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Noah Lukeman
Noah Lukeman
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Noah Lukeman (born November 28, 1973) is an American literary agent, actor, script-writer and author of works about writing and literature.

Key Information

A number of his books are widely used in creative-writing programs.[citation needed] Lukeman has contributed to a number of newspapers and journals, including The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. Some of his books have been translated into Portuguese, Japanese, Korean, Chinese and Indonesian. Lukeman is the founder of the Lukeman Literary Management.

Early life and education

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Lukeman was born in New York City, the son of Brenda Shoshanna, a psychologist, actress, and playwright, and Gerald Lukeman, a Shakespearean actor and director.[1] He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and creative writing at Brandeis University, located in Waltham, Massachusetts.

Career

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After college, Lukeman worked for various publishers, including William Morrow and Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

In 1996, Lukeman founded Lukeman Literary Management, in which capacity he acted as agent for a number of successful writers. In 2001, Lukeman joined Michael Ovitz's Artists Management Group (AMG), where he ran its New York publishing office for years before returning to being an independent agent.

Lukeman has also acted in a few independent films.[2][3]

Writing

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Lukeman's writing is diverse in nature. His first published works offered advice and techniques for writers. Since then, he has collaborated with a U.S. Marine Corps general to write about the inner workings of CENTCOM (U.S. Central Command) and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and has written a sequel to Shakespeare's Macbeth in blank verse.[4] Lukeman also works as a screenwriter, and his screenplay, Brothers in Arms, was sold and named to The Black List,[failed verification][4] an annual survey of the "most-liked" motion picture screenplays not yet produced.

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Noah Lukeman is an American literary agent and author known for founding Lukeman Literary Management Ltd. and for writing influential guides on the craft of writing that have become widely used resources for aspiring authors. He entered the publishing industry at age 19 in 1993 as an intern in the editorial department of William Morrow, later completing internships at Farrar, Straus and Giroux and Delphinium Books before becoming a full-time assistant literary agent in 1995. Within six months he had secured seven-figure sales, and in 1996, at age 22, he founded his own New York-based agency, Lukeman Literary Management Ltd., which went on to represent a wide range of authors, journalists, politicians, and celebrities. The agency arranged hundreds of book deals with major publishers such as Random House, Simon & Schuster, and HarperCollins, along with foreign rights and film/TV options, and represented notable clients including His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Academy Award-winning actor Gene Hackman, Pulitzer Prize winner Tom Hallman Jr., and National Book Award finalist Dan Chaon. Lukeman also headed the New York publishing office of Michael Ovitz’s AMG for a period and created one of the early publishing rights websites, PrePub.com, in 1998. Lukeman is the author of several books on writing and literature, including the bestseller The First Five Pages: A Writer’s Guide to Staying out of the Rejection Pile (Simon & Schuster, 1999), The Plot Thickens: 8 Ways to Bring Fiction to Life (St. Martin’s Press, 2002), and A Dash of Style: The Art and Mastery of Punctuation (W.W. Norton, 2006), which have been adopted in university curricula, featured in writers’ programs, and profiled in outlets such as NPR. He has also co-authored Inside Centcom (Regnery, 2005), published the play The Tragedy of Macbeth, Part II (Pegasus, 2008), and sold the screenplay Brothers in Arms, which appeared on the Black List of top Hollywood scripts in 2007. In addition to his agenting and writing, Lukeman has contributed articles to publications including Poets & Writers and Writer’s Digest, spoken at institutions such as Harvard, Stanford, and Juilliard, and offered extensive free resources to the writing community. In the early 2010s, Lukeman transitioned away from traditional literary agenting to focus on digital publishing developments and has since emphasized philanthropy, including founding Read and Recover to provide e-readers to children’s hospitals, organizing food drives in Brooklyn, and making multiple of his writing books permanently available for free to those in need.

Early Life

Birth and Background

Noah Lukeman was born on November 28, 1973, in New York City, New York, USA. He is the son of Brenda Shoshanna Lukeman, a psychologist, psychotherapist, and author. Limited public information is available regarding additional details of his family origins or early childhood experiences prior to his entry into the publishing industry.

Education

Noah Lukeman graduated from Brandeis University with a B.A. in English and Creative Writing, cum laude and with high honors. He double-majored in the subjects and served as Editor in Chief of the relevant publication during his time there. Available biographical information focuses primarily on his professional achievements, but these sources do provide the above details on his academic background.

Career as Literary Agent

Founding Lukeman Literary Management

Noah Lukeman founded Lukeman Literary Management Ltd. in New York in 1996 at the age of 22. After beginning his publishing career in 1993 at age 19 with an internship in the Editorial Department of William Morrow, followed by additional internships at Farrar, Straus and Giroux and Delphinium Books, he took a full-time position as an assistant literary agent in 1995 and within six months secured seven-figure sales. He then established his own agency, operating in an era when business relied on phone and fax without internet support. Through persistence and consistent effort, he built the agency over the subsequent years. The agency represented a broad spectrum of clients, including authors, journalists, politicians, and celebrities, and facilitated hundreds of book deals with major publishers, dozens of foreign rights transactions, and options for film and television. It maintained a focus on literary representation while incorporating related entertainment opportunities. After several years of representing bestsellers, Lukeman was recruited to head the New York publishing office of Michael Ovitz’s Artists Management Group (AMG), where he continued to handle high-profile deals and gained exposure to the Los Angeles entertainment and corporate agency landscape. He later returned to independent operations, adopting a boutique model that prioritized close work with authors and editorial development. The agency remained active for nearly 15 years through the early 2010s. In the early 2010s, Lukeman was among the first literary agents to anticipate the profound effects of the digital revolution on publishing, prompting a shift away from traditional agenting toward the evolving digital landscape. He ceased agenting activities many years ago, and the agency is no longer operational.

