Literary Agents For Children’s Books Picture Books
Children’s Literature
Children’s literature is defined as literature directed toward the child reader, plus the set of literary texts that society has deemed suitable for children, but they were written originally thinking of adult readers (eg Gulliver’s Travels, The Island Treasure or Platero and I).
In another sense of the term, less common, also includes literary pieces written by children themselves. On the other hand, sometimes it is considered that the concept includes juvenile literature, written for or by teens, but what is more correct to call the whole children’s literature or abbreviated LIJ.
The modern literary criticism considered essential nature of “literature” in this kind of writing, so that today it is excluded from the current production of essentially moral or educational texts, while still giving priority to these concepts throughout the LIJ given the context education which develops their reading. This is a very new concept and almost unprecedented in the history of literature.
Literature for children has grown from a largely unknown in the publishing world to grab the attention of the world of books, which is enormous production, the increasing number of literary awards LIJ and the volume of profits it generates. This is due in large part to the settlement of the conception of childhood as a stage of human development itself and specific, that is, the idea that children are not and small adults, or adults with disabilities, has been extended in most societies, so the need to develop a literature and legibly addressed to and by the public is growing.
The conception of infancy or childhood, does not emerge in societies until the advent of the modern age and not widespread until the late nineteenth century. In the Middle Ages there was no notion of childhood as a distinct period and in need of specific works, so there is not exactly a children’s literature. That does not mean that children had no literary experience, but is not defined in terms distinct from the adult experience. Since hoarding of knowledge and culture by clergy and other estates, the few works read by the people wanted to instill values and teach dogma, so the figure of the book as a teaching vehicle is present throughout the Middle Ages and of the Renaissance. Among the books read by children of that age can find the bestiary, alphabets or primers. This could include some of these classical works, like Aesop’s fables in which, to be personified animals, were geared to this audience.
Where the seventeenth century, the landscape begins to change and are increasingly dealing fantasy works, being a true reflection of the myths, legends and stories, typical of oral transmission, which has been gathering knowledge of popular culture through the narration of these, by the older generations to generations of children. In addition to writing these works or stories, which include authors such as Charles Perrault and Madame Leprince de Beaumont, stands the figure of the fabulist, Felix Maria Iriarte Samaniegoo Thomas. At this time, moreover, two events occur significance for what is now known as Children’s Literature, publication, first of Gulliver’s Travels-Jonathan Swift-and, second, Robinson Crusoe-Daniel Defoe-clear examples of what remains today are two issues that meets the LIJ: tales of adventure and enter imagined worlds, uncharted and different.
Once at the nineteenth century with the Romantic movement up the golden age of children’s literature. Many authors who publish their works with an extraordinary acceptance among the younger audience. These are the tales (Hans Christian Andersen, Countess de Segur, Wilhelm and Jacob Grimm and Oscar Wilde in Europe, and Saturnino Calleja and Fernan Caballero in Spain) and novels like Alice in Wonderland-Lewis Carroll-Island Robert L. Treasure Stevenson, The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling, Pinoccio-Carlo Collodi, “those written by Jules Verne or The Adventures of Tom Sawyer among others, which led to a novel context for the establishment of a new literary genre for the reader more young in the twentieth century, where the massive production of LIJ coexists with the works of the adult genre.
There are many famous works of the LIJ quote, as is the case of Peter Pan, The Little Prince, The Wind in the Willows, Pippi Longstocking or collection of stories about the Moomin family, in all of them highlights a new vision to offer to young readers, where in addition to addressing issues such classics as the adventures or discovery of new worlds, seek to overcome the fear, freedom, aspirations, the world of dreams and desires, as acts of rebellion against the adult world. This production is greatly increased in the 70’s, 80 and 90, with authors such as Roald Dahl, Gianni Rodari, Michael Ende, Ren Goscinny (Little Nicholas), (Christine Nstlinger, Laura Gallego Garcia and Henriette Bichonnier among others. In this twentieth century, in addition, new formats LIJ through painting techniques and illustrating stories, where words are accompanied by images that contextualize the story and providing connecting links to history, is the appearance in the book-album or picture book, a genre in which authors such as Maurice Sendak stand, Janosch, Quentin Blake, Leo Lionni, Babette Cole, Ulises Wensell or Fernando Puig Rosado.
