Showing posts with label Publisher's Weekly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Publisher's Weekly. Show all posts

Saturday, May 17, 2025

[Link] Red Flags for Indie Authors

by Raven Belasco

Many of us authors set out into the world of independent publishing full of frustration with traditional publishing’s very real limitations. We also have a belief in ourselves as artists, a desire to oversee our own fates, and a willingness to roll up our sleeves and do what it takes to “make it.”

At some point, many indie authors hit a period of panic. After pouring sweat, blood, and tears into our passion career, we see disastrously low sales numbers. This is the moment when indie authors learn that it’s not just about hard work: it’s also about luck and having deep pockets. There are indeed ways to boost yourself—but they are going to cost you.

That’s what unscrupulous companies are waiting for. These companies have one vital thing in common: they are trying to make money off your desperation. Authors who are panicking about keeping their businesses from failing are authors who will forget that “if it seems too good to be true, it probably is.” For authors who are having trouble spotting the red flags, here are scams to watch out for.

The first you probably already know, but this article would be remiss without mentioning it: the vanity press (also termed a subsidy press) offers publishing services for a fee—which can grow to thousands of dollars as services are tacked on.

For an author concerned about how much work independent publishing is, vanity presses seem like a possible solution: they do the work you don’t know how to do yet, and you just pay them for doing that work, right?

Not right at all. You’d be paying an outrageous fee for minimal (and often low-quality) effort on their part. For this dubious privilege, you assume all the risk while giving up the rights to your work. Their first communication may promise you literary glory and a deal for a Netflix series, but, after they have hooked you, the costs will just keep mounting and the results will not.

Read the full article: https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/authors/pw-select/article/97625-red-flags-for-indie-authors.html

Saturday, April 10, 2021

[Link] Penguin Random House Will Distribute Marvel Comics to Comics Stores

by John Maher

In a move that will likely transform the distribution of comics periodicals in North America, Penguin Random House Publisher Services has reached an agreement with Marvel to distribute its periodical comics and graphic novels to the comics shop market, also known as the direct market.

The two companies have signed an exclusive, worldwide multi-year sales and distribution agreement for Marvel’s comics—including individual issues, trade collections, and graphic novels both newly published and backlist—to the direct market. PRHPS officially begins its distribution to direct market retailers for Marvel titles on October 1. The move marks a major change in the U.S. comics distribution market, which Diamond Comic Distributors has long dominated.

PRHPS will offer Marvel comics to retailers on nonreturnable wholesale terms. The comics shop market is a network of about 2,000 independent retailers around the country that traditionally bought their inventory from Diamond Comics Distributors, the largest distributor of periodical comics in North America. Direct market retailers generally buy most of their stock nonreturnable at wholesale prices. Comics shops sell a mix of periodical comics, graphic novels, prose books and pop culture merchandise.

Marvel’s new agreement with PRHPS follows the unexpected departure of DC from Diamond in 2020. The new distribution agreement means that the Big Two of American superhero comics—Marvel and DC—which are also Diamond’s two biggest accounts as well as pillars of the direct market, have left Diamond Comics Distributors. It is unclear how this will impact Diamond and the comics shop market going  forward but it does mark the end of Diamond's dominance of periodical comics distribution.

Read the full article: https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/comics/article/85890-prhps-will-distribute-marvel-comics-to-comics-stores.html

Monday, February 1, 2016

PUBLISHERS WEEKEY ISSUES CALL FOR REVIEWERS

Publishers Weekly, familiarly known in the book world as PW and "the bible of the book business," is a weekly news magazine focused on the international book publishing business running for over 140 years. It offers feature articles and news on all aspects of the book business, bestsellers lists in a number of categories, and industry statistics, but its best known service is pre-publication book reviews, publishing some 8,000 per year.

Publishers Weekly is currently looking for reviewers for all types of fiction (including graphic novels) and non-fiction, in both digital and physical formats, and for both traditionally published and self-published books. PW pays an honorarium per review. Applicants of color and LGTBQ backgrounds are highly encouraged to apply.

If you are interested in reviewing for PW, please send a resume, clips, and a sample review (approximately 200 words) of a recently published book to reviewers@publishersweekly.com. Please look at published PW reviews for editorial formatting examples. Also include a list of genres (fiction) you'd like to review and any areas of specialization and expertise (non-fiction).

To apply: http://publishersweekly.com/pw/jobzone/details/index.html?record=1607

Thursday, September 10, 2015

[Link] The Myth of The Lazy Writer

By Hugh Howey

The hardest part of getting a book published is the actual writing. All it takes to see this is the number of people who dream of publishing a book but never manage to hammer out a rough draft. I spent 20 years trying to write my first novel before I finally pulled it off. It’s not unusual for an aspiring writer to struggle for years and never produce a finished product to submit to agents or editors.

Once the hard part is done and a draft is written, there are two basic routes a writer can take. Much ink has been spilled over the past few years about the rise of self-publishing—even though the route predates Mark Twain and Benjamin Franklin. To self-publish requires hiring cover artists, editors, and typesetters or learning to do these things on one’s own. The difficult task of emailing a cover artist to hire her services is often used to frighten authors away from self-publishing. That’s because there’s a myth that authors are lazy, and a myth that some authors merely write for a living. No such creature has ever existed.

Continue reading: http://publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/authors/pw-select/article/67611-the-myth-of-the-lazy-writer.html