<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v5.5.4 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Sun, 05 Jul 2009 18:43:09 GMT--><rss xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" version="2.0"><channel><title>Kunati's Publisher Blog — Derek Armstrong Blogs, Answers Questions from Authors and Readers, Discusses Publishing and Book Industry Issues and Offers Book Marketing Tips to Authors and Retailers</title><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/</link><description>Kunati's Publisher Blog — Derek Armstrong Blogs, Answers Questions from Authors and Readers, Discusses Publishing and Book Industry Issues and Offers Book Marketing Tips to Authors and Retailers</description><copyright>Kunati Books, All Rights Reserved</copyright><language>en-US</language><generator>Squarespace Site Server v5.5.4 (http://www.squarespace.com/)</generator><item><title>Derek Armstrong</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2008 17:25:23 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/11/19/derek-armstrong.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:2585009</guid><description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.derekarmstrong.com">Derek Armstrong</a></p>
<p>Publisher <a href="http://www.kunati.com">Kunati Books</a></p>
<p>Correspondent <a href="http://www.crimereportusa.com"><em>Crime Report USA</em></a></p>
<p>Author <a href="http://www.drewpetersonexposed"><em>Drew Peterson Exposed</em></a></p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-2585009.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>"Me Too" is Not the Formula for Success, or Why Memoirs are Not Dead and the Debut Novel is Crackling Hot</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 07 Jun 2008 20:51:39 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/6/7/me-too-is-not-the-formula-for-success-or-why-memoirs-are-not.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:1894004</guid><description><![CDATA[<h3>This Week's Armstrong Publisher Insider Column in <em>ForeWord</em>:</h3><p>Following the advice of bloggers and magazines is a sure recipe for entrepreneurial ruin. Does this mean don&rsquo;t read the blogs or magazines? NO! It means, make the news, don&rsquo;t follow it. Or&mdash;to paraphrase a successful ad campaign: &ldquo;If you read it, it&rsquo;s history, if you do it, it&rsquo;s news.&rdquo;<br /><br /><strong>Reporting Versus Analyzing</strong><br /><br /><em>ForeWord</em>, true to its name, is almost certainly the best of the trade magazines&mdash;very ForeWord thinking (the theme of my blog today&mdash;and clearly the most useful source of information for any independent publisher, independent bookseller, or independent author or librarian. And no, I&rsquo;m not suggesting you stop reading the trades. Rather, that as a publisher, agent, librarian, bookseller or author, you owe it to yourself to read all the trades&mdash;especially the innovative ones such as <em>ForeWord</em>&mdash;to give you the foundation from which to launch your new ideas. <br /><br />But make no mistake&mdash;no entrepreneur survives on other people&rsquo;s ideas. No author succeeds by cloning Harry Potter or <em>The DaVinci Code</em>&mdash;or Kunati Books. (Mind you I was tickled to find an indie publisher who &quot;borrowed&quot; our tag line: &quot;Controversial. Bold. Provocative.&quot; ) No publisher can thrive for long with an unchanging list of ideas, concepts, marketing plans or authors.<br /><br />So, read the trades, and the blogs (especially this one, and my publisher blog: <a href="http://www.forewordmagazine.com/blogs/insider/ct.ashx?id=0e1f8bb8-8fc9-4ed9-b1a7-bfd85d082f0f&url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.kunati.com%2four-publishers-blog%2f">http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/</a>) but only as a base for new-thinking. What&rsquo;s In and What&rsquo;s Out is not a good foundation for publishing decisions. <br /><br /><strong>What&rsquo;s In; What&rsquo;s Out?</strong><br /><br />This is the biggest issue I have with the larger magazines and newspapers and their predictions of What&rsquo;s In and What&rsquo;s Out in any area: books, fashion, food, wine, you name it. Some journalists and bloggers take on the role of creating fads and fashions, instead of reporting on them. <br /><br /><strong>Independent &ldquo;Fill-in-the-Blanks&rdquo; Do It Best</strong><br /><br />Fortunately, readers don&rsquo;t always follow these trends, and publishers who simply try to follow fads often find these titles heading straight to the remainder tables.<br /><br />ForeWord-thinking indies often take the larger risks to introduce new talent, ideas and concepts. I recently read a blog that proclaimed, &ldquo;Indie&rsquo;s find the new authors, big publisher&rsquo;s poach them.