Emma Paterson’s author list reads like a who’s who of influential people currently shaking up cultural discussions in the UK. Emma Dabiri (Don’t Touch My Hair), Otegha Uwagba (Little Black Book), Charlie Brinkhurt-Cuff (Mother Country), Bridget Minamore (Titanic), Panashe Chigumadzi (These Bones Will Rise Again), Funmi Fetto (Palette – a beauty bible for women of colour, out October 2019) are just a selection of her clients.
Paterson studied English at Cambridge then completed an MA in Gender Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies. Her first publishing job was as editorial assistant for an academic publisher. She moved on to an agents’ assistant role at the prestigious Wylie Agency, joined Rogers, Coleridge & White in 2013 and is now a literary agent with Aitken Alexander Associates. She was named the Bookseller Rising Star of 2018.
1. You completed an MA at SOAS then went into academic publishing before deciding you preferred fiction publishing. How hard was it to get an assistant position at The Wylie Agency?
The first time I interviewed for that position, I didn’t get the job. Some time after, because the first interview had gone relatively well, I sent the director of the London office an email and asked whether any new vacancies had opened up. Luckily, there was a new position available so I interviewed again and finally got the job in 2010 around the time of the ash cloud.
2. What do you enjoy most about your work?
The breadth of it can be very stimulating. On the surface, the job is editorially driven but it also requires keen business instincts; the energy to generate new ideas; an interest in international publishing and global trends; a sensitive and complex understanding of people and their tastes. Deep down, though, I derive the purest pleasure from working closely with authors. That is the most rewarding part of the job, creatively and intellectually.











