Here are some of the books I’ve edited. For a full list of my acquisitions, please consult Publishers Marketplace.
2024 & 2025
Published titles
Here are a few exciting acquisitions of mine that are in progress.
Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash
From Madeline Cash, editor of Forever magazine, a debut novel following five members of a dysfunctional suburban family—the parents in a disastrous open marriage, their three daughters in various states of rebellion—as they unexpectedly end up at the center of a crime ring run by their town's local billionaire; examining girlhood, identity, family, and the all-pervasive chaos of the 21st century.
The Vivisectors by Missouri Williams
From Missouri Williams, winner of the Republic of Consciousness Prize for The Doloriad, a novel set in a famed but dying university city increasingly overrun by nature and the gardeners who govern it, following a reclusive graduate student who is forced into a complicated friendship with a divisive student; an exploration of faith, selfhood, love, and metaphor.
Waiting for Britney Spears by Jeff Weiss
From freelance writer/LA-icon Jeff Weiss, a multifaceted portrait of the beloved, embattled pop star, tracing the singer's meteoric rise and tragic fall alongside America's own peak and decline in the 2000s, combining cultural criticism and history along with the Jeff’s early experience as a tabloid writer shadowing Spears, resulting in an exploration of America's last great pop star and the world that exploited her.
Fear of a Female Genius by Lindsay Zoladz
From Lindsay Zoladz, New York Times critic and cultural critic, a feminist history of the idea of artistic genius and a critical journey through the lives and work of many female artists, writers, and musicians who transformed male-dominated fields, including Joni Mitchell, Yoko Ono, Elaine May, Hilma af Klint, and Mary Shelley, as well as several previously unsung female artists, all of whom inspire and argument for a new and more expansive understanding of genius itself.
Speed of Life by Andrew Durbin
From Andrew Durbin, editor-in-chief of frieze, an exploration of two foundational, transgressive, and intimately connected gay artists—Paul Thek and Peter Hujar—who defined New York's storied downtown scene and later the international art world, and who ultimately changed contemporary art forever; a book about friendship and death, queerness and community, and the complicated meanings of "legacy."
Play the Tape by Rembert Browne
From Rembert Browne, former writer-at-large at New York magazine and staff writer at Grantland, a cultural history tracing the last 20 years of the American experiment—from Black culture and domestic politics to an Internet that suddenly made everything possible—alongside a generation's coming-of-age and the author's own stories of success, setback, and survival, to interrogate how we got to this unprecedented point, so the past can inform our future.
Two forthcoming novels by Bryan Washington
From National Book Award 5 under 35 Honoree, Dylan Thomas Prize and NYPL Young Lions Award winner Bryan Washington, two new novels: the first about a mother and a son, estranged for 10 years, reconnecting in the son's chosen city of Tokyo in the weeks leading up to Christmas, and the second exploring intergenerational Black queer relationships through a young gay man who takes a job as a live-in caretaker for a retired older pianist.
Weird Era by Ryan Schreiber
From Ryan Schreiber, founder of Pitchfork, a chronicle charting the site's improbable journey from early internet bedroom blog to the world's most influential music publication, while also telling the story of the music and generation of listeners Pitchfork launched along the way.
Caring at the End of the World by Xiaowei Wang
From Xiaowei Wang, author of Blockchain Chicken Farm and 2023 National Book Foundation Science + Literature Award winner, a chronicle of the entanglement of technology and care in America—in particular the way in which quick-fix technology has transformed our beliefs about what it means to be healthy, and how to care for ourselves and our communities.
Here are some book-related chats.
Harper’s Bazaar: A conversation with Jonathan Escoffery about the editorial process (October 2023)
Barnes & Noble’s Poured Over podcast: An interview with Miwa Messer, host of the podcast, alongside Henry Hoke, author of Open Throat (June 2023)
Gagosian magazine: A profile in Gagosian alongside some amazing editors (summer 2022).
St. Henri Books podcast Weird Era: A discussion about publishing and my career (July 2022).
Vogue: An interview with Vogue about the state of queer publishing (June 2022).
Lehman College, CUNY: A talk with Lehman College’s Writing Queer Literature course (February 2022).
FSG x LitHub podcast Well-Versed: In conversation with Eric Cervini, author of The Deviant’s War, and Mark Gevisser, author of The Pink Line, about queer rights, past and present (June 2020).
FSG x LitHub podcast Well-Versed: In conversation with Thomas Grattan, author of The Recent East, about the genesis of his debut novel (February 2021).