Week of July 8, 2012—An Interview with Frances
Gilbert
Thursday, July 12—Frances, the Editor
This is the final
installment in a four-part interview with Frances Gilbert, Editorial Director
at Doubleday Children’s Books, Random House.
Rob: Frances, what have you acquired recently that you love and
why?
Frances: My last two years when I was at Sterling were in management
so, alas, I didn’t get to acquire much then, which is why I’m so excited to be
acquiring again at Doubleday. I love authors and missed working with them so
much. My flat-out favorite author to work with is Tammi Sauer. I published her
first picture book, Cowboy Camp,
after pulling it out of the Sterling slush pile, and went on to publish Chicken Dance and its sequel, Bawk and Roll. I knew Tammi was a gifted
writer from the first page of Cowboy Camp.
She has impeccable timing, tells a rollicking tale, crafts very sympathetic
characters, and is just ridiculously funny. Also, as a published author, she
really gets out there and sells her books. She makes it her business to know
everyone, which is a publisher’s dream.
Rob: Are there any great picture books out there that you wish
you had acquired? If so, what and why?
Frances: Ooooh, there are so many! Knuffle Bunny is a perfect picture book: funny, crisp, loving,
stylish, approachable, identifiable, and unique. And Olivia, which came out when I was a buyer at Scholastic Book Fairs.
The rep from Simon & Schuster presented it and I remember thinking, “Damn, this changes everything.” Like Knuffle Bunny, the art and story are so
cool and smart, but also warm and funny. They stimulate the way a kid thinks
about art and color and design but they also just make that kid crack up.
Flawless.
I’ll also put in a pitch for my
all-time favorite picture book, the incredibly trippy Rain Makes Applesauce, which won a Caldecott Honor in 1965. It has
lines like “I wear my shoes inside out, and rain makes applesauce.” What does
any of it mean? I have no idea. But when my kindergarten teacher read it to us
in 1974 it did something to my brain. I especially loved getting to scream out
loud, “Oh you’re just talking silly talk!” The sad thing is, it would have
trouble getting acquired today. It’s just so darned weird.
Rob: What percentage of your authors are new writers?
Frances: At Sterling I published a number of first-time writers.
It’s a joy to find someone new. It’s what we’re here for.
Rob: What percentage of the books on your list are by
author/illustrators?
Frances: Finding that double-threat is, for me, the Holy Grail. Like
Ian Falconer and Mo Willems and Rosemary Wells and David Shannon, whose work I
adore, author/illustrators fundamentally understand how art and story are
intertwined.
Rob: Tell us what’s coming from Doubleday Children’s Books that
we should be watching for, and/or what direction you see Doubleday is headed
under your leadership.
Frances: One of the fun things about my new job is digging into the
Doubleday backlist, which is storied and rich, and finding some older gems to
reissue that could use a little loving. Doubleday was the first publisher of The Velveteen Rabbit! How lucky am I to
have that on my list?! At the same time, I’ll also be acquiring new picture
books and fiction, and will hopefully find this generation’s The Velveteen Rabbit along the way.
Frances, thank you for an incredible
interview. I am grateful for your time and the attention you gave to your responses.
Thanks for helping us all grow as writers.
4 comments:
What a great week of posts! Thanks, Rob and Frances.
I saved these up so I could read them all at once. I'm on my way to the library to pick up a lot of picture books and then I'll get back to polishing my manuscripts. Thanks for this wonderful interview.
Is it any surprise Bawk & Roll is dedicated to Frances?
I have absolutely loved working with her. :)
Bookmarked all these posts. Light and helpful. Thanks Rob and Frances!
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