Interview Feature: Anne Sowards & Giveaway

We want to give a huge welcome to the awesome person that is Anne Sowards, editor extraordinaire at Penguin.  Anne kindly agreed to answer our pesky questions we had for her. Anne’s interview will be part of a series of interviews with people working within the publishing industry, behind the scenes. We hope you enjoy :D.

Anne Sowards is an executive editor at Penguin Group (USA) Inc., where she primarily acquires and edits fantasy and science fiction for the Ace and Roc imprints. Some of the great authors she works with include Jim Butcher, Patricia Briggs, Rachel Caine, Anne Bishop, Ilona Andrews, Jack Campbell, Karen Chance, and Rob Thurman. When she’s not reading, she listens to Chinese rap and spends way too much time playing video games. Follow her at http://twitter.com/AnneSowards.

Book Pushers: Anne, welcome to the blog, and thank you so much for agreeing to this interview.

Anne: Thanks so much for asking me! It is always a thrill to talk with people who love books as much as I do.

Book Pushers: As an editor for Ace, can you tell us what you love most about your job?

Anne: There are a lot of fabulous things about my job, including getting to read the books before everyone else. But I think the best thing is finding a book I absolutely love and then being a part of publishing it and bringing it to readers. (The power, it is heady.)

There was a book I adored when I was a teenager (ARIEL by Steven Boyett) that had been out of print for years. I was able to bring it back into print (and publish its sequel), and I have to tell you, my thirteen-year-old self could never in her wildest dreams have imagined she’d be Steven Boyett’s editor one day.

More recently, I fell crazy in love with Gwen Hayes’s debut YA contemporary paranormal, FALLING UNDER. On the surface it’s a familiar story, about a girl who feels like she doesn’t fit in and the mysterious boy who shows up at her high school. But Theia Alderson is British living in California, which gives this first person POV story a very distinct voice and a slight old-fashioned / Jane Eyre feel. She and Haden Black meet in these fabulous Tim Burton-esque dream sequences as well as in high school—and Theia doesn’t know if they’re sharing this dream or if it’s all on her end. It is full of angst and torment and emotion, and I’m so excited to see what people think when it comes out next March.

Book Pushers: How many books do you work on at a time, and how long can the process be?

Anne: A lot?  (Yes, I got into publishing because I’m terrible at math.) But seriously, right at this very moment I have eight manuscripts to be edited, and three that need to be read for acceptance (i.e., when the author has already revised and I need to read their changes to make sure it’s all copacetic—and request the advance payment they’re due at that point).

To give you a more global perspective, I have over 60 books coming out this year. Some of them are reprints (i.e. different formats of books we already published, like the paperback edition of a 2009 hardcover) so there’s no actual editing of the text involved, but I still present the book in meetings, write marketing materials about the book, review the cover copy and the art, etc. The distribution of my titles from month to month can vary wildly, depending on when my books are scheduled. For any given month, I could have zero books being published—or nine (my all time high, which I would prefer to never replicate again, because it made me crazy).

As far as how long the road to publication can be, our usual amount of production time is 9-12 months. So if I bought a book today, assuming it wasn’t a movie tie-in or some other project that needed to be rushed, the earliest it would be published is nine months from now—if it didn’t need any editing and we had a slot open in the schedule. 12-18 months from the time of acquisition to the time of publication is more likely.

Book Pushers: How many people within the publisher do you work and interact with to get a book ready for the final draft?

Anne: Penguin is a huge company and we all have our own roles. I primarily know my piece of it. If you’re talking about just getting the text ready for publication, there’s me, my assistant, the managing editor, the assistant production editor, the interior text designer, the copywriter, the freelance copyeditor and freelance proofreader, production (who coordinate with the printer), and our digital team (who handle conversion and distribution of the various ebook formats). Apologies to anyone I left out!

There’s a whole different group of people if you throw the cover into the mix (art director, cover designer, freelance artist, etc.), and then contracts gets involved when we’re actually acquiring books. Subsidiary rights handles the licensing of whatever additional rights we hold (it varies for each book—examples include book club, audio, large print, UK, translation, etc.).

