Authors Tom Angleberger and Paul Dellinger joined forces to write the recently published children’s book Fuzzy. Now the human and robot friendship novel is making its way into the film rights market in a big away and getting plenty of attention.
Andrea Brown Literary Agency
When Max befriends her new robot classmate Fuzzy, part of Vanguard One Middle School’s new Robot Integration Program, she helps him learn everything he needs to know about surviving middle school — the good, the bad, and the really, really, ugly.
Jay Asher’s new book, What Light, is currently heating up the film rights market. The YA novel is a follow-up to his highly successful Thirteen Reasons Why, which spent 65 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list and is now in the works as a series at Netflix.
Sierra, a teenage girl whose family runs a Christmas tree farm in Oregon, develops a relationship with a complicated boy named Caleb while visiting in California.
Alex Gino’s debut novel tells a progressive story without condescending to its younger demographic. New York Times, MTV, and Paper Towns author John Green have all praised the story, the rights to which are now available.
When people look at George, they think they see a boy. But she knows she’s not a boy. She knows she’s a girl.
Pitched as Clueless meets Silver Linings Playbook, a popular high school swimmer with OCD, who is uncomfortable with her queen-bee status, finds unexpected comfort in an underground poetry club introduced to her by a quirky classmate.
Pitched as Clueless meets Silver Linings Playbook, the dramedy centers on a popular high school swimmer, uncomfortable with her queen-bee status, who finds unexpected comfort in an underground poetry club introduced to her by a quirky classmate.
Logline: Story follows a Japanese-American boy who, while interned at a camp during WWII, joins the camp’s baseball team, which goes on to beat the state champions.