&rdquo; Well, that may be an exaggeration, and clearly the authors have the right to profit from their new-found fame. <br /><br />But it does highlight the role Indies have taken on; Indie publishers find the new talent and through innovation help them succeed, assisting debut authors to build their brands and careers. Indie booksellers do the same by hand-selling books. Independent magazines such as <em>ForeWord</em>, even more so. Read the story of <em>ForeWord</em>&rsquo;s inspirational start-up in the 10th Anniversary issue of the magazine. Indies (in any field) are the unsung heroes, you could say. <br /><br /><strong>An Inelegant Segue...</strong><br />I&rsquo;ll gratefully make a small plug here that only subtly ties in with my point in this blog: First happy 10th to <em>ForeWord </em>(much deserved!) And thank you <em>ForeWord </em>for recognizing the role of the Indie Publishers with your new Independent Publisher of the Year Award&hellip; I&rsquo;m beyond delighted Kunati and our author&rsquo;s were honored, and am so much hoping this inspires other indies to innovate, take chances and find new talent. Which is my crazy segue into &hellip;<br /><br /><strong>Memoirs&hellip; In not Out!</strong><br />Today I spent two hours chatting with a very talented memoirist with an important story to tell about abuse. Now, I was trying to explain, &ldquo;post Frey, memoirs are out&rdquo; but I found myself not believing it. And, in the end, I made an offer on this most wonderful book.<br /><br />When I look at our book list, I see a dozen memoirs. So, clearly, we don&rsquo;t believe they&rsquo;re &quot;out.&quot; They sell well. They are not famous people&mdash;just important stories from real people with genuine writing talent. Such as <em>Mothering Mother</em>: an important story of a daughter coping with her mother&rsquo;s Alzheimer&rsquo;s. And Paul Cook&rsquo;s new memoir <em>Cooked in LA</em>: a stunning story of addiction to fame, alcohol and drugs. And most certainly Wendy Aron&rsquo;s amazing <em>Hide &amp; Seek</em>, both a memoir and a story of recovery from one of America&rsquo;s most debilitating conditions: depression.<br /><br />Clearly, we don&rsquo;t believe memoirs are dead. Today, I saw <em>Publisher&rsquo;s Weekly</em> described Memoirs as &ldquo;Unstoppable&rdquo; and cited bidding wars on memoirs. &ldquo;Publishers continue to snap up memoirs, undermining the perception that the genre is embattled in this post-Frey, post-Seltzer era.&rdquo; Indies, of course, knew this long ago. It's not news to us.<br /><br /><strong>Novels, a Shrinking Affair?</strong><br />Commonly accepted &ldquo;publishing trends&rdquo; indicates that novels are shrinking affair, certainly for the debut author. Now, here we may be somewhat different from the prototypical indie, and clearly different from the larger publishing houses. We love debut fiction and fiction in all categories. It&rsquo;s one of the reasons why we&rsquo;re in business. And we continue to show that debut fiction can be successful, even in a 1 million plus title universe, where self-published fiction will soon outnumber trade-published titles.<br /><br /><strong>But What is the Secret?</strong><br />Hard work? Innovation? Risk-taking? Creating new trends? All of the above. Our director Kam Wai Yu created the first book trailer back in the eighties. Movie trailers were his inspiration, but it hadn&rsquo;t been done. Why, we asked? The synergies of two industries combined to create a new phenomenon. Now, we lead with book trailers. But, it&rsquo;s hardly considered innovative now. Almost mainstream. Nice to set the new mainstream I suppose.<br /><br />So, on to the next innovation. Blog tours. Okay, that&rsquo;s mainstream now too. Ezines. Been there, done that. Social Marketing 2.0. Very yesterday. What&rsquo;s next&hellip; well, I&rsquo;ll share, but not today. (Hint: I share often at <a href="http://www.forewordmagazine.com/blogs/insider/ct.ashx?id=0e1f8bb8-8fc9-4ed9-b1a7-bfd85d082f0f&url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.blogertize.com">http://www.blogertize.com</a>) <br /><br /><strong>Does this Mean You Must Invent?</strong><br />Of course not. It does mean you must be an enthusiastic early adopter. Make it your own.<br /><br />By watching <em>ForeWord </em>and the blogs, you stay on top of the next great trend: interactive trailers, paperless galleys, paperless catalogs, live web, online PR... And then you add your own personality to what has proven successful. Blend your brand of enthusiasm with the hottest new trend. Ignore the big publisher trends. By the time you hear what&rsquo;s hot, it&rsquo;s yesterday. Live author chat? So old now. Virtual book plates. Done. Think beyond.<br /><br />Make it your own. Work it (that&rsquo;s the hard work part). Take risks, especially the ones that only cost time versus money. Invest the time (who needs TV time or sleep?&mdash;if I wanted TV time would I be writing this blog?) These are the tools of the indie. There&rsquo;s no secret. <br /><br /><strong>We Just Want it More</strong><br />Why does this work for the indie? It&rsquo;s simple, really. We want it more. We work harder because we want it more. There&rsquo;s no stopping innovation--and innovation has always come from individual minds.