Our sales department sells the book to buyers and gets it into stores, and publicity and advertising / promotion work so that people know the book has been published.

Book Pushers: How many times can a book go through the editing process? Can it be a long and frustrating time for both authors and editors?

Anne: I normally just do one round of edits but I’ve gone back and forth with the author more than that when the book needed that extra push to make it even better. Of course, I primarily do global editing (character / plot / pacing). Once the author and I are done, the book goes to a copyeditor who edits for spelling, grammar, consistency, etc. The author reviews the copyedited manuscript, and then the book will be typeset. After that, the author and a proofreader go over it again, looking for typos and errors.

I don’t think of the editing process as being frustrating, though I can’t speak for my authors—they might say something different! Really it’s about making the book as strong as possible.

Book Pushers: What do you think of the trends in Fantasy and Urban Fantasy today? Are they any upcoming trends that you’re seeing that has got you super excited about?

Anne: As the market gets crowded, I think it’s getting tougher to break out new urban fantasy authors (and also, more challenging to find the ones that stand out as fresh and different). But there are still new writers out there doing amazing books.

For example, one of the things I love about Ilona Andrews’s books is how they definitely speak to the core urban fantasy market, but they’ve got their own spin on things (like the vampires in Kate Daniels’s world, which are not sexy at all—they’re mindless, ravening beasts whose minds are controlled by the necromancers). Devon Monk is another writer doing some very interesting things with urban fantasy. In her Allie Beckstrom series there are no vampires or werewolves at all. Instead, magic has developed as an alternate energy source, and it’s used as commonly as electricity—except the price you pay to use magic doesn’t come from your bank account, but your body and soul.

I’ve been hearing a lot about steampunk lately, though I’m still not sure whether it’s going to develop into a full-blown trend. Certainly Cherie Priest and Gail Carriger have found a lot of success writing in this area, so I’ve acquired some I’m really excited about: DEAD IRON by Devon Monk, about a cursed bounty hunter in steampunk America, and THE DOOMSDAY VAULT by Steven Harper, which has a British steampunk setting–both launch in 2011.

I’ve definitely been having fun with the thief / assassin fantasy subgenre. I don’t know if there’s a specific name for this yet, but basically it’s traditional fantasy with a thief / criminal / assassin as the hero. It’s edgier and more morally ambiguous than the standard epic fantasy about the battle between Good and Evil, and Brent Weeks’s Night Angel trilogy is one of the foremost examples. The one I acquired is called AMONG THIEVES by Douglas Hulick, and it’s definitely morally ambiguous (the opening scene is our hero supervising the torture of somebody else) but for all that, Drothe is someone I came to care deeply about over the course of the book and, as it turns out, he has his own kind of honor. There’s adventure, swordplay, betrayal, and absolutely fantastic fight scenes.

Book Pushers: We know that you edit a lot of Urban Fantasy, and Fantasy books, but would you ever consider or be interested in editing other genres?

Anne: Fantasy and science fiction are my first love, but I do occasionally dabble. I edit Elizabeth Vaughan’s paranormal romances for BerkleySensation, and I also edit Ann Purser’s Lois Meade and Ivy Beasley mystery series for Berkley Prime Crime. I’ve been doing more YA recently as well, which has been great. After I began editing Rachel Caine’s Morganville Vampires series, I acquired Tate Hallaway’s Vampire Princess series (first book ALMOST TO DIE FOR just came out this summer!) and Gwen Hayes’s aforementioned FALLING UNDER and its sequel.

I’m kept pretty busy with my fantasy and science fiction, though, so I don’t have as much time to roam further afield.

Book Pushers: Are you always actively looking for new or unusual settings for Ace books? And is there a setting that you’ll automatically say no to?

Anne: When I’m acquiring a book, setting is just one of many factors, and in fact is not that high on my priority list (i.e. setting a book in New York City is not going to automatically make me buy it, no matter how much I love my home). I am much more focused on storytelling, character, and voice. Is the story something fresh and different? Or if the story itself is familiar, has the author made me care about the characters?

Book Pushers: And finally, do you have a dream author of yours that you would love to work with?

