The Steve Laube Agency is committed to providing top quality guidance to authors and speakers. Our years of experience and success brings a unique service to our clients. We focus primarily in the Christian marketplace and have put together an outstanding gallery of authors and speakers whose books continue to make an impact throughout the world.
Our Service Philosophy
Content
To help the author develop and create the best book possible. Material that has both commercial appeal and long-term value.
Career
To help the author determine the next best step in their writing career. Giving counsel regarding the subtleties of the marketplace as well as the realities of the publishing community.
Contract
To help the author secure the best possible contract. One that partners with the best strategic publisher and one that is mutually beneficial for all parties involved.
Recent Posts
Writer’s Block Becomes Writer’s Talk
Seth Godin once wrote in a blog post:
No one ever gets talker’s block. No one wakes up in the morning, discovers he has nothing to say and sits quietly, for days or weeks, until the muse hits, until the moment is right, until all the craziness in his life has died down.
What a liberating concept! It reminded me of a great book by Joel Saltzman, If You Can Talk, You Can Write.
Of course, there are times when it feels like the well is dry and you have “nothing to say.” But that isn’t really true, is it? You can sit down with your spouse, your best friend, or your writers group and talk about your lack of inspiration. It may be that in that expression you can find the spark of creativity.
It is the same for writer’s block, if there is such a thing.
The key, of course, is to write something. Anything. Even if it is bad. Kevin J. Anderson suggests you should “dare to be bad and then fix it.”
Still don’t feel like you have anything to write? Just imagine a topic and think of what you would say if asked the question while sitting with a panel of experts. And then write your answer.
It would be interesting to hear what you do to get past any sort of “blockage” in your writing life. Please post your thoughts below.
Leave a CommentFun Fridays – January 31, 2025
Are you like me and stunned that this is already the last day of January? Since our minds are blown, let’s enjoy some mindless fun with marbles playing music in today’s video. ShareTweet
Tips for Mentoring Writer Friends
You’ve undoubtedly done everything listed below since you’re one of our readers. However, based on the many unsolicited submissions we receive, many new authors still need to follow good advice. If you’re mentoring new authors, we suggest recommending the following: Please Read and Follow Our Guidelines As Steve Laube says, “We are not hiding.” We feature our guidelines on our website. These guidelines state what type of manuscripts we seek. Reading further, each agent presents which Christian manuscripts we seek. Because we often see submissions contrary to Christianity, and because each of us receives Christian manuscripts that don’t fit the …
What Entered the Public Domain in 2025?
I try to post something about this every year. This year is no exception. In the United States, under U.S. copyright law, works published in 1929 and earlier are now in public domain. One can publish them or use them without securing copyright permission. In case you are wondering about the specifics, the Copyright Term Extension Act (passed in 1998) gave works published from 1923 through 1977 a 95-year term limit. They enter public domain on January 1 after the conclusion of the 95th year. This law applies not only to books but anything under copyright, like films and music. …
Fun Fridays – January 24, 2025
The 1972 Olympic Games saw one of history’s most iconic come-from-behind races. Watch it again today and be inspired by Dave Wottle. (The 800 meter race is twice around the track.) The lesson? When it seems you are too far behind. When it looks like every other writer already knows everything. When you probably should just give up. Keep running. Keep working at your craft. Every writer you know or admire started at the beginning. Just like you. ShareTweet