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NaNoWriMo pitches Archives - Page 8 of 9 - The Book Doctors

Tag: NaNoWriMo pitches

  • Mica S. Kole

    The Goddess Candidate by Mica S. Kole 

    The day eleven Signposts fell out of the sky, Devon Lamont’s main concern was hiding makeup from her fundamentalist father. But when one of these fiery Signs appears outside her high school, Devon becomes one of the first people to read the strange words burned into the ground all around it: Walk through fire… and become God.

    A day later, a Portuguese bartender films himself touching the Sign, crossing dimensions, and meeting angels, and the world learns that the Signs are no hoax. God is dead, and His post is up for grabs… or Satan’s got a trick up his sleeve.

    But none of this matters to Devon. Touching the Sign would mean an end to her carefully cultivated double life as popular girl and pious child… and she’d rather be kissing Corey, a semi-mysterious, nerdy guitarist. But Corey has an otherworldly secret, and he—as well as half the modern world—thinks it’s worth severe burns to turn into a deity. Even worse, Devon’s father sees the flame-protected Sign as an opportunity to prove his family’s faith… and it is this steadfast devotion that could burn Devon’s world to the ground.

    At 72,000 words, THE GODDESS CANDIDATE is a contemporary YA LGBTQ fantasy that explores the various effects of religion on the human capacity for tolerance and love. It pairs Kiera Cass’s THE SELECTION with the modern-day darkness and diversity of Lev Grossman’s THE MAGICIANS. It is intended to kick off a series.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Janelle Fila

    The Gravedigger’s Assistant by Janelle Fila

     

    Complete at 70,000 words, THE GRAVEDIGGER’S ASSISTANT is a YA, magical realism novel with an unreliable narrator in the vein of WE WERE LIARS.

     

    It’s Halloween, and the Blood Moon calls Reese’s ancestors to a family graveyard. Reese doesn’t know anything about Gravedigger, the spirit in charge of digging graves for her dead relatives, and she doesn’t care. After a stint in rehab for drunk driving, she’s finally free to go back to senior year. Except now, everything’s changed. Her parents fight about who forgot to defrost the chicken. Her best friend finds a replacement and demotes Reese to tagalong. Her boyfriend scurries down the hall without a word, expecting Reese to give him space until he’s ready to talk. She doesn’t even get the courtesy of a breakup text.

     

    Screw that. When Reese stumbles upon the graveyard, she befriends Gravedigger and replaces her fraying real-world relationships. She bonds with ghosts like Frances, a 1900’s suffragist, and Frances’s mother, who threw herself into a creek after her husband left to prospect gold and never came home. Reese promises to find her missing great-great-great-grandfather and return his ghost to the graveyard before the end of the Blood Moon’s cycle, a journey that will connect her worlds in ways she cannot imagine.

     

    My stories and poems have appeared in YARN, WORD HOTEL, Golfwell.net, and the PROUD TO BE Anthology. In May, I will earn my MFA in Writing for Children and YA from Spalding University.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Lorinda McKinnon

    Assisted Lovin’ by Lorinda McKinnon

    Janice, an aging female journalist, lands in an assisted living facility, bitterly determined to remain aloof and detached, only to discover that intrigue and romance aren’t just for the young. She is swept up in the drama of a corrupt facility administrator, the hilarious attempts at friendship by the oversexed ladies across the hall, and in the attention of the dignified gentleman in the unit next door.

    When a newspaper prints an exposé of romantic activities in the retirement community, it attracts the attention of the townspeople and alarms the residents’ families, who are worried by the possibility that it could be their loved ones who are involved in this risqué scandal. The residents find the notoriety thrilling, and go to great lengths to spy on one another―and to be featured in the next newspaper article.

    Janice teams up with the newspaper reporter and her new friends to reveal a plot to force the facility to close, and discovers she has found a new―if slightly dysfunctional―family.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Mally Becker

    The Whiskey Code by Mally Becker 

    Set during the darkest days of the American Revolution, THE WHISKEY CODE tells the story of General Washington’s most reluctant spy, a fiercely independent young woman who races time and Turncoats to uncover, then thwart, a plot that threatens Washington’s life.

    Recently widowed Rebecca Parcell is too busy struggling to maintain her Morristown farm to give a fig about the Revolution. While the village gossips whisper that she betrayed her cheating late husband by turning him over to the British, George Washington has proof that he was in fact a Loyalist spy. Washington swears he’ll help Becca preserve her farm if she can uncover her late husband’s secrets.

