom right away. She, of course, ordered it, read it, and passed it along to me—and it was so worth it!

In Laura Schaefer’s absolutely darling version, the March sisters get a slight update (Meg is a fashionista! Someone has a secret crush!), but their sisterly camaraderie still holds the same charm. As they deal with the changes and tensions that come along with growing up (but never apart), including getting to know their new neighbors the Lawrences, the girls teach the same valuable lessons about family and friendship as in the original. The recipes and craft projects at the end of each chapter add a bit of fun to what could be considered by some (not me) to be an old-fashioned kind of story. All in all, this is a sweet introduction to one of the greatest sister books ever written. (PS: I’m a Beth.)

The Prince and the Dressmaker

If you want to read a book that will stay with you forever, read Jen Wang’s The Prince and the Dressmaker.  This graphic novel is nothing short of masterful.  I smiled from the first page to the last and often found myself going back over pages and panels to experience them again. 

Despite its elaborate costumes, fancy parties, and majestic settings, The Prince and the Dressmaker is not your average fairy tale.  But it is most definitely a tale that needs to be heard.  Jen Wang tells a story of identity that feels at times scary and impossible but also comforting and hopeful.  She explores stigma and societal expectations with grace and truth.  On the page, Jen experiments with composition throughout the book to keep the visual experience as exciting and beautiful as the story being told.  Her art is soft and sweet and often powerfully simple.

The Prince and the Dressmaker will make you laugh and cry and swoon and hope.  Read this book.