<br /><br />Individuality is definitely the territory of independent publishers, independent booksellers, and independent magazines such as <em>ForeWord</em>. We have to invent to succeed. We have to work to grow. And we do it with a big smile, because enthusiasm is a big part of the formula for success.</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-1894004.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Author's Ask — I'm Looking for an Agent</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 06 Jun 2008 13:34:49 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/6/6/authors-ask-im-looking-for-an-agent.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:1890998</guid><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Excerpts from Our Publisher's Replies to Emails</strong><br /> <br /></p><hr /> Hi there,<br /> &nbsp;<br /> My name is (NAME REMOVED) and I am currently looking for an agent to represent my unpublished book 'NAME REMOVED'.<br /> &nbsp;....<br /> I have already been offered three partial contracts from Uk publishers (NAMES REMOVED).<br /> &nbsp;<br /> The drawback was that they wanted me to pay a considerable amount towards the production of the novel, hence my need for an agent.<br /> &nbsp;<br /> I have attached the synopsis underneath for you to peruse at your leisure.<br /> &nbsp;<br /> If you would like to view sample chapters or the manuscript, that can be arranged on request.<br /> &nbsp;<br /> I look forward to hearing from you.<br /> &nbsp;<br /> Wishing you all the best,<br /> &nbsp;<br /> Wayne. <br /> <p>&nbsp;</p><hr /> <p><strong>Derek Armstrong's Reply</strong></p> <p>Thanks for writing, but of course we're a publishing house, not an agency. Speaking as a publisher and author &mdash; and in my opinion &mdash;&nbsp; you should never have to pay any amount of money to publish your book. This would be considered self-publishing, or even vanity publishing. An agent will help you to send to royalty traditional publishers, of course, or you can try submitting directly to the independent publishers such as Kunati who are known to be traditional royalty paying companies (meaning, they license the rights to edit, publish and distribute and they invest their own money to market your books, and they pay you a percentage of sales).&nbsp; A quality publisher will never ask an author for money &mdash; not even one penny. If you are looking for an agent I suggest Writer's Market, which you can find with a quick Google Search. Their directory is a good investment, or you can sign up with them online for a small fee to research all the &quot;looking&quot; agencies and publishers. <br />  <br />  Hope this helps and best wishes with your novel.<br />  <br />  Best, <br />  <br />  Derek Armstrong<br />  Publisher, Kunati Books<br />  &quot;A publisher to watch.&quot; Booklist<br />  <em>ForeWord</em>'s PUBLISHER OF THE YEAR 2007 at BEA <br />  <br />  W www.kunati.com<br /></p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-1890998.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>This Week's ForeWord Magazine Publisher Insider — Five Lessons From the Author Trenches</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 25 May 2008 13:36:25 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/5/25/this-weeks-foreword-magazine-publisher-insider-five-lessons.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:1862046</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>During my career as author, I've had four agents, two publishers and many, many &quot;please sends.&quot; It was a long, long journey to success, and patience is really called for, but I'll share what I've learned as an author.<br /><br />My master plan as author, back in 1993 was to pitch a NONFICTION project that no one could resist. Get published. Then use my credential to get an agent. Up until then, I had good success with &quot;please sends&quot; from agents but I'd get variations on &quot;loved your book, but not for us.&quot; (Those were the polite ones).<br /><br />Thank goodness I had a background in marketing, and my living was established, because as a writer (other than as an ad copywriter - my day job) I'd be starving. Plus, I parlayed my marketing expertise into my non-fiction project.<br /><br />I learned five lessons from my fifteen year journey:<br /><br /><strong>LESSON ONE: </strong>Unsolicited Proposals to publishers work! Yipee!<br /><br />1. I received FIVE please sends from publishers, and a SIMON &amp; SCHUSTER editor PHONED ME (I remember that day... I was in the Apple Store buying my first Mac laptop... a big, happy day all around). While I was fishing for my credit card, she phoned and made me a pre-emptive offer with a $65,000 advance.<br />2. Of course I didn't think about it. I probably should have, because I did get two other offers.