JGoldberg
Oh man now I feel really bad. PublishAmerica just sent me a rejection email. God I can't even get accepted by them. I must suck lol.
Have a great day,
Never feel bad about yourself, Raistlin! *THEY* missed out.
Oh man now I feel really bad. PublishAmerica just sent me a rejection email. God I can't even get accepted by them. I must suck lol.
Have a great day,
Any publisher that is approaches you instead of you approaching them is 99.99% certainty a scam. (The other .01% is ignorance.) They don't know you, and they don't want to - they want your money.
And welcome to Absolute Write. It's a good learning place.
If it were up to me, I owuld add a name or two,
but I don't really know how extensive some of these faults would be (just me or ALL writers)
Just saw this note, and I wanted to mention something: There are a few times in the nonfiction world where a publisher might approach an author. This would generally be if they needed a book on a particular topic, and don't already have contact with an expert on that topic. In this case, an editor might go searching for an expert to write a book they need in their lineup. Such a thing is pretty much unheard-of in fiction, although I suppose best-selling authors may sometimes have this happen to them.
It isn't blank, but the text is the same color as the background. If you highlight it, you'll see it's all there.
I know they've been working on a new template, so perhaps they'll get the bugs worked out soon.
What is a legitimate royalty payment a publisher should offer a (new) writer for their work?
If a publishing house only means of distribution is the internet, is that good?
Another way to verify your publisher is to log on to Better Business Bureau or bbb.org