Transatlantic Agency
2 Bloor Street East
Suite 3500
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
https://www.transatlanticagency.com/
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Transatlantic Agency is a leading literary management company with a team of 20 experienced
agents based in cities across North America. They offer a full spectrum of
career representation to authors (Adult, Children’s & YA, and illustrators)
and storytellers (Speakers, Industry leaders & Influencers) across all
genres and formats for book, content development, speaking and TV & Film.
Transatlantic represents
more than 700 American, Canadian and internationally bestselling and award-winning
clients. Their clients’ books range from commercial to literary for fiction and
nonfiction, graphic novels and picture books, which regularly appear on notable
bestseller lists across North America and have won major awards such as the
Newbery Medal (U.S.), the Giller Prize (Canada), Michael L. Printz Honor Book
(U.S.), and the Governor General’s Award for both adult and children’s
literature (Canada).
Four of their agents are open
to queries:
Samantha Haywood is President of the Transatlantic Agency. She has extensive experience selling authors in North America for publication and TV/film representation. She launched her client list with Transatlantic Agency in 2004 after working in the international rights departments of Random House of Canada and Westwood Creative Artists.
Samantha represents a diverse and vibrant client
list of novelists, memoirists, investigative journalists, graphic novelists,
cookbook authors and thought leaders. Samantha represents international rights
for the renown publisher, Drawn & Quarterly. She is also a founding member
and former President of PACLA, the Professional Association of Canadian
Literary Agents.
She is
not usually open to queries, but she is now.
Samantha Haywood is
looking for a plurality of voices – stories and authors of all backgrounds are
encouraged! Her objective in here client list are originality and diversity.
In fiction, she’s looking
for literary fiction to upmarket commercial fiction of all types. Getting more
specific, yes to: smart contemporary fiction, upmarket women’s fiction and
cross-over/hybrid style novels with speculative elements. Yes to literary
thrillers and upmarket mystery with some cozy mysteries and historical fiction.
In nonfiction, she
prefers narrative nonfiction, especially on culturally relevant topics. Some
examples: sexuality/gender; investigative reportage; outstanding memoirs (must
be truly original or well-known subjects); environmental issues; historical
narratives handled in refreshing ways and true crime with societal
implications. “Essentially, I’m looking for a strong narrative drive and
distinctive voice at all times.”
She’s also seeking full
length graphic novels with author and illustrator as one creator, or already
teamed-up. Graphic novel memoirs, biographies, travel narratives and other
nonfiction graphica also welcome.
Query
Samantha at: querysamantha@transatlanticagency.com
Include a sample of your
work, maximum of 20 pages. “Embed the sample/excerpt into the email after the
cover letter. Graphic novel submissions may include an attachment. Please
submit an author bio/publishing history and a synopsis. Please note if other
agents are also considering the project and please do not submit to me if you
have already submitted to another Transatlantic Agent.”
Carolyn Forde
was a literary agent and
International Rights Director at Westwood Creative Artists for 14 years before
joining Transatlantic.
For the last decade
Carolyn has traveled to both the London Book Fair and the Frankfurt Book Fair
and New York regularly, and she will continue to do so in her new role at
Transatlantic. Carolyn has lived and worked in Japan, Mexico and the Czech
Republic and is a dual citizen of Canada and the UK.
Carolyn is open to queries
from the 1st of the month to the 15th of the month and endeavors to reply by
the end of the same calendar month when possible. Carolyn does not consider
submissions that are sent to other Transatlantic agents simultaneously.
Carolyn would love to see
literary fiction (especially speculative and horror), commercial fiction,
narrative nonfiction by experts in the field and is open minded to a broad
range of topics and styles – as long as it engages her. There are a few things
she’s not keen on – medical/disease related memoirs, police procedurals,
climate thrillers, military or CIA fiction, cozy mysteries, books about film
and tv behind the scenes, and fantasy.
Submit to Carolyn through her query manager here.
Include the first 20 pages
for consideration, within the body of your query – attachments will not be
opened (double spaced and 12 pt font).
Chelene Knight came into agenting after years of working on the editorial side of publishing and in the magazine industry. She is the author of the poetry collection Braided Skin and the memoir Dear Current Occupant, winner of the 2018 Vancouver Book Award, and long-listed for the George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature. Her novel, Junie is forthcoming with Book*hug Press, in the fall of 2022, and her commissioned book on Black Self-love and joy is forthcoming with HarperCollins Canada in 2023.
Her essays have appeared in multiple
Canadian and American literary journals, plus the Globe and Mail, the Walrus,
and the Toronto Star. Her work is anthologized in Making Room, Love Me True,
Sustenance, The Summer Book, and Black Writers Matter, winner of the 2020
Saskatchewan Book award.
Chelene Knight has a
strong editorial background and has worked as a substantive editor for
manuscripts in poetry, literary fiction, historical fiction, hybrid and
traditional memoir, and most recently, children’s books. Chelene has juried for
many literary prizes, including the Amazon First Novel Award. She’s also been
on many arts boards’ granting juries, including the Canada Council for the
Arts, and participated in numerous literary festivals across Canada.