<br />3. So, here's the lesson I learned: NO agents responded to my query, even months later. FIVE publishers gave please sends. Simon &amp; Schuster bought by phone with a big advance. <br /><br />So, to me, this meant: agents aren't necessary to get published, even with the big five. That lesson stuck with me. I think my advance was probably as high as any agent would have secured. <br /><br />I did parlay my nonfiction project into many &quot;please sends&quot; for my fiction projects, which resulted in ten years of with agents who couldn't close my novels. I assumed I needed an agent because every book and expert gave variations on: &quot;Fiction writers must have an agent or they will never be published.&quot;<br /><br />So I locked myself up with agent after agent.<br /><br /><strong>LESSON TWO:</strong><br />Top agents can be closed by authors, but do you want to? They all gave variations on &quot;love this book, this will sell.&quot;<br /><br />But, as it turned out, (and I'm generalizing a bit) these top agents seemed only interested in the top five publishers. Now, once one of these agents pitches and loses to these top five, the next big agent has no chance. It's been pitched already. It's dead.<br /><br />So, agent after agent I fired. I found new ones. Similar stories. Finally, all the top agents were gone. The big lesson... they don't pitch to the indy's and they only want the big deal.<br /><br />SO. That suggests smaller agent right? NOT REALLY.<br /><br /><strong>LESSON THREE:</strong><br />Smaller agents have no great chance of getting you read than YOU DO. I've learned that, too. That's lesson three. Most indie publishers will read without agented submissions.<br /><br />Finally, I peeled off and represented myself. I started submitting to INDIES (like Kunati, but, of course, back then Kunati didn't exist... small publishers with vision, though. I had many please sends from indies)<br /><br /><strong>LESSON FOUR:</strong><br />Publishers expect authors to market themselves, even the big publishers. Smaller publishers tend to partner with authors (with a better possible outcome, if the author is a hard-working promoter).<br /><br />So, I came to believe, with near religious zeal, that Indies are the way to go for DEBUT authors. The advances are small (microscopic, even) but you save a lot of time by submitting WITHOUT an agent, and if they sign you, you've built a direct pipeline to the publisher, editor-in-chief, marketing people... it's wonderful. Once you're published, you can start building your author brand. Your franchise.<br /><br /><strong>LESSON FIVE:</strong><br />The only secret is to &quot;take control of your own destiny.&quot; If you sign with an agent, make it short term and control the relationship. if you are debut, I'd suggest you try the indies first -- and build your brand and author name. Larger publishers will remember your first book when considering your second. Learn the lessons on your debut novel with a publisher who will support, nurture and work with you and help you:<br />- do events<br />- speaking engagements (this is why I got the big advance above &mdash; obviously this is a non-fiction specific element of the marketing mix, and they assumed I would use my advance to travel and speak)<br />- blog<br />- arrange&nbsp; signings<br />- radio publicity<br />- press releases.<br /><br />You'll never be disapointed if you research, plan and take charge of your own careers. Agents can't do that. Neither can publishers. But, most of my author friends seem to believe agents and publishers make or break authors. It has never been so. You make or break your career.</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-1862046.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Trends in Novel Titles: Let Us Know What YOU Prefer!</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 20 May 2008 03:36:53 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/5/20/trends-in-novel-titles-let-us-know-what-you-prefer.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:1850094</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>By Derek Armstrong, Author of, let's see <a href="http://www.kunati.com/madicine/"><em>MADicine</em></a> (one word), <a href="http://www.kunati.com/the-game-thriller-by-derek-arm/"><em>The Game</em></a> (two), <a href="http://www.kunati.com/the-last-troubadour-historical/"><em>The Last Troubadour</em></a> (three).... </p><h3>Novel titles are like clothes. They follow trends and fashions and they get longer and shorter, reveal more, then less. </h3><p><br />For the last few years, the bestsellers lists have been dominated by thrilling, short titles that said little but seemed to promise crisp pace and excitement. Perhaps the over saturation of titles on the market, 300,000 new titles per year on average, with 1.2 million titles in print, will change all that. <br /><br />One word titles are so &ldquo;out&rdquo; now, perhaps because an online search nets too many identical hits, or perhaps because they are out of fashion. Stephen King brought it on with <em>IT </em>and <em>Dreamcatcher </em>and other thriller authors dove in with <a href="http://www.kunati.com/rabid-scandalous-novel-by-tk-k/"><em>Rabid</em></a> and <em>Jaws</em> and James Patterson&rsquo;s snippy titles such as <em>Sail</em> and <em>Jester</em>. Of course there were the classics such as <em>Lolita</em> and <em>Ulysses</em>.