-
509 readers
As publishing has gotten simpler for indie authors in the e-book era, it’s become much more complicated for established publishing companies.
With each edition of a book (Nook, Kindle and so on) requiring its own ISBN, set of metadata and careful production and processing, the back-end of publishing operations is becoming increasingly important — and could
-
116 readers
The stories of self-publishing success—the Hockings, Howeys, Konraths and the like—are well known, as is the Publishing Industry is Dead viewpoint of New York Times bestseller (and self-pub advocate), Seth Godin.
But what of the long-predicted mid-lister migration to self publishing? For the past couple of years, the popular hypothesis has been that the mid-list author—established
2207 readersAs ebooks steadily take over the book market, the question of whether it is better for an author to self-publish or go through the traditional route of working with an established publisher becomes more and more relevant.
Read more on Ebook publishing – Self-Publish or go with traditional publishers?…
-
174 readersWhat are the factors that authors consider when deciding how to publish their next book?A well-written article by publishing beat newbie Leslie Kaufman in The New York Times entitled New Publisher Authors Trust: Themselves suggests that it’s money and support services:…self-publishing will begin to widen its net and become attractive also to more established authors.
-
948 readersBack in the days when publishers where the only gateway to publish a book, writers received an advance upon signing their publishing contract.
With the growing success of self-publishing, two things have happened. Advances from established publishers for unknown authors have shrunk, the plethora of new publishers do not offer advances and self-publishers, of course, not
2742 readersTechnology has enabled established and self-published authors to experiment with serial publishing, making the old form new again.
By Jane Friedman
Christian's latest serial is "The Denver Cereal," a pun if there ever was one
Bring up the topic of serials in the writing community (either online or off), and it doesn’t take long for someone to invoke
2293 readersThe author of Blonde Lightning, Earthquake Weather, Angry Moon, and others, told his prospective publisher to take a walk after he was offered a 25% ebook royalty rate. In a blog post entitled Maybe the Mayans were right … but they were talking about the publishing industry he discusses the negotiations he had for a
830 readersWhen it came to getting a book published and distributed to a wide audience, it used to be that publishing houses with editorial, production, marketing and distribution operations were in the driver’s seat. All but a select few authors could dictate where the relationship went, how fast and under what terms.With the emergence of self-publishing
3374 readersOnline start-ups Byliner and The Atavist have established a market for stories too long for magazines and too short for books.
By Hernán Iglesias Illa
NEW YORK: How long should a book be? For more than a century, publishers and authors have understood that most commercial books, to be profitable and viable, should come in around 250
2980 readersA couple of months ago, agent Sonia Land of the Sheil Land literary agency placed Catherine Cookson’s backlist titles directly on Amazon, without consulting their print publisher, Random House, or offering it a chance to be part of the deal. Now it would seem that Random House has struck back, closing a backlist e-book deal