Snakeye, on 18 October 2010 - 01:42 PM, said:
Hopefully once your manuscript is finished you will not go the self-publish-vanity press or print-on-demand route. There is a reason many writers cannot find a legit publisher to gamble on their work...It's not good enough..I would advise you go the hard route and submit your manuscript to established traditional publishers big or small. You will be rejected but try try again...If your work is good enough someone will foot the bill and make the effort to publish it..If ya want to be a writer ..be a real one.. not an imitation of one..A "Published Author" is one that is payed money up-front for his or her work..Also, if ya want to sale books learn the art of public speaking..If ya don't... ya won' make it..and pay a pro to edit your manuscript before you submit it to a publisher....Good luck
Thanks for the advice. Yes, I would like to go the traditional route. I hear that Literary Agents also are a good means of getting you through to the editors who publish your type of book. There are many of the big publishers now who won't even read a manuscript unless they already know the author or a work that has been recommended to them by word of mouth and that is where a Literary Agent comes in.
So it is not only a process of zeroing in on publishers who publish your type of book, but also publishers who publish new authors, same with finding an agent who can also help with the editing process, etc., as they also specialize in certain genres.
Plus, different publishers require submissions in different formats. Some want full manuscripts, some want only the first five chapters, some want only query letters, etc. Some take submissions via email, others snail-mail.
Along with that research, I also have to come up with the PITCH, the catch or description of the story in just a few lines, and many of them also require a short BIO. Just the query letters alone are even in different formats for what they want you to include.
Not worried about the public speaking, pretty comfortable with that, luckily.
Anyway, you can see why I am leaning toward finding a Literary Agent. It is all pretty mind-boggling, but I have started Book Two, meanwhile, thinking along the lines of a Young-Adult series.
I have read that when editors consider a book they are also considering whether they want to also invest in future books from you. It is practical and good business to look beyond a One-Hit Wonder. So, can they expect to continue a relationship with an author who will continue to turn out something that will make money for them? Hmmmm. Something to think about, huh.