Middle Grade author Janet Sumner Johnson talks about her debut novel, THE LAST GREAT ADVENTURE OF THE PB&J SOCIETY, as well as the challenge of writing for middle graders, the assumption that books for children are somehow lesser than books written for adults, as well as the question of what content to include for younger readers.
Links:
Query Tracker
Literary Rambles
Brenda Drake's Pitch Wars
Dee Romito's Query Sign Submit
Janet Sumner Johnson:
Site
Blog
Lisa Maxwell: The Rejection File
Tori Rigby: Red Flags For Agents
Geoffrey Girard: Learning Craft Through Short Stories
Kate Watson: Promoting A "Quiet" Book
Liz Coley: Being A Hybrid Author
Melanie Crowder: Upper Middle Grade Vs. Young Adult
Elsie Chapman: The Pain of Publishing
Gwenda Bond: Writing Mentors
September Roundup & How Important Research Is In Fiction
Tiffany Jackson: Setting Writing Goals
Jeff Zentner: Drawing Inspiration From Real Life
Madeleine Roux: Following Up A New York Times Bestselling Debut
July Roundup & H.R. 1695: What It Means For Writers
Jody Casella: The Benefits of SCBWI
Tara Dairman: Pros of Writing Contests
June Roundup & A Quick Copyright Lesson
Jessica Strawser: From Journalism to Fiction
Tiffany McDaniel: Surviving Eleven Years of Publishing Rejection
Kim Dinan: Writing Memoir
Michelle Gagnon: When Your Agent Is A Bad Fit
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