Publishing

PandaErica Newsletter 03

BIG NEWS: PandaErica is now represented by Marietta Zacker at Gallt & Zacker Literary Agency! 🎉

This feels like a dream come true. 💫

Growing up, I was obsessed with Sailor Moon and spent my childhood in Walt Disney World’s orbit, convinced I’d become a Disney artist someday. That was the story I told my family when I went to Ringling College of Art and Design for Illustration—but secretly, I dreamed of becoming a mangaka like Naoko Takeuchi. My bedroom walls were covered in fan art of original Sailor Soldiers inspired by me and my best friend’s middle school imaginations.

In college, a children’s book history elective reignited my love for picture books and comics. Mentors like Doug Chayka, George Pratt, Paula Jawitz, and Tom Casmer helped guide me toward children’s publishing.

After graduating, I moved to New York City and was lucky to work under legendary art director Martha Rago. I immersed myself in the kidlit world—joining the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators, attending conferences, and finding an incredible creative community. I’ve had the pleasure of speaking on panels, reviewing portfolios, and leading workshops at various industry conventions and events, where I met mentors, friends, and other creatives who inspired me. Thank you, Books of Wonder, for allowing me to meet my hi sci-fi idol, Brandon Sanderson, and his kind editor at Tor when they released his book The Rithmatist. Thank you, the Met Museum, for hosting an event with Oliver Jeffers, where I took a cool pic with him and got a couple of books autographed. I once wrote an email to him asking if I could be his Brooklyn studio assistant and if he had any advice for an aspiring author-illustrator like me when I was still a struggling, jobless grad. He took the time to write the kindest reply and gave such poignant advice:

Experiment and practice. Be disciplined and determined. Work hard and be prepared to hear "no" a lot.

I printed this email out and framed it. I’m always in awe of the limitless kindness, hope, and pay-it-forward spirit that can be found within the kidlit community.

Through a collection of uncanny coincidences, I landed my first indie-published book project with Electric Eggplant after tweeting some art with the SCBWI winter conference hashtag and following through with a direct email query to the publishers. This led to The Girls’ Q&A Book on Friendship by Ann Fox. In my role as a book designer, I hired the talented Violet Lemay on a couple of nonfiction picture books, and she, in return, hired me for my first published sticker book, The Future Is Ours: Feminist Stickers to Express Yourself by DuoPress Labs. And it was through my SCBWI Illustrator portfolio page that the authors of Mighty May Won’t Cry Today found my art and decided to hire me for my self-published picture book debut.

Marietta is one of the many kind souls I’ve met on my journey. She had offered to review any of my stories whenever I felt ready to send them to her earlier in my career—maybe too early? I didn’t feel ready at the time, and after many years had passed, she bravely asked me again: “Was I represented, and if not, would I like to talk about it?” In 2024, I did feel more confident and had a picture book dummy about a dog and his boy ready to share. That same dummy is now on submission. It’s been a whirlwind getting to today, but I’m so excited for this opportunity. I’m excited to work hard to get my stories and books out into the world. Thanks for sticking around to see where this winding path takes me next, Panda folks!

PandaErica
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