Notable Clients and Agency Achievements

Lukeman Literary Management, under Noah Lukeman's leadership, represented a diverse array of authors, journalists, politicians, and celebrities, securing over 200 book deals with major publishers including Random House, Knopf, Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, and Penguin. The agency also arranged numerous foreign rights sales, magazine serializations, and film and television options. Among its notable clients were His Holiness the Dalai Lama, for the book The Wisdom of Forgiveness co-authored with Victor Chan, as well as actor Gene Hackman, who collaborated on Escape from Andersonville with Daniel Lenihan. The agency represented other prominent figures such as Fran Drescher for Cancer Schmancer, Montel Williams for Climbing Higher (with Larry Grobel), and musician Brian "Head" Welch for Save Me from Myself. The agency's client list included recipients of major literary honors, such as Pulitzer Prize winner Tom Hallman, Jr. for Sam: The Boy Behind the Mask, National Book Award finalist Dan Chaon for Await Your Reply, and American Book Award winner Spoken Soul by John and Russell Rickford. It also handled multiple New York Times bestsellers, including American Terrorist by Lou Michel and Dan Herbeck (reaching #2 on the list) and Jennifer Lee Carrell's Interred with Their Bones (also published as The Shakespeare Secret). These successes reflected the agency's ability to place works across genres and secure recognition for its authors through prestigious awards and commercial performance.

Authorship of Writing Guides

Early Books on Manuscript Submission and Plot

Noah Lukeman drew upon his experience as a literary agent to author early non-fiction guides that offer practical advice on manuscript submission and narrative structure. His debut book in this vein, The First Five Pages: A Writer's Guide to Staying Out of the Rejection Pile, was published by Simon & Schuster in 2000. The guide examines the decisive role of a manuscript's opening pages, arguing that agents and editors often reject submissions based on flaws evident in the first few pages alone. It provides targeted instruction on improving prose, presentation, dialogue, sound and rhythm, adjectives and adverbs, repetition, show versus tell, metaphors and similes, pacing, and characterization to prevent immediate rejection, and includes end-of-chapter exercises for practical application. The book achieved bestseller status and has been incorporated into the curricula of numerous universities. Lukeman followed with The Plot Thickens: 8 Ways to Bring Fiction to Life, published by St. Martin's Press in 2002. This work focuses on plot construction, contending that compelling plots emerge from the integration of elements such as characterization, journey, suspense, conflict, and context rather than an isolated "great idea." It functions as a fiction-writing workshop, guiding writers of various experience levels to combine these fundamentals innovatively and create multidimensional, timeless stories applicable to novels, short stories, screenwriting, and other imaginative forms. The book received positive critical notices, including praise for its practical insights on suspense and conflict, and earned recognition as a national bestseller, a BookSense 76 selection, a Publishers Weekly Daily pick, and a Writers Digest Book Club selection.

Works on Style and Punctuation

Noah Lukeman's work on style and punctuation is chiefly represented by A Dash of Style: The Art and Mastery of Punctuation, published by W. W. Norton & Company in 2006. This book reframes punctuation as a dynamic artistic tool rather than a rigid set of rules, demonstrating how its mastery can elevate clarity, rhythm, sentence variety, economy of expression, and overall style in creative writing. Lukeman argues that punctuation choices reveal the writer's thinking and can transform prose from ordinary to evocative. The book devotes full chapters to major punctuation marks—including the period, comma, semicolon, colon, quotation marks, dash, and parentheses—as well as to paragraph and section breaks, and concludes with a chapter titled "The Symphony of Punctuation" on their integrated use. It draws illustrative examples from authors such as Poe, Melville, Hemingway, Carver, Kafka, Joyce, Shakespeare, Faulkner, and others, posing questions about their stylistic preferences to highlight punctuation's expressive power. Interactive exercises at chapter ends encourage practical application, making the guide accessible and engaging for creative writers and anyone seeking to refine their prose. A Dash of Style received strong praise in the writing community and has endured as a resource in craft education. It was named one of the best writing books of the year by The Writer magazine in 2006 and described as "an instant classic" by novelist M. J. Rose. The book was selected for the Writer’s Digest Book Club and the Forbes Book Club, profiled on NPR, and adopted into the curricula of over fifty universities and writing programs, including those at Brandeis, Harvard Extension, Johns Hopkins, and the Gotham Writers’ Workshop. Its positive reception is reflected in endorsements from educators and writers who have called it "pithy, elegant," "a master class," and "flawless."

