A revealing account of how agents have shaped book publishing and the literary canon from the 1950s to today
Middlemen rewrites literary history from the perspective of one of its most important but least visible the literary agent. Chronicling the story of agents in the United States from the 1950s to today, Laura McGrath uncovers their critical role in the making of American literature. From the famed three-martini lunch to the Frankfurt Book Fair, Middlemen takes readers behind the scenes to show how agents influence what we read. Along the way, it explains why many debut novelists never publish another book, why agents champion short story collections even though they sell poorly, how agents advocate for writers of color in a system that values whiteness, and why there are so many New York novels.
Weaving together original archival research, data analysis, and interviews with scores of agents and other publishing professionals, Middlemen demonstrates that agents—eighty percent of whom are in fact women—are much more than “middlemen.” As intermediaries between author and publisher, agents act as advocates, matchmakers, negotiators, and tastemakers, and they must balance artistic values with the commercial imperatives of publishing conglomerates. The book describes the decisive role agents have played in celebrated novels—from Jack Kerouac’s On the Road to Colson Whitehead’s The Intuitionist—but also in the creation of entire literary categories like the debut novel, the story collection, postmodernism, multiethnic fiction, and world literature.
Featuring profiles of agents past and present such as Sterling Lord, Lynn Nesbit, Candida Donadio, Marie Brown, and Andrew Wylie, along with perspectives from agents at all stages of their careers, Middlemen is an entertaining and eye-opening account of how literary fiction—and the literary canon—is made.
Very informative. Besides the first hand experience of agents lunch and business meetings at book fair, I’m very touched by the in depth analysis of the deeply rooted racism in publishing. At the end of the book, the author also detailed her research process and methodology, which is also very interesting.
20-30% of the book elaborated on the content of a few important American literature books published in last century, which is a little boring and feels off topic to me. The book requires concentration to read. But overall it is worth the effort.
"Middlemen" is the most bookish of bookish books. Drawing on her dissertation and the academic work she has done since then - including interviews with agents, fieldwork in NYC and at the Frankfurt book fair, and data analysis on a corpus of book deal announcements - Laura tells us about the "middlemen" of how trad books (as opposed to indie) get published: the literary agent. Structuring her contents like the life of a book, from pitch to foreign rights, she takes us on a journey into the back rooms, lunch spots, and digital communications of publishing. Chapter 5, on activism and cyclical uptake of topics, was especially lucid and informative. While written with an academic and industry audience in mind, "Middlemen" also has a lot to offer for leisure readers: if you've ever wondered why some books get published while others don't, why some books make it big and others don't, why NYC is the center of publishing, etc., this book is for you. I enjoyed Laura's witty, engaging style, substantiated by chunky footnotes and a profound network of academic references, and learned so much both about publishing and how to think about turning my dissertation into a manuscript.
Maybe just a tad preachy, but overall very informative. Learned a lot. Has caused me to think a lot about who is guiding the literary market & how that guidance affects what I choose to read.
I'm not normally one to read much nonfiction, but when the cover of this showed up on my home library's app's "Recently Added" carousel, the cover popped and, being an erstwhile English major with long extinguished delusions of working in publishing (tried marketing, got bored) but a fondness for the milieu (memories of reading Brightness Falls) I thought I'd check it out, and I'm glad I did. McGrath's writing is very readable and her theses are exceptionally clear and well-developed (perhaps a little too much at some points, but again, as an infrequent reader of nonfiction, especially that which appeals to the popular but falls more heavily towards the academic, I can't really speak to that), the evidence is laid out, and I found myself agreeing with all her arguments, which only depresses me a little bit. That all literature, or at least most literature post 1900 (and probably a significant portion prior) is so explictly shaped by market influence, whether though audience desires or agent/publisher mediation, surely says something about what we consider art (what does it mean for The Crying of Lot 49 to have been written to fullfill and leave a contract?), but I suppose at the end of the day everyone has to eat. Bills come due for us all. Anyway, interesting book, kudos to the cover designers for picking pink so it had more visual appeal on a white app interface, and a shame the only other full review on Goodreads right now at time of writing (5/5/26) is evidently AI. Worth a read if you're interested in the business of books.
Middlemen offers a compelling and meticulously researched exploration of the often overlooked role literary agents play in shaping American literature. Laura B. McGrath reframes the publishing landscape by placing agents at the center of literary production, revealing their influence not only on individual works but on the broader evolution of the literary canon.
One of the most striking aspects of the book is its ability to balance narrative accessibility with scholarly depth. Drawing on archival research, industry data, and firsthand accounts, McGrath constructs a detailed yet engaging account of how agents operate as intermediaries negotiating between artistic ambition and commercial realities.
The book also stands out for its broader cultural insights. By examining how agents have supported emerging voices, navigated systemic challenges, and influenced literary trends from debut fiction to multiethnic literature it highlights their role as both gatekeepers and advocates within a complex industry.
Overall, Middlemen is an insightful and thought provoking work that reshapes how we understand the machinery behind literary success. It is a significant contribution to conversations about publishing, authorship, and the forces that determine what stories are told and remembered.
Best book on publishing I've read. Anyone who wants to get into the industry, especially as an agent or editor, should read it. Also the writing is really smooth. It's an enjoyable read as well as nicely gossipy (who ARE the people whose names have been changed?).