<br /><br />Lately, perhaps because of issues of similarity, the titles have grown back up to two and three word bites, with the bestseller lists dominated by plays such as: <em>The Quickie</em> and <em>Simple Genius</em> and of course all of Janet Evanovich&rsquo;s eternally two word titles, such as <em>Fearless Fourteen</em>.<br /></p><h3>Classical Four Word Titles</h3><p>Classically, the turn should go back to the longer titles if fashion is any judge (and with titles such as <em>A Thousand Splendid Suns</em> and <em>The Memory Keeper&rsquo;s Daughter</em> the tend seems certain), the ones we all remember and will always remember, such as:<br /></p><ul><li><em>Gone With the Wind</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>Up the Down Staircase</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>From Here to Eternity</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>Splendor in the Grass</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>For Whom the Bell Tolls</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>The Lord of the Rings</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>A Dance with Dragons</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>War of the Worlds</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>The Pillars of the Earth</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>To Kill a Mockingbird</em><br /></li></ul><p>Many hot titles are much longer than four words or five, and have caused reader rants and complaints in some cases, but there is little doubt the trend is going long again. And who can argue with the success of <em>A FareWell to Arms </em>or <em>The Sun Also Rises</em>?Ernest Hemmingway seemed stuck on the four word title, and with good reason. Did any other author command such recall from such poetically perfect titles?<br /></p><h3>Longer Titles Back in Fashion?</h3><p>So, what&rsquo;s with the new bevy of longer and longer titles. Do they work? I&rsquo;d like to invite your comments on these new trends. Here are some popular titles that are inevitably pulling us towards longer and longer titles. In some ways, they sound hip, cool, even catchy. But can anyone remember them?<br /></p><h3>Quite a Mouthful</h3><p>In Sloan Crosley&rsquo;s cool <a href="http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6546013.html?q=Longer+Book+Titles" target="_blank">&ldquo;Quite a Mouthful&rdquo;</a> column in <em>Publishers Weekly</em>, he particularly highlighted: &quot;Lucinda Rosenfeld's wonderful <em>What She Saw in Roger Mancuso, G&uuml;nter Hopstock, Jason Barry Gold, Spitty Clark, Jack Geezo, Humphrey Fung, Claude Duvet, Bruce Bledstone, Kevin McFeeley, Arnold Allen, Pablo Miles, Anonymous 1-4, Nobody 5-8, Neil Schmertz, and Bo Pierce</em>. A title that can be absorbed for the bargain count of... 36 words.&nbsp; Is it any wonder that recent major fiction debuts have been called And Then We Came to the End and Special Topics in Calamity Physics?&rdquo;<br /><br />Other hot examples of long titles cited by Sloane:<br /></p><ul><li><em>Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight</em></li></ul><ul><li><em>I Love You More Than You Know; You Don't Love Me Yet; I Love You, Beth Cooper.</em></li></ul><p><br />My own titles go with the fashions. My earliest, <a href="http://www.kunati.com/the-game-thriller-by-derek-arm/"><em>The Game</em></a> was two short words, but nearly impossible to find against sports titles on Amazon. Then, <a href="http://www.kunati.com/madicine/"><em>MADicine</em></a>, easier to find, but one word. <a href="http://www.kunati.com/the-last-quest/"><em>The Last Quest</em></a> and <a href="http://www.kunati.com/the-last-troubadour-historical/"><em>The Last Troubadour</em></a> are three words each. Other Kunati Titles range from one word, such as <a href="http://www.kunati.com/tk-kenyon/"><em>Callous</em></a>, to a lengthy: <a href="http://www.kunati.com/mothering-mother-memoir-by-car/">Mothering Mother, A Daughter's Humorous and Heartbreaking Memoir</a>. Putting aside non-fiction, and long subtitles, Kunati titles run the full spread, all very memorable, but trending longer:</p><p><em>&bull; bang BANG<br />&bull; Bathtub Admirals<br />&bull; Belly of the Whale<br />&bull; Courage in Patience<br />&bull; A Decent Ransom<br />&bull; Heart of Diamonds<br />&bull; Hunting the King<br />&bull; Janeology<br />&bull; The Last Troubadour<br />&bull; The Last Quest<br />&bull; The Master Planets<br />&bull; Miracle Myx<br />&bull; Nuclear Winter Wonderland<br />&bull; On Ice<br />&bull; Recycling Jimmy <br />&bull; The Secret Ever Keeps<br />&bull; Shadow of Innocence<br />&bull; Toonamint of Champions <br />&bull; Truth or Bare<br />&bull; Unholy Domain<br />&bull; Whale Song<br />&bull; Women of Magdalene </em><br />Our 2009 titles seem to be pushing into the five to seven word range.</p><h3>What Do YOU Think?