![]() ![]() ![]() Maria Teresa Hart’s book, DOLL, is a pop-culture feminist critique of doll history and culture, from Raggedy Ann to Barbie to android sex dolls. We talk about how that happened, what it was like and how an experience like this can become an doorway into larger opportunities in publishing. Her book, Doll, is part of Bloomsbury’s Object Lessons series. Maria Teresa Hart is a writer and editor who works most often in food and travel, with a series of impressive bylines that range from the New York Times and The Atlantic to VICE and Business Insider, but she came on the pod to talk about the experience of writing a book for a publishing house within an existing series. (The fiction version would be work-for-hire chapter books or books within a fandom-and we’d love to talk about that if you have guest ideas.) ![]() ![]() Many writers get started this way, with gift books, guides and other non-fiction books that follow existing formats or fit into existing series. The book itself was shorter and much differently formatted than standard non-fiction. We pitched the book before I had many bylines at all-but adding the words “is the author of the forthcoming book…” to my pitches opened a lot of doors. Susan was the expert and I was a rising writer with a lesser expertise riding on her coattails. For me-KJ-it was Reading with Babies, Toddlers and Twos, a book I wrote in 2006 with Susan Straub. ![]()
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