Anne: She sadly passed away not too long ago, but Octavia Butler was brilliant. Her Xenogenesis trilogy (published in an omnibus as LILITH’S BROOD) blew my mind.

Big thanks again to Anne!

And not only has Anne given an awesome interview, she has also offered to give away the following books for you lucky readers :D.

Up for grabs are:

2 ARCs  FALLING UNDER by Gwen Hayes

In her dreams he’s irresistible—seductive, charming, and undoubtedly dangerous. But when he appears to her when she’s awake—and captivates her just the same—she’s not sure which way is up and which is down.

Theia Alderson has always led a sheltered life, not allowed the same freedoms as the rest of the teenagers in the small California town of Serendipity Falls. But when a devastatingly handsome boy appears in the halls of her school, she feels every urge she’s ever denied burning through her at the slightest glance from Haden Black. Theia knows she’s seen Haden before—not around town, but in her dreams.

Theia doesn’t understand how she dreamed of Haden before they ever met, but every night has them joined in a haunting world of eerie fantasy. And as the Haden of both the night and the day beckons her forward one moment and pushes her away the next, the only thing Theia knows for sure is that the incredible pull she feels towards him is stronger than her fear. And as she slowly discovers what Haden truly is, Theia’s not sure if she wants to resist him, even if the cost is her soul.

1 finished copy MAGIC TO THE BONE by Devon Monk (first in the series)

Everything has a cost. And every act of magic exacts a price from its user–maybe a two-day migraine, or losing the memory of your first kiss. But some people want to use magic without paying, and they offload the cost onto an innocent. When that happens, it falls to a Hound to identify the spell’s caster–and Allison Beckstrom’s the best there is.

Daughter of a prominent Portland businessman, Allie would rather moonlight as a Hound than accept the family fortune–and the many strings that come with it. But when she discovers a little boy dying from a magical offload that has her father’s signature all over it, Allie is thrown back into the high-stakes world of corporate espionage and black magic.

Now, Allie’s out for the truth–and the forces she finds herself calling on will overturn everything she knows, change her in ways she could never imagine…and make her capable of things that powerful people will do anything to control.

1 finished copy ALMOST TO DIE FOR by Tate Hallaway (first in series)

On her sixteenth birthday, Anastasija Parker learns that her so-called deadbeat dad is actually a vampire king. And he wants Ana to assume her rightful position at his side, in spite of the fact that she has witch’s blood running through her veins-from her mother’s side.

Too bad witches and vampires are mortal enemies. And now Ana’s parents are at each other’s throats over her future. It’s up to Ana to make a choice, but deciding your eternal destiny is a pretty big deal for a girl who just wants to get through high school.

1 finished copy of GHOSTS and ECHOES by Lyn Benedict

Sylvie is back from vacation, and all she wants out of life right now is for the Magicus Mundi to leave her alone for a bit. No dead things, no mayhem, no life-and-death struggles. Just because Sylvie managed to take some time off doesn’t mean that the Magicus Mundi has to follow her example, though, and it’s been piling things up on her doorstep while she was away.

Still, she can pick and choose her cases, right? Solving a string of burglaries sounds perfect–mind-numbingly boring and mundane. Until you throw in Sylvie’s missing sister, a generous helping of necromancy, and a Chicago cop possessed by a disturbingly familiar spirit.

As the Rolling Stones sang, “You can’t always get what you want.”

Click on the galley below to view the covers of the books.

Giveaway is open internationally. And there will be one winner for each book.

To enter the giveaway, tell us what new tropes or storylines you would love to see in future Urban Fantasy books?

Also, in your comments, please state what  books you would like to win.

Big thanks again to Anne, and we hope you all enjoy the interview. Good luck! 😀

52 thoughts on “Interview Feature: Anne Sowards & Giveaway”

  1. This was very interesting and I learned a lot. Thank you!

    I’d actually like to see a return the fae to UF, but just fae; no vamps, ghosts, werest etc. I’d also love to see more myths and fairy tales from around the world updated and remade into UF.

    I’m interested in Ghosts and Echoes by Lyn Benedict.