</h3><p>I&rsquo;d love to hear comments from readers, authors, agents, librarians and booksellers. What do you think of longer titles? What&rsquo;s hip right now? What&rsquo;s just right? <br /></p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-1850094.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>This Week in ForeWord Magazine: From a Publisher’s Mailbox — Real Answers to Author, Agent and Reader Inquiries</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 16 May 2008 17:10:22 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/5/16/this-week-in-foreword-magazine-from-a-publishers-mailbox-rea.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:1843169</guid><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>My Weekly Publisher Insider Blog on <a href="http://www.forewordmagazine.com/blogs/insider/PermaLink,guid,b3f5ebfc-c49a-4d3f-96cc-a320bece1f8f.aspx" target="_blank">ForeWord</a></strong></p><p>What could be cooler than opening my overflowing mail box, answering a few authors, and sharing my responses with the world? Of course, names are not included, but I think these authors won&rsquo;t mind sharing their important questions.<br /><br />For the most part, I believe my answers reflect a typical indie publisher&rsquo;s response<font size="2" face="Arial"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial;">&mdash;</span></font>if they have time to respond at all. We do try to always respond quickly to inquiries and as fast as we can on queries. So, let&rsquo;s have some fun:<br /><br /><strong>Reader Question: </strong>&ldquo;Which is more important, reader reviews and opinions or professional reviews?&rdquo;<br /><br /><strong>My Answer: </strong>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to hedge my bets on this one. Trade reviews from ForeWord, Publishers Weekly and Booklist are vital in launching a title, but we find that ultimately reader buzz and online reader reviews carry the most weight in the shelf-life and ultimate sales of our titles. Even customers who buy in bricks and mortar stores will research online reader reviews at online stores. We find readers<font size="2" face="Arial"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial;">&mdash;</span></font>based on informal anecdotal evidence<font size="2" face="Arial"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial;">&mdash;</span></font>will happily read through 80 reader reviews before making a decision. <br /><br /><strong>Author Query: </strong>&ldquo;Dear Agent, I am seeking representation&hellip;.&rdquo;<br /><br />Ummm&hellip; bite your tongue, Derek, bite your sarcastic tongue! I&rsquo;m sure my replies were quite civil (I hope!) but this is really not the way to invite a &ldquo;please send&rdquo; when querying a publisher. We get this one a lot. Please take the time to research my name, or at least write &ldquo;Dear Editor or Dear Publisher&hellip;&rdquo;<br /><br /><strong>Fan Query: </strong>&ldquo;Why did you decide to publish The Last Troubadour novels as three books set one year apart in release dates? I'm telling everyone to read, but I&rsquo;m a little annoyed that you&rsquo;re making me wait a year. What happened to Ramon Troubadour?&rdquo;<br /><br /><strong>My Answer: </strong>&ldquo;Annoying is my middle name. Sorry. As publisher, we felt a 1400 page book might be a little bit too heavy for the average weight-lifting reader. Never fear. Fall is not long off. Thank you for the compliment, but I&rsquo;ll never tell, on pain of death, what happened to Ramon Troubadour&hellip;.&rdquo;<br /><br /><strong>Author Question: </strong>&quot;Is there something you&rsquo;d like to see submitted that hasn&rsquo;t yet dropped into your lap?&quot;<br /><br />&quot;I have to tell you&hellip;I love your strategy and insight&hellip;What I&rsquo;d really like to know&hellip;Is there anything in particular (subject-wise) that you haven&rsquo;t yet found ? Is there something you&rsquo;d like to see submitted that hasn&rsquo;t yet dropped into your lap?...Here&rsquo;s my problem<font size="2" face="Arial"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial;">&mdash;</span></font>I&rsquo;d like to know what genre is selling right now, and what isn&rsquo;t. What type of fiction can actually cause a &ldquo;buzz&rdquo;? Or&hellip;is it only nonfiction that is on the publisher&rsquo;s mind at this time?&quot;<br /><br /><strong>My Answer:</strong> &ldquo;At Kunati, we haven't yet felt the urge to assign, since we're riding a tsunami of submissions as it is right now. I suppose if we did assignments, it would inevitably be in nonfiction, which is the area most publishers count on to &quot;pay the bills.&quot; Fiction is more a passion and love, and the nonfiction helps pay for our addiction to good fiction.