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Ann Leslie Tuttle

About Ann

Ann Leslie Tuttle joined DG&B in 2017 after working for 20 years at Harlequin Books where she worked on an extensive and varied list of bestselling and award-winning titles in romance and women’s fiction.  She received her B.A. degree from the College of William and Mary and an M.A. from the University of Virginia. Helping to grow the careers of established and debut writers has always been Ann Leslie’s passion.  Ann Leslie is especially seeking women’s fiction (e.g. relationships, family sagas, historical fiction and psychological thrillers) romance (e.g. romantic comedies, medical romance and contemporaries) and Southern Gothics on the adult fiction side as well as Middle Grade fiction and narrative nonfiction.  Ann Leslie lives in New York City with her husband and young daughter, who is just discovering the magic of books and writing.

Ann Leslie wants to see more romance.

As a child, I could imagine no more magical world than working with books and authors.  My fondest memories were of curling up on a snowy day (which used to virtually shut down the South) or a steamy summer day and reading the Nancy Drew and Cherry Ames series of books and much later my mother’s latest Sydney Sheldon and Mary Higgins Clark books.  Watching shows like “Mary Tyler Moore,” hearing about my mother’s days at NBC in Rockefeller Center, and meeting representatives of the NY publishing world who traveled to Williamsburg for the College of William and Mary’s biannual publishing seminar, I wanted nothing more than to move to New York and have a career in the “glamorous” field of book publishing.

I still remember taking the Amtrak train from Charlottesville and moving into a hotel for women so I could start my first job in publishing. There I got to work at Charles Scribner’s Sons, get to know the Scribner family and even work on a collection of essays by Charles Scribner, Jr., on his own reflections of a lifetime in publishing.  

Graduating with my masters from the University of Virginia, I’d always thought that I needed to work on “important” books—books that would shape ideas and educate people.  Books about ancient civilizations, the original colonies and biographies of famous historic figures.   But it wasn’t until my mother was dying and I was sitting beside her with all the prayers I could imagine said that I finally realized that any book that could transport someone from the worst situation imaginable was important.  Especially if it took the reader from that moment when they felt most alone and most full of despair or anxious. Any book that left them feeling uplifted and stronger.   Any book that promoted a sense of community and showed the world as a better place.   That was when I made my decision to finally work with the romance and women’s fiction books I’d always loved, and I’ve never looked back.

At the heart of every good romance is the sense of finding family, that identity and connection that gives purpose, hope and love to someone’s life.  To me, the best romances have well developed protagonists who’ve truly been to hell and back and now must overcome their greatest fear, which usually involves an issue of trust or willingness to put their heart on the line again after a gut-wrenching loss.  It’s these characters that the reader connects with and roots for as they find love.  Even though these characteristics are central to the romance genre, some aspect of them are also at the core of what often draws me to a project.

When I first moved to New York, I don’t think I’d even heard of literary agents—let alone knew what they did.  But the more I worked as an editor, the more respect I had for the ones who could successfully and realistically champion for the best deal for their client, knew when to get involved in editorial matters and how to best represent their client in sensitive conversations when emotions might be running high on both sides. Now I can’t envision any more thrilling—and challenging-- opportunity.

As an agent at Dystel, Goderich & Bourret, I’m looking romances--from contemporaries and medical romance to romantic comedies—as well as all types of women’s fiction from psychological thrillers, Southern Gothic, and historical fiction to multigenerational family sagas and titles that explore the nature of relationships between friends and family.  I’m especially drawn to stories with a strong sense of place and that are beautifully written.

I’m also excited to expand my list to include Middle Grade.  These wonderful books help young people start to understand a world and emotions they’re just discovering.  Be it related to bullying at school, coping with a family drama, living with a medical condition or finding friends.  I’m especially seeking stories about fearless and sympathetic female protagonists that embody a range of diversity and underrepresented voices. 

And, finally, I’m looking for Nonfiction, especially narrative nonfiction projects that are stories from underrepresented voices and show how that individual has overcome tremendous personal and/or physical odds.  

In all the projects I’m seeking, I want to find authors who are as passionate about their stories and craft as I am about representing them.  It is a privilege to help matchmake these talented writers with the perfect editor.

