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'A review of the UK children’s publishing scene by
Caroline Horn in this week’s Bookseller provides an interesting picture
of a part of the publishing business which is in pretty good shape. There is a
strong feeling in the trade that the focus has shifted to bestsellers,
bestselling authors and brand-name series. This makes it hard for new authors to
get a sympathetic view taken of their work. The view is that nobody is
interested in unknowns unless they are likely to be instant bestseller material.'
News Review takes a look.
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'Many of us who have worked in the publishing
business have long expected hardbacks to be superseded by paperbacks. But over
the years hardbacks have been surprisingly durable in their grip on the
book-buyer, with various come-backs affecting how much they are produced. Although it’s obviously going against normal pricing
rules, the more expensive hardback edition survives partly because of the gift
market and partly because readers don’t want to wait to read their favourite
novelist. But why not publish that novel straight into paperback? News
Review muses on the latest trend.
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'Certain genre areas of fiction publishing seem to
be coming into their own in a big way at the moment, which is good news if
that’s the area you write in. Science fiction and fantasy are particularly
popular. Last month major SFF author Terry Pratchett’s new novel became the
fastest selling adult hardback novel by a British novelist since records began,
selling no less than 31,094 copies in its first full week... News Review
looks at the boom in genre publishing.
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'Amazon has been much in the news this last week.
After the announcement of it first big purchase for its new publishing arm at
the Frankfurt Book Fair, which sent tremors through the publishing world, it is
now consolidating its position on e-books. The deal in question may have
garnered the book for Amazon because of the high ebook royalty offered. But the
question is going to be whether the company can get the book into the book trade
– or will Amazon sales be enough? News Review reports.
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'There is an increasing trend for older people to
write their own memoir and then to self-publish it, sometimes in a nice gift
edition. For many people looking back over their lives, the
motivation for this is to set it all down for the family, particularly the
grand-children, so that the story of their lives will not be lost but can be
passed down through the generations. To have a handsome volume to give to your
relatives is one thing, but for your own personal slice of family history to be
preserved for the future is also a great motivator.' News Review looks at
the trend.
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'We've arrived at this place where we just
thoughtlessly plunge towards whatever the thing is that will allow us to make
less of an effort. We know we're diminishing experience. We know that
it was richer to walk to the store, talk to the bookseller, maybe meet your
neighbour than it is to click online. But we can't stop ourselves...' Nicole Krauss, author of Great House,
in the Observer
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‘The world does not have tidy endings. The world does
not have neat connections. It is not filled with epiphanies that work perfectly
at the moment that you need them...' Dennis Lehane, author of Moonlight Mile in The
Independent on Sunday.
- 'Books have always been defined by
their physical presence. Those under 50,000 words do not give customers
value for money, books much over 200,000 words are cumbersome to read
and prohibitively expensive to produce. Ebooks make those rules
redundant. Piers Blofeld, agent at Sheil Land, in the Bookseller.
- 'There's just too much stress on
authors. The business model seems to be that publishers want a book a
year. I wanted to spend time on my novels, but that isn't economically
viable...
Steph Swainston, fantasy author, who is abandoning
writing to become a chemistry teacher, in the Independent on Sunday.
- 'Peter (Kravitz - her editor) said to me,
I'll give you money for this. It had never occurred to me that anyone would
give you money for writing: I thought writers were wealthy people who just
wrote things out of the goodness of their heart and gave them as gifts. Janice Galloway, author of
All Made Up, in the Guardian
'The majority of poems one outgrows and
outlives, as one outgrows and outlives the majority of human passions.'
T S Eliot
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Darren Shan’s first book,
Ayuamarca, was published in 1999 by Orion and didn’t have much impact. The
sequel, Hell's Horizon, sold fewer copies than the first. But in January
2000, Shan released Cirque du Freak, the first book of The Saga of Darren Shan
series in the UK and Ireland and this was the beginning of his tremendous
success and as a YA (and, more recently, adult) horror writer.
Help for Writers
Use this page as a springboard to over 2,000
pages on the site.
