Rea Frey
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Blair Braverman's writing may also work, except she's an expert and I'm a novice in comparison to her.
Thank you.
Hey team, I'd love some help with finding comps for my grounded speculative romance novel.
It's about a 30 something year old career woman who feels very behind in life and yet somehow finds a way to travel to a parallel world where all of a sudden she's living the life she's always dreamed of.
including a surprising relationship with her on-and-off professional nemesis.
It would appeal to fans of Ashley Poston's The Seven Years Slip because of its elements of magical realism, whimsical and introspective tone, and single POV focus on one woman's journey towards love and healing.
Another possible comp would be Taylor Jenkins Reid's Maybe in Another Life, which similarly explores the what-if scenarios of life and how different choices lead to very different outcomes.
However, both of these feel too big for a debut novel, so I'd love more options.
Thank you in advance.
Thank you, Emily, for helping us with comp titles.
I'm writing a thriller, a psychological thriller that I would compare to Wrong Place, Wrong Time by Jillian McAllister.
Maybe Yesteryear, which hasn't come out yet.
But really the most, I think the best comp is an older TV show called Dead to Me.
The main character inherits her aunt's lucrative MLM business.
But she also believes that she's living in the wrong timeline.
She joins a timeline support group to prove it, makes a reckless choice to fix it, and repeatedly wakes up in the wrong body.
Her and her bestie from the support group go on a journey to try to figure out what happened to the teen that the main character is inhabiting before they completely lose touch with real reality.
Hi Emily, I would love help with comp titles for my campus novel with the psychological thrill of the film Black Swan.
Told in epistolary format, this story follows Maggie Rivers, an aspiring surgeon secretly battling the twisted voice of her eating disorder, as cultural beliefs surrounding mental health, looming med school entrance exams, and a physician who declares she's not thin enough to be in danger, push her toward collapse.
Maggie writes and receives letters to the five main people in her life,