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#61 |
Philosopher
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That is incorrect. Here is an easy test. After getting the first rejection letter, submit the book to a different publisher. If that one accepts it, then either the rejection letter did not mean this is not good enough, or the second publisher made a mistake in accepting it. All that a rejection letter tells you is that the publisher did not accept the book for publication.
The reader is the only test that has ever mattered. |
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#62 |
Bookaholic
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Because some self-pub authors do a lot of marketing for themselves? So do a lot of trad-pub authors. There are a lot of self-pub authors, some quite successful, that appear to do little to no marketing of themselves beyond maybe a website. Maybe I'm just not understanding what you mean.
Last edited by AnemicOak; 08-15-2012 at 12:01 PM. |
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#63 |
Wizard
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From what I've been reading, more and more the trad publishers are requiring mid-list authors to do their own marketing.
All that being rejected by a trad publisher means is that "we don't think we can sell this." it could mean that it's great writing, but doesn't fit neatly into marketing genre categories. It could mean that it's too cutting-edge. it could mean that the trad publisher thinks that the market for sparkly vampires will be past by the time the book actually sees print and distribution. Being rejected has nothing to do with writing quality, unless you get one of those (increasingly rare) rejection letters that's full of suggestions for how your next book could be better. |
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#64 | |
Not so important
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From a personal perspective, I have read many bad books that have been published by the different publishing houses -- probably 30-40% of what I bought, lend or otherwise read from publishing houses I consider below par. However, in my experience with self-published work the percentage of sub-par books is probably twice as high. They might be cheaper, but my time is worth quite to me in the end. |
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#65 |
Philosopher
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If a rejection letter means that the book isn't good enough that implies that the publisher is infallible. Otherwise, all that can be said is that the publisher didn't think the book was good enough. And even that is assuming that the publisher gave detailed reasons for rejecting the book. Without it, all that you know is that the publisher didn't accept it.
Yes, there are a lot of bad self-published books. But I don't pick out books at random, whether they traditionally published or self-published. By all means, if you don't want to read self-published books, fell free not to read them. I've read and enjoyed a number of self-published books. The publishers can and do make mistakes. Why should I be deprived of good books just because the publisher made a mistake? |
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#66 |
Bookaholic
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That's only one of many things it could mean. It could mean that they think it's a great book, but that they're unsure how they would market it (they can't pin it down to one of the typical categories). They could be focusing much of their buying on whatever's popular at the moment (steam punk, dystopian are popular right now and they're also looking for the next 50 Shades).
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#67 | |
Maria Schneider
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#68 | |
Maria Schneider
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That said, in this day and age, I think the idea of an editor and/or agent who spends developmental time with writers is fast going the exit route. Some of it is time and some of it is training. Being a partner or beta reader for the author is not quite as expected as it was. I see it in the overall quality of some genres. There's always been mistakes in books; it's part of the nature of the beast. But in the last 10 years I see mistakes of a different nature--cars in two places at once, something contradicting a previous paragraph--things that I think some editors would have caught. They simply aren't caught as often anymore. |
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#69 | |
Maria Schneider
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Marketing is another PART of a business plan and should be considered by trad writers or self-published. I went to a talk by a traditionally published author who was fairly successful sales-wise. But her advice was not to follow her path which was to spend twice as much on marketing as her book brought in. She hired publicists, traveled, signed, gave talks, etc. But she misjudged how much it would help sales. She advised a lot smaller marketing plan. Some of it, again, depends on the goal of the writer. There is NOTHING wrong with with one of those goals being to make money. And honing ones craft is a very basic first step. |
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#70 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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I certainly agree that honing one's craft is the first step. But it is exactly the step that too many of the self-publishers skip, because they think their writing is just terrific--their family and their buddies say so, after all. So they assume success depends on marketing. |
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#71 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#72 | |
Maria Schneider
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#73 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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#74 |
Philosopher
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With a chain restaurant, you know what to expect. With an independent restaurant, the food might be great or it might be terrible. I've discovered fantastic "indie" restaurants, and I've discovered indie restaurants that I wouldn't want to eat at again. I could limit myself only to chain restaurants to be sure of the same level of quality, but that would be dull.
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#75 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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