Posts Tagged "book publishing industry"

Literary Agents and Self Publishing Q & A

Posted by on Aug 10, 2011 in General Book Smarts, Self Publishing | 2 comments

Sue Collier, a friend and maven in the indie book world, kindly ran a a short interview with me to help promote my Writers Digest Webinar on agents and self-publishing.  The Webinar is over, and I don’t think the On Demand version is available yet (sigh), but for those interested in the topic, here’s a teaser & link to the whole thing.  I love talking about this stuff. 

Why would a happy self-publisher want an agent? A Q&A with agent Jody Rein

 

Posted By Sue Collier on June 28, 2011

Sue: Ok, the big elephant in the room…Why would a happy self-publisher want an agent?

Jody: Well, you know that there are hundreds of thousands of self-publishers out there, and each one has a different story. In brief, a literary agent is a good choice for a self-publisher who hopes to publish some or all of his or her books through a traditional house, or who needs help and access to sell subsidiary rights (such as film or foreign) to his or her self-published work, or, possibly for a self-publisher who seeks career management.  The services I just listed are all in flux as I type—the whole publishing world is in the midst of a massive identity shift.

I’ve been thinking lately that what we’ll see, at least in the near future, are increasing numbers of people who jump in and out of self and traditional publishing over the course of their careers…READ MORE

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Serenity Prayer for Overwhelmed Book People

Posted by on Aug 4, 2011 in Digital Jody, General Book Smarts, Miscellany | 1 comment

Fess up.  I can’t be alone.  It’s just too much sometimes, isn’t it?

Because I must be informed, and it all looks so important, I subscribe to email updates from Digital Book World, Hubspot, assorted LinkedIn conversations and the TechRepublic  along with PublishersMarketplace, the Observer’s book column and the requisite NYT book& other news, along with ten or twenty other feeds.  It doesn’t matter whether the source is techno or literary–most of them make me feel like I jumped on the wrong busor, more accurately, like I was sitting on the right bus but the driver sneakily changed the route, so all of us folks happily chatting away in the back didn’t even notice we were on the wrong street.

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The Hangman’s Daughter Makes Me Cheer

Posted by on Aug 3, 2011 in Digital Jody, General Book Smarts, Miscellany | 4 comments

‘The Hangman’s Daughter,’ e-book hit, now out in paperback – USATODAY.com.

I love this story!

We are all guilty of bemoaning the state of book publishing today, often to the point of conflict.  In the past few days, two heartfelt essays promoting what is best in both old-school corporate publishing (Adrian Zackheim in his Portfolio blog) and what is wonderful about printed books (Aaron Gilbreath in the Chicago Tribune) stood out.  I scanned through the comments after each essay–so many people, so vehement, sometimes disrespectful, so convinced that both print and publishing are on the way out. The rancor is unnecessary; the issue not black and white.

There may be a best of both worlds on the way.  In the tale of The Hangman’s

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Hello

Posted by on Aug 1, 2011 in Hello, Miscellany | 0 comments

Well, OK.  Hello.  I’ve recently found myself saying, fairly often, “man, I want to blog about that!” only to discover that, much to my surprise, I didn’t actually have a blog. 

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A World Without Borders

Posted by on Jul 24, 2011 in General Book Smarts, Miscellany | 4 comments

A lifetime ago, on a lovely fall afternoon as I sat, ostensibly studying, beneath a big shady tree with my college beau David on the University of Michigan Diag, a perfectly puppy-looking puppy bounded up to greet us.  This brown bundle of adorable was trailed by a sad young couple, one member carrying a large bag of Puppy Chow, and the other a tiny leash and collar. 

“We thought our landlord allowed dogs,” they explained.  Neither David nor I had ever owned a dog, but we were smitten.  We agreed to take the dog on an “experimental” basis and we held tight to the couple’s phone number, just in case, but we knew we would keep him.   He had chosen us under that tree, and we couldn’t let him down.  

He also wasn’t trained.  At all.

So we didn’t walk straight home with the pup.  Before he even had a name, we walked (the puppy trotted) into the one and only Borders’ bookshop on State Street, headed to the back of the store and up the stairs, and picked out and purchased a few key books on puppy training before heading home to face the roommates.

Step One:  puppy.  Step Two:  bookstore.  

These sweet memories come back to me now in the wake of the news of the Borders’ Group bankruptcy.

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