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| Publishing Questions and answers about the publishing industry, featuring answers from literary agents, publisher writers, and editors. |
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| | #886 (permalink) |
| gojiro Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 3
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Fair enough - I can see that getting value for money is important. I was only going to send out to agents. Time to look at smaller publishers. It definately isn't YA unless that includes 20 year-olds. Cheers |
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| | #887 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 240
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold If you have 400 Pages of manuscript done in standard form and standard typeset. When made into a official book, does that change and go up in the number of pages. Or does the editor change the font to round it up to the nearest 10 |
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| | #888 (permalink) |
| Battling the world snake Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 51
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold I seriously wouldn't worry about that if I were you, unless you've got a specific interest in typesetting and printing. If you're a writer, your job is to write. |
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| | #889 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,135
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold As the Good Doctor says, don't concern yourself with that. Write the book, it'll be set as the publisher wants and the page count will be completely different from the typescript. |
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| | #890 (permalink) |
| Mod of Awesome Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 3,634
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Hey John, do you think there is still a market for short novellas in fiction fantasty sci fi whatever, especially geared towards young adults? Or has long high fantasy killed the little fantasies? |
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| | #891 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,135
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold The only market is in the magazines and occasionally in small presses. No one in mainstream book publishing is interested in anything less than a full-length novel, at the lengths I've mentioned before, I'm afraid. Epic fantasy has been the bestselling area of the genre for thirty years now. As a book publisher, I couldn't have looked at a novella in the late 1980s, let alone now. |
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| | #892 (permalink) | |
| Mod of Awesome Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 3,634
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Quote:
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| | #893 (permalink) | |
| If you see a stranger... | Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Quote:
I have aproblem at times staying within the word limit of a short story appropriate for a mag, and often the tale will naturally be novella length. Doesn't anyone jsut want to sit for an hour sometimes and enjoy an entire story? | |
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| | #894 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 4,803
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Charles Stross had two novellas (The Atrocity Archives and The Concrete Jungle) published in the same volume, which took the name of the first. When I bought it, I did so thinking it was a (shortish) novel and I guess it helped that one novella led directly into the next. Was Stross was able to do this becuase he was a known quantity as a novellist (as well as, of course, the quality of his writing and imagination)? |
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| | #895 (permalink) |
| I am, the scallywag Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,434
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Bookstop, I imagine many magazines will feel very good about publishing a novella in different issues of their magazines. As long as you stay around 30000 or so they can split it up in 2*15000 or 3*10000. |
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| | #896 (permalink) | |
| Author and Editor Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 911
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Quote:
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| | #897 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 4,803
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold I guess so, Ian - and even in this special case, the book's cover had to suggest a single story, which goes to reinforce what John said earlier about the market. (May I admit here that I would probably not have bought the book if it had been presented as two stories; in this case, I'm glad I was "fooled"**.) ** - Not difficult to do in my case, it seems, as the Contents page gives the game away. ( ) |
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| | #898 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,135
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Quote:
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| | #899 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,135
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold Quote:
Bookstop: I'm sure some people do want to finish a story in one hour, but not enough of them buy books. That's why story collections and anthologies are not published in the numbers they were thirty years ago - mainstream public taste changed, and mainstream publishers follow what the public will buy in sufficient quantities to make it commercially viable. Again: It's a business. Most novellas and story collections come from small presses now. | |
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| | #900 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 8
| Re: "Personal" question(s) to John Jarrold I'm about to get involved in putting together an anthology of works by the members of my mainstream writer's circle, and have a couple of questions. 1) A couple of our writers have had books published, and I'd like to suggest they write standalone stories featuring the worlds and characters from their novels as a way to promote their books within the anthology (I'm going to push for a short 1 paragrapgh author bio with every story). Is there likely to be any issues with their publishers with them doing this? I suspect not providing they are new stories and not novel extracts, but wanted to check 2) A lot of the publishing industry seems to put a lot of emphasis on published work in which the author was actually paid (presumably to separate professional work from pure vanity publishing). We're lucky that all our writer's in the circle can actually write to varying degrees (some better than others, but all can write), but even so it's already been said that only pieces up to an acceptable standard will be included. Unfortunately a lot of writer's circle anthologies are seen as pure vanity publications. So I'm wondering whether paying those whose submissions are accepted a token payment would help our writers (as they could then say that yes, they've been paid for their work) 3) I've got a funny feeling I could end up doing a lot of the work on this anthology, so I was wondering whether there were any pitfalls to avoid / words of wisdom (either from you John or other people who've done such work). It'll be mixed genre, have a common (though yet undecided) theme, contain both prose and poetry, and be used to promote both the writer's circle and its writers. |
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