<br /><br />&ldquo;Because fiction is about passion and love, we really can't assign. It has to be driven by the author's passion, heart, interest or experience (a lot of publishers actually phone prospective authors to probe them on their life experiences<font size="2" face="Arial"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial;">&mdash;</span></font>it's that important to credibility in a novel<font size="2" face="Arial"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial;">&mdash;</span></font>and this is ALWAYS done in Hollywood for scriptwriters). I couldn't in conscience direct you to a genre or subject for fiction. You have to navigate your own passions.<br /><br />&ldquo;Buzz in fiction is always historical. Just when you think you know what's hot right now, suddenly everyone's buzzing something else. And since publishing is always months behind the market, due to editing and printing, trade reviews and distribution, you'll never be ahead of the buzz. By the time the &quot;me toos&quot; come out, as we saw with The Da Vinci Code, it's already too late. So I can only advise you to follow your passion, blend in a good dollop of life experience, and have fun with it. That will show, and it will, in the end, find a home.<br /><br /><strong>Agent Question: </strong>&ldquo;As an agent, I represent several top authors. Can I expect Kunati to review my manuscripts as a priority over unagented submissions? Do you accept simultaneous submissions?&rdquo;<br /><br /><strong>My Answer: </strong>&ldquo;Not the answer you&rsquo;ll want to hear, but we give no priority to agented submissions. We do respect the professionalism and selection process and rigor you deploy, and we expect quality. The review, once started, might be slightly faster simply because you probably researched carefully our preferences and the market comparables. But we do not read agented submissions ahead of unagented. They are read in the order they are received. Yes, we accept simultaneous provided you mention this in the cover.&rdquo;<br /><br /><strong>Author Question: </strong>&quot;How long does it usually take to get a response?&quot;<br /><br />&quot;I submitted two queries to you, the bold and provocative press, thinking you were looking for real controversial stuff. Haven't heard from you either on&hellip;How long does it usually take to get a response? Let me know, because I like your press a lot.&quot;<br /><br /><strong>My Answer:</strong> &ldquo;Since we don't require agents, we have to read thousands of submissions (literally), so lately it's been months rather than weeks. You can politely follow up a month or two after submission if you haven't heard, but be cautioned that you must provide the DATE (exact) of your original query PLUS your original email (if you use multiple emails, and you give us the wrong one, we will not find your submission on a search)&hellip;&rdquo;</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-1843169.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Author Question: "How long does it usually take to get a response?"</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 08 May 2008 13:37:34 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/5/8/author-question-how-long-does-it-usually-take-to-get-a-respo.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:1822461</guid><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>&nbsp;From this morning's Emails:</strong></p> <p><em>&quot;I submitted two queries to you bold and provocative press, thinking you were looking for real controversial stuff.&nbsp; Haven't heard from you either on... How long does it usually take to get a response?&nbsp; Let me know, because I like your press a lot.&quot;</em></p> <p><strong>My Answer:</strong><br /></p><hr /> Since we don't require agents, we have to read thousands of submissions (literally), so lately it's been months rather than weeks. You can politely follow up with query AT kunati.com about 2-3 months after submission if you haven't heard, but be cautioned that you must provide the DATE (exact) of your original query PLUS your original email (if you use multiple emails, and you give us the wrong one, we will not find your submission on a search)... Here's a recent blog our editor posted on <em>ForeWord Magazine </em>on this topic:<br /> <br /> Be careful when you &quot;follow up&quot;<br /> This point pertains particularly to my work at Kunati, but I'm sure there are equivalents in other author-editor relationships. Because we accept email submissions, we get a lot. Really. A lot. I keep them in folders with labels such as November Queries, Active Consideration, Non-Fiction and so on. If you have queried Kunati and wish to do a follow-up because you haven't heard from us in &quot;six months,&quot; be sure to send your follow-up from the same address as your original query came from, and be sure to include the exact date of the original query. This is important because when an author emails me a follow-up, it makes me feel guilty. When I feel guilty, I must make the guilt go away by whatever means. So I will search for that original query until I find it, and then respond. If I cannot find the original query, I will feel even more guilty, thinking that I might have deleted it, or somehow lost it. At this point I will respond to the author doing the follow-up and apologize for not being able to find the original query. If the follow-up author then replies&mdash; &quot;Oh, did I say March? I meant July. And by the way, I've got a different email address now. Could that have something to do with it?