    Her search for the truth pairs her with an escaped British prisoner, Daniel Alloway —the last person to see her husband alive—as they embark on an espionage mission through British-occupied New York City. Moving from glittering balls to an underworld of brothels and prisons, Becca and Daniel uncover a plot that threatens the General’s life and the new country’s future. Will they move quickly enough to prevent Washington’s death? Will Becca learn who betrayed her husband? And as she grows more confident in her own independence, will she continue to cling to the farm and her past?

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Erin Roll

    Wind Dancer by Erin Roll 

    A race and an air show for up-and-coming young aerialists and airship builders. It was just the sort of news that sixteen-year-old aspiring pilot Emily Halloran had been waiting all her life for.

    Growing up in early twentieth-century Belfast – a city that prides itself on building ships of the air as well as ships of the sea – Emily longs to join the ranks of the world’s greatest pilots and airship designers. She has already designed and built her first aircraft, a small two-seater called Wind Dancer.

    When Emily sees the notice in the newspaper about the competition in England, she knows that she has to enter. It would mean a chance to make a name for herself; besides, with Belfast increasingly threatened by civil unrest, lost jobs and war in Europe, Emily’s family needs something to hope for.

    So Emily and her sister (and co-pilot), Katie, take Wind Dancer and join the other boys and girls flying their way to a chance at glory.

    As they make their way through the semi-finals, Emily and Katie see first-hand that the competition is fierce, and that the odds are decidedly against them. What good can a homemade, built-from-spare-parts airship like Wind Dancer be against the professionally-built airships that some of the other contestants are flying?

    It also becomes clear that someone is playing a dangerous game with the contestants’ lives.

    Will Emily, Katie and Wind Dancer triumph?

    Set in an alternate-history Ireland and England, Wind Dancer is a high-flying, thrilling steampunk adventure.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Lynn Katz

    The Surrogate by Lynn Katz

    The Surrogate is a 78,000 word psychological thriller.

    On the verge of returning from another disappointing summer vacation visiting dead authors’ homes, Jenn Cooper, an English teacher from Connecticut, meets her doppelganger in a Key West bar, and agrees to swap lives for one month.  Jenn believes she has nothing to lose; she could not be more wrong.  As she struggles to make sense of her new situation while hiding her actual identity, she discovers her double’s teenage son, Martin, has isolated himself behind his locked bedroom door.  With each passing day, Jenn uncovers clues that shed light on Martin’s disturbing behavior and the twisted family dynamics.  Jenn confronts the school system that has failed Martin.  She seeks guidance from the new school psychologist with whom she has an affair.  As his home-school tutor, Jenn plans American Literature assignments designed to lure him out of his isolation.  Martin’s obsession with violent videogames and guns, his unsuppressed rage, his verbal threats, and missing firearms from the family’s arsenal above the garage, lead Jenn to suspect that Martin may be plotting a mass shooting.  With every plot twist, Jenn faces more obstacles and fewer options.  She must reimagine her life’s purpose, and use her teaching skills to prevent another American tragedy.  Convinced that Martin’s mother was psychologically unable to prevent her son’s downward spiral, Jenn Cooper believes she is the surrogate who has the skills to help him, and if necessary, she has the will to stop him. 

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Carol Mackela

    Noon Skate by Carol Mackela

    Monica Jones stared with horror at the smoldering ruins of the apartment building that had been her home.  She and her teen daughter had lost everything in the blaze and must now rebuild their lives.

    Monica’s parents had disowned her after she became pregnant in high school, and she had struggled to provide for her daughter for years.  Now a 37-year-old paralegal in Michigan, Monica races to the ice rink every day during her lunch hour for exercise, lessons and camaraderie.  She dreams of a gold medal in ice dance (akin to a black belt in martial arts), an accomplishment that would represent years of hard work and considerable investment in coaching, ice time, and expensive skates.  When Monica’s friendship with skating partner Brad Peltonen takes a romantic turn, Monica wonders if she and Brad have enough in common off the ice to make their relationship work.  Will the apartment fire and its aftermath draw them closer or hasten the end of their romance?

    When Brad suffers a medical emergency, Monica prays that he will survive to be her partner on and off the ice.  She continues to work on the last dance she needs to complete her gold medal.  Will she pass the test and become a gold medalist?