Already, in the XXI century, the LIJ is well established in Western countries, where sales are huge and vast literary production.
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I’m sending in a manuscript for a children’s book to a literary agent, but have a question…?
For the submissions guidelines, it says to send, “if applicable”, colored copies of illustration samples. I’m not an artist, just a writer. Do I need to find someone to draw pictures for me? Or is it fine to not send any illustrations?
And it never mentions a query. Do I still send one, just in case?
It just lists a self-addresses envelope, illustration samples, and completed manuscript…
It’s my first time!
Anyways, thanks.
Query anyway just to be safe. They’d rather respond to a needless query than discard an unsolicited manuscript.
It would be best if you had the illustrations done before submitting. Time is of the essence in this business, and they aren’t going to want to run with the story and have to find an illustrator.
I’m sending in a manuscript for a children’s book to a literary agent, but have a question…?
For the submissions guidelines, it says to send, “if applicable”, colored copies of illustration samples. I’m not an artist, just a writer. Do I need to find someone to draw pictures for me? Or is it fine to not send any illustrations?
And it never mentions a query. Do I still send one, just in case?
It just lists a self-addresses envelope, illustration samples, and completed manuscript…
It’s my first time!
Anyways, thanks.
What do these terms mean used by literary agents?
I am writing to literary agents because I want to get a children’s book I have made published, and I found information about a few off the internet. However I came across these terms and I don’t know what they mean: ‘for picture books, send complete MS and sae’ and ‘write, call or email before submitting MSS’. Sorry if it they are obvious, I’m 16 and I’m finding it all quite difficult! Thanks for your help!
I’ve tried googling it and nothing useful comes up! :/
Thank you Almost Dr., very helpful! 🙂
I’ve come across something else – ‘unsolicited manuscripts’…?
Thank you for your help A 🙂
Literary Agent for picture books?
I have written the text for several potential picture books, and would like to attempt to submit them to a Literary agent in an attempt to have them placed with a publishing house, or at least to find out if I even have a shot.
My basic question is how to find and submit to a literary agent for picture/children’s books. (Including how manuscripts are *usually* submitted.)
But I will gladly take any other advice in the field of picture books, children, agents, publishing, etc.
I have to mention that I have read a few generalized books on this topic, but I am in need of more information. If it makes any difference I am located relatively close to NYC.
Thank you very much!!!
Send a query and completed manuscript. Sometimes publishers have (and prefer to use) their own illustrators.
Okay, for the good news, you can easily submit to publishers for picture books, so you don’t really need an agent.
Now, for the bad news. Picture books is a shrinking market. They’re not selling well, and data from one of the large publishers shows that the market for picture books shrunk by 33% in 2010. That’s not good news for PB writers. This means it’s going to be MUCH harder to get them published. THis also means that it’ll be MUCH harder to find an agent who accepts picture books – they need something they can sell.
BTW, you don’t write a query letter for PBs. You usually send the text and if you want, you can have a link in your email in case they want to see what the pictures look like – don’t require they go there to see the whole thing.
Your best source of information are agent blogs and industry websites, which is how I found out about the market for PBs and I’m not even writing one! Check some publisher websites – these will be small, but legit presses – that publish PBs and see what their guidelines are. I’ve come across a few of these publishers myself, but I didn’t make a note of the ones that publishes PBs, unless they also publish YA, which is what I’m writing. I came across these publishers through writers forums (you might come across a writer’s profile who lists the publisher for her book and that publisher might accept unagented manuscripts), I’ve come across small publishers by visiting author websites and seeing who their books are published by and if those publishers take unsolicited manuscripts (some do, but most don’t – it depends), and I’ve found small publishers by just visiting industry websites like Galley Cat and Publishers Weekly where they might have an article about a publisher or a publisher might be mentioned in an article, and you can look up that publisher’s website to learn more about them and what they publish, and if they take unagented manuscripts.
So, start looking, and it does take time to build a list because most publishers do not take unagented manuscripts, though some small, but very legit presses, do. Even some mid-sized, well-respected presses take unagented manuscripts. I’ve also come across some respected children’s book presses and it’s really a toss-up on whether or not they accept unagented manuscripts.
See my profile.
MS=manuscript
sae=self addressed envelope
MSS=manuscripts