Did you know – as you sit at your
state-of-the-art computer – that Qwerty has been going virtually unchanged for
around 140 years? Not many such useful inventions last that long without some
idiot trying to change them.
It’s a classic case of -- it works don’t fix it. These letters are now fixed
into the brains of millions of users and operate on millions of computers across
the world.

Set up your
own blog
In order to be in the best position to promote
yourself and your writing, it’s well worth setting up a blog. In case you find
this idea a bit alien, here’s why you should take the trouble to do this.
A blog offers you the
opportunity to start building an audience for your work and the chance to
experiment with writing about yourself and with different kinds of writing.
Many successful writers’ blogs start with a small readership of family and
friends, but build a good audience over the years. Relax and just write what
comes naturally, it makes sense for your blog to be more informal, more personal
than a standard piece of non-fiction writing and more lively than a slice of
autobiography, as there are no conventions that go with it.
Help get your book ready for
publication with an editorial service
Marti Norberg, who has worked as a reporter and
managing editor for several Colorado newspapers, advises on how to use an
editorial service (such as WritersServices)
to get your book ready.
Previous magazines:
October
September
August
Magazine index
Writing Memoir and
Autobiography
Writing
Historical Fiction
Writing Romance
Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy
Writing Crime Fiction
Writing non-fiction
WritersPrintShop
If you're thinking
about self-publishing, this is the place to find out what's
involved. If you're ready to go ahead, our high quality service is second
to none and there's an economy version for those who want to
tackle some of the work themselves. You can
estimate
the cost for yourself.
Our book review section
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What kind of a free
Press do we writers want? A totally free Press left with its own self-governing
body for standards of behaviour?
Or a Press without any restrictions other than the existing laws of libel?
Or a Press subject to government and legal censorship?
Our new service is for anyone who is having
difficulty producing their cover or jacket copy and may be especially helpful
for self-publishers. Let our skilled editor/writers do the job for you, so that
you end up with a professional blurb.
Our latest new contribution: 'One agent wrote
to say my titles were so uncommercial that reading my synopsis made him laugh
and that he couldn't sell any of my titles to a publisher even if he had a
million years to try.'
Do you want to find out how to publish your
work as an ebook? Chas Jones's new series guides you through the process. The
first article provides a practical introduction to ebook publishing.
The second
article looks at metadata and explains the importance of getting the
metadata right.
The third article in Chas Jones's series
about ebook publishing deals with
Ebook
conversion and what you should think about before starting your own ebook
conversion, with an overview of the software.
The fourth article deals with
Preparing files for e-book conversion.
The final article is entitled
Selling and
Marketing Your Ebook and covers marketing through Amazon, Google and Ingrams,
being your own supplier, print and payment, and other marketing.
Update to our links
Our 23 lists of recommended links have just been
updated with many new links to sites of special interest to writers. these range
from
Writers Online
Services to
Picture libraries
and from Software for writers
to
Writers Magazines & Sites.
If you are
looking for copy editing online, it is difficult to ensure that you are getting
a professional copy editor who will do a good job on your manuscript.
WritersServices has now made its copy editing
service unique, as it will offer as standard two versions of your script, one
prepared using 'track changes' and one with all the changes accepted.
Writing
Historical Fiction
Our revised article on Writing Historical
Fiction brings this subject up to date.
Other articles cover
Writing Crime Fiction,
Writing Science Fiction and
Fantasy, Writing Romance,
Writing Non-fiction
and
Writing Memoir and
Autobiography.
Our Editorial
Services for writers
Check out the 18 different editorial services we offer, from Reports to
Copy editing, Typing to Rewriting. Check out this page to find links to the huge number of useful articles on this site,
including Finding an Agent
and Making Submissions.
Our huge section on technology and the web, and how writers can make use of
them, takes you from beginner-level articles to advanced technology.
Are you having difficulty deciding which service might be right for you?
This useful article by Chris Holifield offers advice on what to go for,
depending on what stage you are at with your writing.
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