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  3. I’d love to see something like in those buddy-cop shows but with two female leads a la Rizzoli and Isles in a UF storyline. I’d also love more multiracial casts of characters.

    I’m interested in Ghosts and Echoes by Lyn Benedict since I read and really liked the first in that series. My second choice would be the Tate Hallaway book. 🙂

  4. I would love to win Falling Under, Magic to the Bone and Ghosts and Echoes.

    I would love to see traditional elements but twisted in new unique ways. Also, I’d love to see more unconventional romance in urban fantasy. A great friendship between two girls would be great to read also (or sisters).

  5. I am really looking for more good ghost stories in published fiction. Adding that into UF would work pretty well. I would also like more mythology based story lines.

    I would like to be entered for Ghosts and Echoes and Falling Under.

  6. I would like to see more myths and fairytales used in UF. And mermaids.

    I’d like to be entered for Falling Under by Gwen Hayes

  7. I never get tired of seeing a strong, female MC that is the kick-ass supernatural in the story!

    I would love to win Falling Under by Gwen Hayes. Thank you for the chance!

  8. I’d like to see more stories with Gods and Goddesses, I’m very interested and curious to see how UF authors will re-invent myths, what kind of other twists they’ll come up with.

    I’d like to be entered to win Falling Under by Gwen Hayes and Almost To Die For by Tate Hallaway.

  9. I love all the strong female characters in urban fantasy, but I’d like to see some things where the female leads aren’t always gorgeous and in leather. And/or something where the love interest isn’t always a guy. And/or some things like Anne mentioned, where the lead characters are a bit edgier and maybe even unreliable narrators.

    I’m interested in winning the Devon Monk book. Or any of the others!

  10. What a great interview! Love to see the editors perspective and read about all your responsibilities…sounds like you don’t have any free time!

    I’m really excited about Gwen Haye’s book FALLING UNDER. Can’t wait to read it and her cover is absolutely stunning!

    I <3 Gwennie. 🙂

  11. I’d like to see more non-British/Victorian steampunk, more fae, more stories that go outside the traditional vampire/werewolf myths preferably with an ethnic tint. (Like a story featuring Native American myth or voudouin.)

    I’d like to be entered for ALMOST TO DIE FOR by Tate Hallaway and GHOSTS and ECHOES by Lyn Benedict.

  12. Wonderful interview, you guys!

    I’d love to win FALLING UNDER. I’d enjoy more multiracial characters in UF in the future, as well as storylines involving mythologies from different regions of the world.

  13. Thank you for the insight into the intricacies of the process. I had no idea so many processes and people were involved!

    I’d love to see more of the Sidhe or Goddesses; how mythology builds a world and characters’ perspectives is fascinating. But, mainly, more women and girls who make choices and follow through.

    I’d like to be entered into GOING UNDER and GHOSTS AND ECHOES

  14. I like to see stories with strong female characters. I would like to see more books with heroes from mythology. Great interview. Would love to win either “Falling Under’ BY Gwen Hayes or “Almost to Die for” by Tate Halloway

  15. I want to see less of the usual paranormal creatures like vampires and werewolves. I have always found faery myths far more interesting.
    I’d love to win either Falling Under or Almost to Die for.
    Thanks
    Misha

  16. Yay! I adore Gwen Hayes, so of course I’d love to snag a copy of FALLING UNDER!

    Tropes? How fun would it be to explore a YA retailing of Alice in Wonderland in a new setting, say the underbelly of the music scene?

    *hmm…new novel idea*

  17. I love the thief/assassin character so the Douglas Hulick book Anne mentioned is immediately going on my TBR list. Anything with ghosts is catching my fancy lately, and any book I pick up must have a romantic element.

    Can you please enter me in the draw to win ALMOST TO DIE FOR or GHOSTS AND ECHOES. Thanks.

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  19. Oooooooh, tough question! I guess I’m not too fussed about ‘new’ elements in UF, it’s the how that matters which is why I love the really different & original UF series Anne edits.

    Would love to check an ARC of Falling Under esp after seeing vid of Anne talking passionately about it!

