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Business of Publishing
4 Things to Know About Publishing (From an Intern’s POV) – Samantha Kolb
by, Jill Swenson
August 18, 2015

This summer Samantha Kolb completed an internship with Swenson Book Development LLC. Here she shares some of what she learned in the last 10 weeks. As an English major, I have learned to endure perplexed looks when family and friends ask what my major is. I have also learned to gracefully answer no to the follow-up question; “Oh, are you going to be an English… [Read More]

Filed Under: career, English major, Samantha Kolb, summer intern, teaching
1 Comment
Paths to Publishing
by, Jill Swenson
August 11, 2015

The business of publishing continues to evolve and new finance models have emerged in recent years. There is a lot of new middle ground between self-publishing – Amazon, Smashwords, Lulu – and the traditional route of finding an agent who sells your work to one of the big commercial trade presses – Penguin Random House, Hatchette Book Group, Harper Collins, Macmillan, and Simon & Schuster…. [Read More]

Filed Under: academic presses, Beacon Press, Cooperative Publishing, Distribution, IndieGoGo, Kickstarter, marketing strategy, Nonprofit Publishers, Publishers, Publishing, subsidy
1 Comment
Adventures with a Small Publisher
by, Sharon K. Yntema
July 28, 2015

Often when people plan to write a book, they dream their book will get published by one of the big publishers – Hatchette, Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, or HarperCollins. My story is different and I’ve always been grateful to have gotten in on the ground floor with a small publisher. When my son was about 6 months old, I began working very part-time… [Read More]

Filed Under: Alex Skutt, Association of American Publishers, Creativity in Independent Publishing, Ithaca, McBooks Press, Sharon Yntema, Vegetarian Baby
3 Comments
Dealing With Rejection
by, Jenna Goodman
July 21, 2015

Let’s skip the stories about famous books that were rejected thirty, forty, or fifty-seven times before getting published and becoming well-loved classics. And forget about Stephen King’s nail on the wall that became so heavy with rejections it pulled loose from the wood. Intellectually, we all know rejection is a part of the game, but emotionally… well, emotionally, it’s a different story. So how can… [Read More]

Filed Under: constructive criticism, feedback, On Writing, Rejections, Stephen King
3 Comments
Literary Medic
by, Jill Swenson
July 14, 2015

The hardest part of my job as a book development editor is delivering bad news to a writer. An agent is not interested in offering you representation. An acquisition editor decides to pass after reading your proposal and sample chapters. You failed to make necessary editorial revisions. Rejection is a hard message to deliver. And it happens to be a task I do more often… [Read More]

Filed Under: book doctor, diagnostic, literary medic, prescriptive, writing medicine
3 Comments
Literary Journals and Platform Building
by, Jill Swenson
July 7, 2015

Getting your writing published in a literary journal is an important way to improve your chances of getting your nonfiction (or memoir) book manuscript published. When your writing is published in a literary journal it provides a publisher with evidence you can meet professional standards and others find your work compelling. Literary journals are often considered gatekeepers to the publishing community. Which literary journals should… [Read More]

Filed Under: Creative Nonfiction, Gettysburg Review, Guernica Magazine, Healing Muse, Hippocampus, Kenyon Review, Ploughshares, Tin House
4 Comments
Whose Book is it Anyway?
by, Jenna Goodman
June 30, 2015

So you’ve just finished the latest offering by James Patterson, Robert Ludlum, or Pitticus Lore, and you’re wondering if it was traditionally authored, co-written, ghosted, or something else entirely. Good question. In the case of Patterson, who has put out 140 novels thus far – 15 in 2014 alone – he pays others to write the books for him. These writers don’t receive royalties, but… [Read More]

Filed Under: Full Fathom Five, ghostwriting, I Am Number Four, James Frey, James Patterson, Pitticus Lore, Robert Ludlum, royalties, work-for-hire
No Comments
No Shortcuts
by, Jenna Goodman
June 16, 2015

“There’s a long history, of women especially, saying ‘Well, I just got lucky.’ I didn’t just get lucky. I worked my f***ing a** off. And then I got lucky. And if I hadn’t worked my a** off, I wouldn’t have gotten lucky. You have to do the work. You always have to do the work.”  –Cheryl Strayed, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things Simply… [Read More]

Filed Under: Cheryl Strayed, dedication, disciipline, luck, shortcuts, work
2 Comments
Reading is your Job
by, Jill Swenson
June 9, 2015

“If you don’t have time to read, you don’t have time the time (or the tools) to write. Simple as that,” Stephen King wrote in his memoir, On Writing. When I hear from aspiring authors they don’t have time to read, I think about Stephen King’s observation. The likelihood of publication plummets when a writer doesn’t read. It IS that simple. As a developmental editor… [Read More]

Filed Under: comparative titles, genre, literary conventions, writing craft
4 Comments
Getting Found Online as an Author
by, Jill Swenson
May 19, 2015

Getting Found Online as an Author You can’t afford to ignore the importance of search engine optimization (SEO) if you are a professional writer. The title of your book can affect whether readers find it using search engines. Putting Your Passion into Print was the name for the first edition of the excellent guidebook written by Arielle Eckstut and David Henry Sterry. It is now… [Read More]

Filed Under: author name, book title, Getting found online, in-bound links, Keywords, SEO
5 Comments

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