&quot;--which emotion do you think will replace the aforementioned guilt?<br /> <br /> He also wrote:<br /> <br /> Being rejected doesn't necessarily mean the submission isn't of high quality, of course. Years ago there was a television show called The Waltons. On it, John-boy Walton was an aspiring author. In one episode he received a rejection letter from a publisher and he was dejected. His wise old grandmother said wisely, when I go shopping for gingham, I don't buy lace, no matter how pretty it is. This has stayed with me ever since. Authors who are rejected by a particular publisher should keep it in mind. You might have been rejected because you submitted lace when what they wanted was gingham.<br /> <br /> Best, Derek<br /> <br /> <p>&nbsp;</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-1822461.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Author Question: "Is there something you’d like to see submitted that hasn’t yet dropped into your lap?"</title><dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 07 May 2008 22:42:08 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/2008/5/7/author-question-is-there-something-youd-like-to-see-submitte.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">92453:2307944:1820189</guid><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>A very cool question today from a very savvy author via email:</strong></p> <p><em>&quot;I have to tell you&hellip; I love your strategy and insight.... What I&rsquo;d really like to know&hellip; Is there anything in particular (subject-wise) you&rsquo;d like to wrap your brain around, that you haven&rsquo;t yet found ?&nbsp; Is there something you&rsquo;d like to see submitted that hasn&rsquo;t yet dropped into your lap? ... Here&rsquo;s my problem --&nbsp; I&rsquo;d like to know what genre is selling right now, and what isn&rsquo;t.&nbsp; What type of fiction can actually cause a &ldquo;buzz&rdquo;?&nbsp; Or&hellip; is it only non-fiction that is on the publisher&rsquo;s mind at this time?&quot;</em><br /></p><hr />  <p><strong>And my answer:</strong></p> <p>At Kunati, we haven't yet felt the urge to assign, since we're riding a tsunami of submissions as it is right now. I suppose if we did assignments, it would inevitably be in non-fiction, which is the area most publishers count on to &quot;pay the bills.&quot; Fiction is more a passion and love, and the non-fiction helps pay for our addiction to good fiction. <br /> <br /> Because fiction is about passion and love, we really can't assign. It has to be driven by the author's passion, heart, interest or experience (a lot of publishers actually phone prospective authors to probe them on their life experiences -- it's that important to credibility in a novel -- and this is ALWAYS done in Hollywood for scriptwriters). I couldn't in conscience direct you to a genre or subject for fiction. You have to navigate your own passions.<br /> <br /> Buzz in fiction is always historical. Just when you think you know what's hot right now, suddenly everyone's buzzing something else. And since publishing is always months behind the market, due to editing and printing and distribution, you'll never be ahead of the buzz. By the time the &quot;me toos&quot; come out, as we saw with The Da Vinci Code, it's already too late. So I can only advise you to follow your passion, blend in a good dollop of life experience, and have fun with it. That will show, and it will, in the end, find a home.<br /> <br /> Having said all this, I think our Editor in Chief's current blog in <em>Foreword Magazine</em> is a good reference for any author aspiring to publish. James has some very good advice in this particular blog:</p><p><em>&quot;Well, perhaps I should clarify. Not all submissions are created equal. There are rather more submissions that end up rejected than accepted. Being rejected doesn't necessarily mean the submission isn't of high quality, of course. Years ago there was a television show called The Waltons. On it, John-boy Walton was an aspiring author. In one episode he received a rejection letter from a publisher and he was dejected. His wise old grandmother said wisely, when I go shopping for gingham, I don't buy lace, no matter how pretty it is. This has stayed with me ever since. Authors who are rejected by a particular publisher should keep it in mind. You might have been rejected because you submitted lace when what they wanted was gingham.&quot;</em>&nbsp; <a target="_blank" href="http://www.forewordmagazine.com/blogs/insider/PermaLink,guid,a328bf4c-d211-4bc2-85db-1e6720cdfad1.aspx">Read the full post here..</a>.</p><p><br /> &nbsp;</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://www.kunati.com/our-publishers-blog/rss-comments-entry-1820189.xml</wfw:commentRss></item></channel></rss>