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Are publishers always "reassuring"?
May 29, 2012, 04:54:40 AM
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Topic: Are publishers always "reassuring"? (Read 2824 times)
mingus
Senior member
Posts: 700
Re: Are publishers always "reassuring"?
«
Reply #15 on:
January 05, 2008, 11:03:38 AM »
Of course, you should send only what the publisher requires. No publisher ever says they will reject unsolicited mansucripts, nor should they. What I am suggesting will minimize rejection letters and hurt feelings. I currently advise 3 major publishers and in that role see about 60-100 proposals a year. My responses fall into one of three categories: (i) this is exactly what we want, chase the person and send out to reviewers; (ii) have no use for; send appropriate rejection letter; (iii) maybe, send to reviewers. You want to minimize the number of times you are a (ii).
You (and a few others) seem to assume that just because you have submitted a manuscript, you are under some obligation to the publisher. I disagree. With a submission to a journal or conference you are, as there is always an implicit assumption or explicit statement that the submission is not under consideration elsewhere. With a book proposal, it is more like a job application. At any rate I and the publishers I labor for assume that to be the case, and in (i) above we would be quite aggressive in trying to beat off the competition. Good luck!
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mingus
Senior member
Posts: 700
Re: Are publishers always "reassuring"?
«
Reply #16 on:
January 05, 2008, 11:07:40 AM »
sorry; last part of my response actually belongs to another "publishing blues" thread.
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snowbound
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 1,038
Re: Are publishers always "reassuring"?
«
Reply #17 on:
January 05, 2008, 11:22:02 AM »
Quote
You (and a few others) seem to assume that just because you have submitted a manuscript, you are under some obligation to the publisher.
Huh?! Don't you mean "just because you have submitted a proposal (or sample chapter)"? I thought it was a cast-in-stone rule that that submitting an actual ms, after being asked for it, obliged you NOT to send it elsewhere without explicit permission.
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mingus
Senior member
Posts: 700
Re: Are publishers always "reassuring"?
«
Reply #18 on:
January 05, 2008, 11:33:40 AM »
Being *asked* places no obligations to you, just as it places none on the publisher. What does is whether or not you have signed a contract with the publisher.
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