Chelene was the previous
managing editor at Room magazine and festival director for the Growing Room
Literary Festival in Vancouver. She is now the president of her own literary
studio Breathing Space Creative Literary Studio.
“As a Black female writer
myself, I will always prioritize submissions by Black, Indigenous, and people
of colour writers. I am primarily interested in literary fiction and memoir. I
will also consider some commercial and upmarket fiction, if the story
entertains me and there is a strong plot. For literary fiction, I am incredibly
drawn to character-driven narratives with rich language that push boundaries
(think Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye). I also look for books that encourage
the setting to be a living character (think Amber Dawn’s Sub Rosa). I crave
stories that find unique ways to investigate systemic class inequalities by
speaking from an unexplored vantage point as a catalyst for change.
“For memoir, I need not
only a compelling story, but an intentionally constructed, unconventional
structure that amplifies the narrator’s experiences and contributes to the
reflective voice in a unique way. Grief and memory are not linear. I want to
champion stories that not only force us to reimagine the ways in which we write
our stories, but how we experience and re-experience them.”
Query Chelene through her query manager here.
Amanda Orozco is currently closed to queries and will re-open
to them from April 1, 2023 through April 30, 2023.
Amanda is looking for
stories and projects that make her feel deeply and that surprise her, whether
that be in form, voice, tone, concept, ambition, or all of the above. She is particularly
drawn to stories from Asian and Latinx writers, though she is always looking
for stories with compelling writing featuring protagonists with a distinct
voice and personality; clever, quirky, gritty, and/or twisty stories that keep
her reading through the night.
For fiction, she’s
looking for literary and upmarket adult fiction that feature stories about
love, complex relationships, messy family dynamics, folklore and mythology,
ghosts, and/or magic, in whatever forms they may take. She is particularly
interested in books that bend and mix genre elements, including but not limited
to speculative, horror, romance, and fantasy, and books that present the full
spectrum of joy and hope and explore both the lightness and darkness of the
human condition. She has a soft spot for coming-of-age stories, unique
settings, multi-generational family sagas, short story collections, and the
occasional urban fantasy. Recent favorites include Weike Wang, Kiley Reid, Ling
Ma, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Mary H.K. Choi, Elizabeth Acevedo, and Leigh
Bardugo.
Unless
written by an author of color, she is not the right agent for thrillers, mysteries,
procedurals, space operas, or historical fiction.
For nonfiction, she’s
interested in stories that offer fresh cultural, political, and/or social
critiques along with personal narratives on art, pop culture, tech, and
forgotten, unexamined history. She is looking for perspectives from the margins
or from emerging artists and academics with original ideas and sharp
commentary. She is open to select poetry, memoirs, and illustrated gift/humor
books. Recent favorites include Carmen Maria Machado, Cathy Park Hong,
Alexander Chee, Ayad Akhtar, and Jenny Odell.
Come April, query Amanda
at: queryamanda@transatlanticagency.com
Include a 25-page sample (for fiction) or proposal (for nonfiction). Please include “Query” in the subject line along with the title and genre of your project, and notify her if another offer of representation is received. Alternatively, queries can be submitted through her Query Manager here.
Please submit your query either through email OR Query Manager; do NOT
submit your query through both.
Author Lana Button will be a guest speaker for the weekly Writing Kid Lit course this spring |
If you’re interested in meeting an agent and publishing your book, join us for an upcoming How to Get Published workshop. See here.
Beyond that, Brian Henry’s schedule continues to take shape.
Spring courses:
Online: Intensive Creative Writing, Tuesday evenings, 6:30 – 9:00 p.m., April 18 – June 20, first readings sent April 11. Details here.
Online: Writing
Kid Lit, with two children's authors as guest speakers, Sunday afternoons, 1–3 p.m. April 2 – May 28. Details here.
Online: Writing
Personal Stories, Tuesday
afternoons, April 11 – May 30, 2023. Details here.
Online: Welcome
to Creative Writing, Wednesday evenings, April 12 – June 7. Details here.
In-person: Welcome
to Creative Writing, Thursday evenings, April 20 – June 15, in Burlington. Details here.
A one-day workshop:
Online: Finding
Your Voice, Saturday, April
15, with author Laurie Elizabeth Flynn. Details here.
Writing Retreats:
New: Late summer Writing
Retreat in Algonquin Park at Arowhon Pines Resort. Tuesday, Sept
4 – Friday, Sept 8. Details here. We still
have lots of room in this retreat.
Early spring Writing Retreat in Muskoka at Sherwood
Inn, Friday,
March 24 – Monday March 27. Details here. Waiting
list only.
Algonquin in June Writing
Retreat at Arowhon
Pines Resort, Friday, June 9
– Monday, June 12. Details here. Waiting
list only.
To reserve a spot or for more details about any
course, workshop or retreat, email brianhenry@sympatico.ca
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