Deal of the Week
For six figures, Alexandra Cooper at Harper Children’s preempted North American rights to three graphic novels, two middle grade and one YA, by Wendy Xu, cocreator of Mooncakes, for her solo debut. Tidesong, set for release in 2021, features an ambitious 12-year-old who moves to a seaside town with her aunts for an apprenticeship in magic and realizes that it may be more than she bargained for. The second book in the deal, due out a year after Tidesong, is The Infinity Particle, a speculative YA with shades of Ghost in the Shell about a young woman whose best friend and first love suddenly reappears in her life after being presumed dead for three years. The second, as-yet-untitled middle grade book will be published in 2023. Linda Camacho at Gallt & Zacker Literary Agency brokered the deal.
Jesseca Salky at Hannigan Salky Getzler sold North American rights to Anne Tyler’s 24th novel, Redhead by the Side of the Road, described by the agency as a look into the heart and mind of a man who finds those around him just out of reach, due out in spring 2020. Diana Tejerina Miller at Knopf signed the deal.
Crown v-p and executive editor Rachel Klayman nabbed world rights to Rachel Maddow’s Blowout: Corrupted Democracy, Rogue State, and the Richest, Most Destructive Industry on Earth from Laurie Liss of Sterling Lord Literistic. Maddow is the host of MSNBC’s Emmy Award–winning The Rachel Maddow Show. Set for October, Blowout, per the publisher, “offers a dark, serpentine, riveting tour of the unimaginably lucrative and corrupt oil and gas industry.”
Sally Kim at Putnam came out the winner of a heated auction conducted by PJ Mark at Janklow & Nesbit Associates for Robert Jones Jr.’s debut novel, The Prophets, which, according to the publisher, examines a relationship between two enslaved young men in the Deep South whose love threatens and challenges all around them. The publisher said that Jones’s story summons the voices of slaver and enslaved alike “with an indelible lyricism reminiscent of Toni Morrison.”
This week’s new deals include a picture book by tidying expert, author, and Netflix star Marie Kondo, about how tidying up creates space for joy in all parts of your life; a YA novel about a transgender teen, written by Stonewall Book Award-winning authorKacen Callender (previously known as Kheryn Callender); and the YA debut of Annihilation author Jeff VanderMeer, a two-volume fantasy about a boy who inherits his grandfather's mansion and discovers three strange doors.
This award-winning book unveils the incredible story of the underground prisoner resistance organization at Auschwitz. Prof. Antony Polonsky, chief historian of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, calls it “the definitive study of the topic.” It is a must for every Holocaust and WWII collection. More... (Sponsored)
In what the publisher described as a major preempt, Pamela Dorman acquired world rights for her eponymous imprint at Viking to The Nine Lives of Rose Napolitano by Donna Freitas, who reviews regularly for PW. The novel explores the impact of having children on women’s lives. Miriam Altshuler at DeFiore and Company brokered the deal. International rights were sold to nine countries.
Holt executive editor Paul Golob acquired North American rights to John Thompson’s autobiography, I Came as a Shadow. Thompson, the head basketball coach at Georgetown University from 1972 to 1999, led the team to the 1984 NCAA national championship. He wrote the book, to be published in 2021, with Jesse Washington, a senior writer at ESPN’s The Undefeated website. David Black, who has an eponymous agency, brokered the deal.
Lisa Sharkey, senior v-p and director of creative development at HarperCollins, has acquired world rights to two-time Emmy Award–winning General Hospital star Maurice Benard’s memoir, Nothing General About It: How Love (and Lithium) Saved Me On and Off General Hospital. In the memoir, according to the publisher, Benard chronicles his struggle with bipolar disorder, which he was diagnosed with at age 20. Anna Montague will edit the book, to be published in April 2020 under the Morrow imprint. Jennifer De Chiara, who has an eponymous agency, negotiated the deal.
Behind the Deal
International
- The
Bookseller reports that Fitzcarraldo Editions has snapped up a
book on gender politics by philosopher Paul B. Preciado,
including an account of the author’s own gender transition. Publisher
Jacques Testard acquired U.K. and Commonwealth rights to An Apartment
on Uranus from María Lynch at Barcelona’s Casanovas & Lynch
agency. It will be published in January 2020 in Charlotte Mandell’s
translation from the French, and simultaneously by Semiotext(e) in the
U.S.
- The
Bookseller also reports that Jon Woolcott, publisher of Little Toller
Books, acquired world rights to Diary of a Naturalist by
Dara McAnulty, a 15-year-old conservationist, activist, and
naturalist who has autism. “This is our biggest book yet,” Woolcott said.
Describing it as “raw in the telling,” the publisher said that the book,
due in spring 2020, portrays McAnulty’s connection to the natural world
and his life as a teenager juggling exams and friendships with his work
campaigning.
Page to Screen
Jeff Benedict,
coauthor with Armen Keteyian of the recently published biography Tiger Woods,
has teamed up Brent Montgomery’s Wheelhouse Entertainment for a joint film and
television venture. Their first project will be to shop a scripted, limited
series based on the Woods biography.
Send editorial inquiries
about this e-newsletter to: internationaldeals@publishersweekly.com
Send advertising questions about this e-newsletter to: cbryerman@publishersweekly.com
Send advertising questions about this e-newsletter to: cbryerman@publishersweekly.com
For additional assistance, contact us by email or at the address
below.
Publishers Weekly,
71 West 23 St. #1608
New York, NY 10010
Phone 212-377-5500
Publishers Weekly,
71 West 23 St. #1608
New York, NY 10010
Phone 212-377-5500
Copyright 2019, PWxyz LLC
No comments:
Post a Comment