  20. Wow. Now I have a whole new reading list– fabulous! I just recently discovered (and devoured) Gail Carriger’s series. I’d love to see more fae and urban fantasy but, honestly, one of the aspects I enjoy most is when an author surprises the heck out of me. Gail Carriger was my first introduction to steampunk and I loved, loved, loved it. Ilona Andrew’s world is so well built and there is a romantic element in there that I love. Although the Alice in Wonderland idea mentioned above? I have to see that– please write it! 😉

    I’d love to win ALMOST TO DIE FOR by Tate Hallaway– my daughter and I read paranormal YA together and that sounds perfect.

  21. Hi 🙂
    Thank you for the excellent interview. I really learned a lot about what goes on to get a book out. Thank you very much to Anne for sharing here.
    I love the assassin trope in UF like Jennifer Estep’s Gin series.
    All the best,
    RKCharron

  22. I’m not sure what new tropes or storylines I’d like to see. I just like to see good books with interesting characters. The characters are what really make a book for me.

    I would be interested in winning any of those books! I’m most interested in FALLING UNDER by Gwen Hayes though. 🙂

  23. I love Gwen Hayes, and I would love a copy of “Falling Under”! I couldn’t put “The Fallen” down!

  24. Hm…that’s a hard one, but I’d have to say I’d love to see more culturally/religiously related material. Like I recently read a book based on magic users in the modern day world connected to the ancient Mayans. I’ve also read books with twists on angels and demons through several of their global/cultural/era depicitions. The other day I came across both a werecat (based on Japanese legend), and a weredragon (based on Chinese legend) story. Even if they’re set in America, it gives the story an exotic and timeless (yet original) feel. As some others have mentioned, the fae are underwritten (Irish, in particular, is a culture is rich for stories).

    ~I’d like to win any book BESIDES Magic to the Bone (simply because I own it already!)~

  25. Jessica Rodgers

    I would like to see more stories like Sandman Slim by Richard Kadrey and The Fever Series by Karen Moning.

    The book I would like to win is GHOSTS and ECHOES by lyn benedict

  26. I really love the reluctant hero plot line, and surprises are a definite good thing! But what I am most interested in seeing is the recent steampunk plot lines…different and thrilling, I cant wait! Also, I would really love to have the Magic to the Bone, one of my favorite books. Thanks!

  27. Instead of feeling obligated to create entirely new storylines/mythos in UF, I’d just like the authors/series keep raising the bar on what may seem familiar. Even familiar tropes can become riveting in the right hands.
    Speaking of hands, now you’ve peaked my interest in Douglas Hulick’s AMONG THIEVES, which I wouldn’t mind getting my grubby little hands on….
    Anywho, like Anne mentions FALLING UNDER by Gwen Hayes may feel like a familiar story, but I’m interested in seeing where the author takes it. 😀
    Thanks for the contest and great interview!

  28. Thanks for the interestinga nd fun interview Anne! 🙂

    I sorely miss friendships in UF novels: usually there is a romantic plot, but the heroine/hero does not have great, supportive friends, and I think that would greatly add to the book and characters.

    I would also like to see more books where vampires ae portrayed as disgusting evil creatures and not sexy, irresistible heroes!

    I would like to win Magic to the Bone, have heard great things about this series, so its time I started it 🙂

    Thanks for the great giveaway!

    stella.exlibris (at) gmail (dot) com

  29. That sounds like an awesome job. A lot of work, but very rewarding.

    I like UF that has an HEA romance. I’m primarily a Romance reader and mostly read the Paranormal subgenre. But I love finding UF with a strong and happy romantic thread. Romantic UF is grittier than PR, and I like the grit paired with the hope of Romance.

    I’m most interested in FALLING UNDER by Gwen Hayes, but I haven’t read any of the other authors so I’m not picky.

  30. i would love to see more YA genre UF. I love it and they cant write enough, thanks for the giveaway
    Hope i win. Books i win are read and donated to our public library. So when i win the community wins.
    Thanks
    chaarmedone1512@aol.com

  31. I think we have had enough of vampires. werewolves etc.

    I would like to see more mystery type stories maybe with just a touch of magic from a familiar or something.

    Thanks for the giveaway.

