Nobody is interested in sequels if they’re not already in love with book #1.
Why You Should Pitch a Single Book | Rachelle Gardner - 0 views
The Business of Editing: On My Bookshelf « An American Editor - 0 views
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, for example, use H.L. Mencken’s The American Language (4th ed revised with supplements), Garner’s Modern American Usage (as well as its two predecessor editions), Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage, The American Heritage Guide to Contemporary Usage and Style, Good’s Whose Grammar Book Is This Anyway?, The Gregg Reference Manual, and Burchfield’s Fowler’s Modern English Usage
Why E-book Distribution Is Completely and Utterly Broken (and How to Fix It) ... - 0 views
Do Writers Really Need a Book Business Plan? by Deborah Riley-Magnus - The Book Designer - 0 views
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Now is the time to jot down all those people who will want your book, why they’ll want it and how effective they’ll be at getting more people to want it. Know – really know – who your market and readership target is.
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No point in writing a book if you don’t know why or if it’s special.
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where else might it fit in perfectly?
What the Penguin-Random Merger Says About the Future of the Book Business - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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most observers expect that this is just the beginning of a series of mergers — like those in the music business — that will take the Big Six publishers down to the Big Three and perhaps one day even the Big One.
The Future Role of Agents | WritersDigest.com - 0 views
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There’s a final dilemma. Publishers are now paying lower advances, releasing fewer titles and selling digital content at lower prices than print content (which in turn affects royalty payments to both agent and author). Assuming this is the new reality, there will be less money to go around for the number of agents now in business. Plus, will it be worth an agent’s time and energy to sell a project that doesn’t pay more than $1,500 upfront? Probably not. One agency has quietly come out with a new model that requires authors to pay a minimum commission—i.e., the agent must earn a minimum amount on a sale no matter what advance the publisher pays, which means authors would “share” a larger part of the advance upfront (or even pay out of pocket in the case of very low advances). Undoubtedly, there’s no shortage of aspiring writers who would be ecstatic to pay more to an agent if it meant securing a publishing deal. But such a model is sure to raise ethical concerns. Agents may take projects knowing they will ultimately be paid by authors rather than by publishers. Is the industry (that includes the author!) ready to accept such a shift in how agents profit?
The Most Common Grammar Gaffes Writers Make (and How To Avoid Them) - 0 views
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The passive voice is weak, vague, and wordy. "New York publishers are being attacked by self-publishers" is not as powerful as "Self-publishers are attacking New York publishers." I search for every instance of "be" and "being" to eliminate as many instances of the passive voice as I can.
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hyphenate two or more words used as an adjective—"social-media sites"
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bulleted lists should maintain a parallel structure
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