    Monica was introduced in my first novel, On Your Feet! (Indie Excellence Award winner, 2009) (about ballroom dancing).  As a gold medalist in ice dance, I have drawn on my 20 years of skating experience in writing Noon Skate.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Crystal Chilcott

    Meteor Showers by Crystal Chilcott 

    Moving every year or two is hard on teenagers under normal circumstances, but doubly so when each move means adjusting to a new culture and country. For a figure skating Olympic hopeful, getting the proper training is nearly impossible.  When Santiago moves to train full-time at an Olympic Training Center site, he knows his life will change drastically.  No longer will he live as a global nomad with his mom and an ever-growing number of half-siblings. For the first time, he will seek companionship beyond his family.  What he isn’t prepared for is a tragedy that challenges everything he thinks he knows about his family, faith, sport, and his place in the world.

    His grief sends him on a quest to find the father he never met, a search for existential meaning in his life, and a relentless pursuit of a spot on the Olympic team. As he uncovers his mother’s secrets, he is aided by Athena, the world champion who lives next door and Shae-Lynn, his young secondary coach with a toddler and a big secret of her own.

    A comparable title is I Am the Messenger by Markus Zusak. The novel would appeal to teenagers with goals of their own, an interest in travel, or who are struggling to find their place in the world.

    Thank you for your consideration.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Jennifer Mannering

    The Sky Shatters by Jennifer Mannering

    I am seeking representation for THE SKY SHATTERS, an LGBT Young Adult romance novel, complete at 77,000 words. Award-winning author, Tim O’Brien called my novel “suspenseful and vividly written” and internationally bestselling author, Amy Stuart “loved the diversity of characters and the quick witted words and dialogue”. My novel will appeal to fans of Adam Silvera’s More Happy Than Not and Tommy Wallach’s We All Looked Up.

    When the rain starts, it’s simply an annoyance. But then it doesn’t stop.

    Seventeen-year-old sci-fi geek Simon Myers doesn’t know if the rumours of a global flood are true, but he does know that he’s not gay. He just happens to spend a lot of time studying the muscles of his childhood friend, star quarterback Jay Griffon. Unfortunately, things have been weird with his friend ever since Simon stumbled upon Jay’s heartbreaking secret. Now Simon is forced to grapple with his new feelings for Jay and watch from the sidelines as Jay starts dating the sharp-tongued beauty, Trish O’Brian.

    The daughter of a heroin addict, Trish has never had an easy life. With her mother practically comatose and her father never home, Trish is the sole caregiver for her baby sister and often must resort to stealing to keep them fed. But Trish has a plan. She’s shimmied her way into Jay’s life in her tightest jeans and skimpiest top, and come hell or high water she’s going to use him and his rich-kid privilege to escape her chaotic home life and circling social worker.

    As tensions between Trish, Simon and Jay escalate, so does the persistent ferocity of the rain. The complaints and jokes about the weather begin to morph into whispers of fear and acts of violence. Schools are closed. Shops are broken into. The electricity goes out. The water gets higher.

    And a kiss changes everything.

    I am an Event Coordinator at the Lavin Agency in Toronto, where I spend my days surrounded by books and interesting people. On rainy days you can find me reading under a blanket, drinking copious amounts of Earl Grey tea. My blanket fort is also located in Toronto.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).

  • Wadza Mhute

    by Wadza Mhute

    From 1976 to 2008 in an ever-changing country, from civil war to civil unrest – a story of three generations of women in the same family. They experience displacement within and without against the backdrop of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) from civil war to independence and economic inflation.

    MaiRati is a widow, who loses her farm to her husband’s brothers after his death. The inheritance laws in 1970s Rhodesia do not include women. Still she survives. 

    Rati briefly fights in the civil war where she endures physical and psychological trauma. To escape forced conscription in the rural areas she travels to the city and marries Lovemore, a businessman who becomes wealthy after Zimbabwe’s independence. Along with his wealth come mistresses or “small houses.” Rati shares her husband with other women.

    Her estranged daughter Muni immigrates to United States to escape the dysfunctional home. She attends university on a scholarship and struggles as an international student.  A crisis at home forces Muni to return and confront her past.

    The three women run from their circumstances but struggle in their new homes.

    This is a story of family, immigration and its struggles, as well as a story of discovering oneself in the midst of hardship. It is a story of undiagnosed trauma and returning to ones roots to begin again.

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    Vote for your favorite pitch. The pitch that receives the most votes will be awarded the “Fan Favorite,” and the author will receive a free one-hour consult with us (worth $250).