    I would like GHOSTS and ECHOES by Lyn Benedict if I get lucky.

    Carol T

  32. I would love to see the Fae again in a story. I love the Fae in all their glory (and nastiness). They seemed to have been shoved aside for vampires, werewolves and others like that right now.

    Maybe even something with gargoyles, goblins as main characters. Something with a touch of suspense.

    If I get lucky to win, love to try Ghost and Echoes. A new author to explore is always great. Thanks and I loved the interview.

  33. I would love to win Falling Under. Crossing fingers 🙂

    I would like to see more Fae. The only book I have read with Fae in it was the Southern Vampire Series by Charlaine Harris. The Fae are kind of like background noise and the books are so overrun with Vampires and Shifters. I think Vamps and Shifters have exploded on screen and in books and there are so many choices out there that I think sometimes they fade into eachother. I want something to stand out. I would love to see more Fae, I know there are some out right now and I just haven’t gotten my hands on them and am hoping to change that soon

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  35. I’d like to see dark retellings of old fables incorporated into UF. I know fables are meant to be short, but I think it’s a unique idea which hasn’t been done to its full advantage.

    I’m going for Falling Under and Almost To Die For.

    Thanks.

  36. I’d love to see a retelling of the female warrior in regards to mythical cultures and beliefs or even from made-from-scratch ideas.

    I’m all for Falling Under by Gwen Hayes. 😉

  37. Great interview – its fascinating to see the process.

    I’d like to see a UF novel/series with a witch as the protagonist, there are very few and I think it has a lot of potential for character and storyline.

    I would choose Ghosts and Echoes or Magic to the Bone.

    Thanks!

  38. I’m more interested in steampunk these days than urban fantasy, but I like to have fantasy in my urban fantasy–actual magic rather than just vampires or werewolves. I just read the first Dresden Files book, and that’s the type of story I would like to see.

    I would love to get a copy of Magic to the Bone. Thanks, Anne & Book Pushers, for giving all these out!

  39. I’d like to read an urban fantasy book in which the antagonist wins.

    I’d like to win any of these books.

  40. I would like to see more myths, mermaids and fairytales used in .UF mermaids.

    I would like ALMOST TO DIE FOR by Tate Hallaway
    Or
    FALLING UNDER by Gwen Hayes

  41. I’d love to see more mermaids! There are so many directions they can go and I’d love to see them play around more.

    I would love to win MAGIC TO THE BONE by Devon Monk or FALLING UNDER by Gwen Hayes.

    Thanks so much!

  42. I would love to see retelling of old fairytales in UF. I also would love eastern mythology woven into UF story lines. I think we need something fresh for UF.

    I would love to win GHOSTS and ECHOES by Lyn Benedict
    or
    MAGIC TO THE BONE by Devon Monk

  43. Great interview. Thanks for all the information and the chance to win books! I would be thrilled to get any of them and look forward to them coming out.

    As far as new books. I like books with a detective or mystery slant to them. That could be interresting UF. Also, if would be fun to read a historical fiction with fantasy combination. As in, x happened in reality because of y.

  44. I’d love to win Magic to the Bone.

    And, I’d love to see more riffs on Steampunk. I’ve seen a couple set in the “Wild West” and I think more could be done there. Or, maybe a Steampunk feudal Japan? That has possibilities!

  45. Thank you for the excellent interview. Thank you very much to Anne for sharing here.

    I think we have had enough vampires, When I go to buy a book it´s difficult find a fantastic and romantic book without vampires. I think I have read vampires books for the rest of my life.

    I would like to see other storys: more mystery, more magic, fantasy…

    I would like GHOSTS and ECHOES by Lyn Benedict if I get lucky.

    Carol T

  46. I’d like to see more fae, because I still haven’t exhausted my enjoyment of fae in UF stories, and I think it’ll be a long time before that happens.

    I’d like to see more male leads. I do like when we get to see stories with female & male POVs, but I’d like more books solely from a male POV, just for a bit of variation.

    I love UF books *happy sigh*
    Lots of good books to choose from in that selection, ooh, don’t know! I think I’ll opt for Ghosts and Echoes

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