Dear Fabulous Agents and Writing Coaches:
A cross between Ally Condie’s Matched and
Laurie Halse Anderson’s Fever 1793, REVELATION (73,000 words) is a YA
historical novel with crossover potential about breaking through expectations
to find one’s own place in the tangled racial web of 1825 New Orleans.
All seventeen-year-old
Angelique Saint-Clair wants is the freedom to choose her own fate. But to
secure a comfortable life for herself as a free woman of color, she has been
taught that she must follow in her mother’s footsteps and sign a contract with
a wealthy Creole gentleman . . . not as his wife, but as his mistress. Her
mother has trained her well for her first quadroon ball, dances given for the
purpose of introducing quadroons to such men. At the ball, Angelique snags the
attention of Monsieur LeBlanc. Handsome and kind, he has everything to offer.
Unfortunately, Angelique’s heart already belongs to another, her impoverished
piano instructor who happens to be LeBlanc’s half-brother.
Determined to secure her
daughter’s future, Marguerite Saint-Clair encourages negotiations with LeBlanc,
forcing Angelique to choose between comfort and love. Angelique assumes such a
choice will be easy until yellow fever strikes the city. When Angelique decides
to sacrifice her desires to save her mother’s life, she discovers she is too
late because LeBlanc has already left the city. Soon after, her mother dies,
but Angelique refuses to give up when she discovers the key to empowering
herself: her father’s name on her baptismal record. Armed with this
information, she carves a life for herself and the aspirations of her heart.
Originally from Louisiana, I
return home through my writing, which includes Becoming Cajun, Becoming
American: The Acadian in American Literature from Longfellow to James Lee Burke
(LSU Press, 2009) and an article on post-Katrina New Orleans detective
fiction published in Clues: A Journal of Detection. In terms of fiction,
I am an active member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and
Illustrators. I also attended the 2013 Rutgers Council on Children’s Literature
One-on-One Plus Conference, the 2014 Yale Writers’ Conference, and the December 2014
Big Sur Writing Workshop.
The first 250 words of the
manuscript are pasted below. Thank you for your time and consideration of this
simultaneous submission.
Sincerely,
Maria Hebert-Leiter
REVELATION, First
250 Words:
Masks cover only so much. I twirl
the silk-wrapped stick and watch the attached mask circle above my hand like a
bird. Flawless dove feathers rise from the right corner. I brush my fingertips
along the edge. It tickles, and I smile. I used to adore dressing up, pretending
I could be whatever my imagination desired. I raise the mask over my face. It
has been years since I believed I could have anything if only I imagined it.
Still, I cannot stop the music that
rises in my head or the image that forms in harmony with it. Me sitting at a
beautiful piano as I press down my left hand and play the chords that open the
second movement of Schubert’s Fantasie,
the Adagio. Somber notes only I can hear pull me from the tedious present until
my fingers clench. The stick propping up the mask cracks in two.
“Angelique,” Maman says, my name
sliding like silk in her perfect French marred only by a hint of
disappointment. She accepts the broken pieces. Her lips pinch then ease as she
turns back to the seamstress and waves her hand up and down the dress. “It
looks exquisite.”
Maman requires no mask. She has
perfected the art of pretending we are better off than we really are.
Thick raindrops plunk on the
banquette. I hear more than see them beyond the front window of our cottage on
Dumaine. The wooden walkways have soaked up so much water lately that they have
warped in the perpetual heat.