Dramatic Writing and Media Work

Plays and Theatrical Works

Noah Lukeman has written one published play, The Tragedy of Macbeth, Part II (also subtitled The Seed of Banquo), an original sequel to Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Macbeth. The work begins immediately after the conclusion of Shakespeare's play and imagines a resolution to the witches' prophecy that "the seed of Banquo" will become kings. Written in blank verse and structured in five acts, it closely emulates Shakespeare's language, pace, and dramatic form to create a faithful continuation. The play was first published in hardcover by Pegasus Books in October 2008, with a paperback edition released on April 23, 2010. It received critical praise for its poetic execution and theatrical potential, with reviewers describing it as "a poetic, well-paced drama" and an "audacious achievement" that demonstrates mastery of Shakespearean style. The work was selected as recommended reading in New York Magazine's fall preview. Staged readings of the play have been performed, including Act I at The Producers Club in New York on November 5, 2008, the full script at the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York on April 23, 2009, and a complete reading in the United Kingdom in 2010. No full stage productions are documented in available sources. This remains Lukeman's primary known contribution to theatrical writing.

Screenwriting and Film/Television Involvement

Noah Lukeman has participated in independent filmmaking primarily through short films, where he has credits as a screenwriter, director, and actor. His screenwriting credits are limited to two short films he also directed and appeared in during 2005. He co-wrote, directed, and acted in A Better Life (2005), playing the character Michael in this short about a young woman's pursuit of a better life through fashion. That same year, he wrote, directed, and starred as the title character in The Toy Soldier (2005). These projects represent his direct creative involvement in screenwriting for produced short films. Beyond these, Lukeman has acting credits in other independent short films, including a role as Robert F. Kennedy in Bobby: RFK 37 (2006). He has no listed credits in television production or series. In feature screenwriting, Lukeman authored the screenplay Brothers in Arms, which was sold to a film studio and named to The Black List in 2007 as one of the top unproduced screenplays of the year. No produced feature films from his writing are documented.

Other Professional Activities

Columns, Blogs, and Industry Commentary

Noah Lukeman authored the blog "Ask a Literary Agent," where he offered detailed advice to aspiring writers on navigating the publishing industry. The blog, active from 2009 to 2014, primarily took the form of responses to reader-submitted questions, covering topics such as querying literary agents, securing representation, negotiating contracts, the risks of vanity or fee-charging publishers, and strategies for self-publishing, particularly ebook series marketing and sales optimization. Lukeman used the platform to share practical insights, including warnings against paying upfront fees to publishers and guidance on ebook pricing, promotions, and avoiding common pitfalls in the industry. Notable posts from the blog's later period included discussions on the challenges of landing an agent with a short story collection alone, distinctions between literary and commercial fiction, and a comprehensive list of 26 tips for maximizing ebook series sales through tactics like free promotions, series packaging, and advertising platforms. In the blog's profile, Lukeman explained that he maintained it simply to give back to the writing community by providing free, direct advice without accepting new clients through the site. The blog complemented his published writing guides by offering ongoing, interactive commentary on similar subjects, though it focused on shorter-form Q&A rather than extended instruction. No evidence indicates other regular columns or blogs authored by Lukeman in major writing publications or elsewhere during this period or beyond. The blog remains accessible online as an archive of his industry commentary.

Personal Life

Family and Interests

Noah Lukeman has maintained a private personal life, with limited publicly available information regarding his family. He has described acting as a significant personal interest, particularly enjoying the opportunity to perform Shakespeare in small off-off-Broadway theaters. Lukeman has noted that memorizing and performing the dialogue offers a deeper experience than reading alone, providing insights that inform his perspective on writing. He has also participated in small roles in independent films and short films, which he pursues for enjoyment rather than prominence. Lukeman recommends that writers take acting classes to gain a greater respect for dialogue and enhance their craft.

Residence and Later Activities

Noah Lukeman is a long-time resident of Brooklyn, New York. His later activities have centered on philanthropy, particularly efforts to combat food insecurity in Brooklyn neighborhoods including Bed-Stuy, Brownsville, and adjacent areas. He serves on the board of the BedStuy Campaign Against Hunger and organizes annual fundraisers such as Project Oatmeal and Project Turkey. In 2019, he was honored with the Planter Award for his 15 years of work to help feed the hungry in Brooklyn. Lukeman founded Read and Recover, an initiative that purchases e-readers and donates them to children's hospitals. He continues to donate thousands of free books and audiobooks to individuals unable to afford them or facing hardship. He has made several of his writing guides freely available, including audiobook and ebook editions of titles such as The First Five Pages and The Plot Thickens, with plans to release more in free formats if rights revert. In 2020, Lukeman was featured in videos for Apple Books for Authors, offering guidance on writing and publishing topics such as developing a plot, and related content remains accessible on the platform. He offers to provide copies of his published books for free to those in need, including military service members, and responds to specific publishing questions via email ([email protected]) after individuals have read his free materials. He is also willing to speak to writing groups or universities at no charge when his schedule allows. While Lukeman is no longer agenting and his literary agency was active through the early 2010s, these charitable and educational efforts represent his primary ongoing activities.
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