For a young girl growing up in rural Virginia who loved books, what could be more fabulous than making an author’s own childhood dreams into a reality.

Query Instructions

My goal is to make this process as painless as possible for you, and the following guidelines will make us better able to respond to you in a timely manner.
 
-Do send your query letter via email, and include the full query in the body of the email, not as an attachment.

-Do include a writing sample of the first 25 pages of your manuscript (fiction) or your proposal with sample chapter (nonfiction) in the body of the email below your query letter.

-Do proofread carefully and double-space your materials if possible.

-Do be sure to query only one agent at this agency. We will not review queries sent to more than one of us.

-Do resend your query email if you haven’t heard from us in 8 weeks, noting the date previously sent. Our goal is to read and respond to every query in that time frame.

 
-Don’t send attachments with a blank email or an incomplete query – we will not open them.

-Don’t send materials as a shared file or download link (such as Dropbox or Google Docs). We will not open these files.

-Don’t submit to more than one of us at once, whether in the same query or separate queries, or requery another agent here after getting a pass. We share queries with each other frequently, so a no from one is a no from all.

-Don't query more than one project at a time.

-Don’t send a query for a novel until the manuscript is complete, polished and ready for review. We do not accept partial manuscripts for novels. Nonfiction can be queried with a proposal.

-Don’t pitch projects or follow up on queries over the phone or via social media. Pitches made via Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc, will not be considered except as part of a planned pitch event.

 

Query Tips
 

We like our unsolicited queries to be concise, well-written, and well-proofed, and as devoid of gimmicks as possible. Here’s what to include:

A professional, personalized greeting.

A mention in the first paragraph of why you’re querying us: you admire a client’s work, you met us at a conference, you read a great interview, etc. Be brief and specific!

Key stats for your project: title, genre, word count, and comp titles or authors.

Your pitch: a paragraph or two summarizing your novel or nonfiction project that will hook us on your work. For fiction, please include genre, word count, and comp titles.

Your bio or credentials: your expertise in the topic, your previous publication credits, your social media platform.


Nonfiction Proposal Guidelines

We work very hard with our clients to help them create their proposals and because we think this part of the publishing process is so very important, we wanted to share our basic formula for putting together a non-fiction proposal. The proposal is broken down into several parts.

Overview

This begins with a brief dramatic anecdote which is meant to get the reader, in this case the editor at the publishing company, interested in the material. Immediately after this anecdote, you should describe in two or three sentences—no more—what the book will be about. This is followed by another brief paragraph on why it is being written and then another on why you are qualified to write it.

After this, you need to describe your audience who will buy your book—both demographically and statistically. The more numbers you have here the better.

Alongside your audience, describe your platform and marketing advantages: who you are, your qualifications, your media experience (or media coverage of your project/podcast/organization), your social media reach (not just numbers but growth and engagement), outlets where you regularly speak or publish pieces, any other media where you have a strong connection. And anything else you bring to the table to support your book. 

The final element of the overview is a comparative section where you compare your book to others that would be found in the same place in the bookstore. In each case, you must provide the author, the title, the publisher, and the year of initial publication and, book by book, tell us how your proposed book will be as successful as those or more so.

Annotated Table of Contents

This consists of chapter heads and no more than a couple of sentences on what each chapter will contain.

Sample Material

If you’re writing a general nonfiction book, we need at least one sample chapter that matches a chapter described in your annotated table of contents.  The sample chapter is meant to do two things: show off the writing and tell us things we don’t already know.

If you’re writing a cookbook, there should be a section of sample recipes, which can be labeled as such. There should be 10-12 recipes from all parts of the book (i.e., one or more from the appetizer section, one or more from the soups and salads section, one or more from the entrees section, etc.). Each of these recipes should be accompanied by headnotes (about a paragraph of text introducing the recipe). Each recipe should be in standard cookbook format and should clearly state the number of people it will serve.  In addition to the sample recipes, you’ll need to include introductory text from one or two different sections of the book so that editors get a sense of your narrative writing style.

Author Biography

Finally, there should be a more formal narrative of the author.

This is followed by links that serve as Support Material—reviews of previous books, recent articles by and about you from national publications, a schedule of speaking appearances, any national media appearances, etc.

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Suite 904
New York, NY 10003

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