Walden
House (Books & Stuff)
284 Hiram Street
Bracebridge, Ontario
Bracebridge, Ontario
Walden
House is a combined literary agency and micro-publisher. Founded
in Bracebridge, Muskoka, in April 2011, the company has been actively involved
in the preparation of its authors’ manuscripts, and assisting in the building
of their platforms and marketability prior to presenting them to prospective
clients.
“We first
concentrated on the YA genre and have now ventured into the self-help arena,”
says Brenda Paterson, the company’s co-founder. “Because we’re a new and small
company, we intend to keep the number of books we serve to a manageable
minimum. No manuscript is disregarded at this point. And we actually do read
them all.”
“Author-centric
is a term we use because we put the author first in all considerations,” adds
Paterson. “Walden House also encourages our authors to participate in promoting
not just their own work, but the work of other writers represented by the
company. We’re all on the same exciting adventure, and the success of one will
impact the success of the others.”
Although
based in Muskoka, Walden House currently represents authors from across North
America. Also unique to the company is its Editorial Selection Committee, a
group made up of volunteer readers, writers and editors who vet proposed
manuscripts. They represent various age groups (9-82), experience and are wide
spread geographically.
Although focusing
on its agency work (a number of its manuscripts are currently being considered
by publishers in Canada, the US and Europe, but no sales yet), Walden House
will consider publishing ventures with titles it feels have local appeal or
would appeal to niche markets. One such title, Alex Mortimer & The Beast
& Wildeor by Walden House co-founder Bryan Dearsley, a novel for young
readers, has sold almost 1,000 copies in Muskoka through local bookstores and
venues such as the RMS Segwun steamship, aboard which some of the action
of the book takes place.
Query
Brenda at: info@waldenhousebooks.com
Your
submission should include:
1. A brief description of your project.
2. Author bio, including published writing, awards, professional or
personal contacts that may be relevant.
3. A vision of how to market the book and to what demographic.
4. The first three chapters of your manuscript double-spaced.
5. Only e-submissions will be accepted.
Brian
Henry will be leading a "Writing
for Children and for Young Adults" workshop
in Hamilton on February 9 (details here).
Also, he'll be leading "How
to Get Published" workshops
on March 16 in Kingston (details here)
and on March 17 in Peterborough (details here).
To register, email: brianhenry@sympatico.ca
But probably the best single step you can take toward getting manuscript ready for publication is to join one of the “Next Step” or “Intensive” creative writing courses. Starting in January, Brian will be leading “Next Step” courses in Mississauga (details here) and in Georgetown (details here). He’ll be leading “Intensive” courses in Burlington (details here) and in Mississauga (details here).
But probably the best single step you can take toward getting manuscript ready for publication is to join one of the “Next Step” or “Intensive” creative writing courses. Starting in January, Brian will be leading “Next Step” courses in Mississauga (details here) and in Georgetown (details here). He’ll be leading “Intensive” courses in Burlington (details here) and in Mississauga (details here).
See Brian's full schedule here, including writing workshops and creative writing courses in Kingston, Peterborough, Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Georgetown, Milton, Oakville, Burlington, St. Catharines, Hamilton, Dundas, Kitchener, Guelph, London, Woodstock, Orangeville, Newmarket, Barrie, Orillia, Gravenhurst, Sudbury, Muskoka, Peel, Halton, the GTA, Ontario and beyond.