INDUSTRY INSIGHTS: Insiders’ perspectives on what writers need to know about publishing in 2024 and beyond.

Common Language, Different Rules Literary Agent Kate Johnson compares and contrasts the U.S. and U.K. book markets

When I relocated part-time to the UK last year, there were many mysteries to figure out: Why so many tea breaks, and how does one brew it in the Orwell fashion? Where does one find canned pumpkin come Thanksgiving? What’s a knees-up, and what does it mean to get trolleyed there? […]

By |2024-01-06T22:26:04+00:00January 29th, 2016|Industry Insights|Comments Off on Common Language, Different Rules Literary Agent Kate Johnson compares and contrasts the U.S. and U.K. book markets

What a World Class Chef Can Teach Us About Editing & Publishing

If you’ve never seen Gordon Ramsay in action, think of him as a drill instructor for chefs. His restaurants have earned a total of 16 Michelin stars, he was awarded the OBE, and he’s had eight different television series in the UK and US combined. The guy not only knows food, he knows the business of food. […]

By |2024-01-06T22:27:31+00:00November 13th, 2015|Industry Insights|Comments Off on What a World Class Chef Can Teach Us About Editing & Publishing

Who Needs A Brand Name? Critical information about author brand

A perfect, real-world example of the power of author brand comes from looking at the sales of a book called The Cuckoo’s Calling by John Galbraith. According to Peter Hildick-Smith, founder of the Codex-Group, when first released in April 2013, the book sold 449 copies. A few months later, after it was revealed that Galbraith was a pen name […]

By |2024-01-06T22:27:41+00:00November 12th, 2015|Industry Insights|Comments Off on Who Needs A Brand Name? Critical information about author brand

Patience: A Sterling Virtue of Quality Publishing A Writer's Primer on Why Hurrying is Bad for Books

by Jane Ryder

When I was a kid, my mom — an impressively self-educated poor Tennessean with a high-school education and a fondness for annoying axioms — would say, in a sing-song voice, “Patience is a virtue, and it will never hurt you.” Keeping my mouth shut in the face of such an obvious untruth wasn’t easy, but […]

By |2024-01-06T22:28:16+00:00November 2nd, 2015|Industry Insights|Comments Off on Patience: A Sterling Virtue of Quality Publishing A Writer's Primer on Why Hurrying is Bad for Books

A Guide to Sub-Genres in Fantasy and Science Fiction

Sub-genres of any kind can be difficult to nail down, but in the genres of fantasy and science fiction it’s not easy to even get them to hold still. The principle reason for this is that these two genres are often collectively called “speculative fiction” because they deal with the question “What if . . . ?” […]

By |2024-01-20T17:14:48+00:00October 27th, 2015|Industry Insights|Comments Off on A Guide to Sub-Genres in Fantasy and Science Fiction

Bad Book Covers Considered What self-publishing authors can learn from a taste of tasteless covers

There are countless cliches that speak to the idea that beauty is found within, and that the value of what is on the surface is, well, superficial. A facade. “Beauty is only skin deep.” Another old adage points a crooked, arthritic finger from well beyond the grave at those who might say otherwise: “Never judge […]

By |2024-01-06T22:34:00+00:00June 6th, 2015|Industry Insights|Comments Off on Bad Book Covers Considered What self-publishing authors can learn from a taste of tasteless covers
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