DENTON WRITERS
LEAGUE
FIRST
EDITION
OCTOBER 2004 VOL. 15 NUMBER 10
DWL Home Page: http://byjoni.com/dwl
If you would like a copy of the newsletter e-mailed to you instead of through the US post, please contact George Avera or Joni Latham.
WHERE WE MEET AND WHEN
The second Saturday of every month, at the
Denton Library-North
Branch - click here for map
3020 N. Locust St (corner of Windsor St &
N. Locust St)
Denton, TX
General Meeting 10:30 a.m.
Lunch at Noon at the
Evergreen Super Buffet - click
here for map
1006 W. University Dr
Denton, TX
76201
NEXT MEETING: OCTOBER 9, 2004
Guest Speakers
October - Pamela Stone
November - Gloria Oliver
December - General Meeting
GUEST SPEAKER
Pamela Stone is an award-winning syndicated writer and author. Ms. Stone writes about issues pertaining to families, seniors and women, for news publications throughout the country, as well as magazines. She is the author of A Woman's Guide to Living Alone: 10 Ways to Survive Grief and Be Happy, Taylor Publishing, 2001. Currently, her new book on long-distance caregiving is being represented by her New York agent.
SEPTEMBER MEETING RECAP
Lorraine Heath spoke on agents, editing, contracts, and other things authors should know before dealing with agents and publishers. Although all her experience is in the romance genre, much of the information can cross genres and is still good to know. I'm not sure if I can do all the information justice but I'll try for a high level overview.
The first thing to remember is that although there are guidelines, there are no set standards. Nothing is ever set in stone. The whole process depends on the publisher, the agent, the author, the book, and the market.
Agents usually take 10% to 15% of the author's earnings. These days 15% is the going rate. The agent acts as the middle-man between the author and publisher. All monies go to the agent who removes their percentage and then either sends the remaining monies on to the author or places it in an escrow account for the author. The process is the same for monies received from advances and royalties.
How do you know if you need an agent? An Agent:
Knows the market.
Knows the editors and their preferences.
Knows how to get around the "no simultaneous submission" rule.
Knows the ins and outs of the business.
Knows your market value.
Can be a buffer between the author and the publisher.
Can help with career plans.
Is a cheerleader.
When should you start looking for an agent? Not until you've finished the book.
Once you decide you need an agent, here's what you should consider when choosing one:
Do they represent your genre?
Are they taking on new clients?
Do they charge reading fees?
Are they a member of AAR (Association of Author Representatives)?
Where to search for an agent? See links at the end of article.
After a book is submitted to a publisher and they accept it, they may offer an advance, which could be paid at one or a combination of four points during the publication process:
Signing Fee (when you sign the contract)
Proposal Acceptance Fee(multi-book contract, submit and acceptance proposal for next book)
Delivery and Acceptance Fee (delivery of manuscript and acceptance by editor)
On Publication Pay (date of publication)
The publisher might may 50% of it at signing and 50% at delivery and acceptance or they could split it three ways paying a portion at signing, a portion at delivery and acceptance, and the last portion on publication. It depends on the publisher.
Royalties usually range from 4% to 8% of the cover price and are paid against the advance the author receives. The book has to sell enough copies to pay back the advance before the author actually receives a royalty check, which is paid through the author's agent. Of course, they take their percentage before sending it on to the author. Also, in some cases, royalties are held in reserve against possible returns. Yes, the sellers are allowed to return the unsold books by returning the cover after ripping them off the books and throwing the books away.
Agent Links
http://www.aar-online.org
http://www.agentresearch.com
http://www.literaryagents.org
Reading
Writers Guide to Book Editors, Publishers, and Literary Agents, 2002-2003: Who They Are! What They Want! And How to Win Them Over!
by Jeff Herman Author: Gary Kessler Once you have written (and polished) your book or article, you are
struck with the question of how you can share this work with others. If
you wish to share it beyond your immediate circle of friends and family,
you will want to publish it. To do so, you need to know: The first consideration in manuscript submission is whether or not you
need a literary agent to seek and represent the sale of your work. You Don't Always Need an Agent Agents aren’t required for all approaches to publishers. Agents will
only become involved when there is enough money in a publication deal to
make their time and effort worthwhile. This means they operate almost
exclusively in the realm of major trade publishing houses. You do not need - and, in fact, probably will not be able to engage -
an agent: For these types of manuscripts, you can submit directly to publishers.
What an Agent Will/May Do For You A good literary agent will: Literary agents work through networking. They network with publishers
and other agents to determine what is on demand - and at what general
price. They usually make their offers of representation based on this
knowledge. They also network to determine what publishers will fit best
with the clients they are representing. What Do You Pay an Agent? Reputable agents will charge a standard commission on the advance and
royalties from all uses of rights. All agent fees and commision should be collected out of book sale
proceeds as they comes in from the publisher(s). Publishing receipts
generally come through the agent to the author, so the agents usually take
their cut out as it passes through their hands. Beware A large number of businesses pose as serious literary agents. They use
the publishing hopes of neophyte book authors to prey on them. Thoroughly
check out prospective agents by the methods outlined in this article. Watch out for: Submitting Directly to Publishers You can directly submit to any publisher that will accept unagented
submissions. Whether or not they do is usually noted in the submissions
guidelines they post on their websites and list in the various guides on
agents and publishers. Small and medium-sized publishers and academic publishers normally deal
in unagented works (but pay no or low advances). Agents come into play
where there’s a big enough advance in the offing to provide them a good
commission (usually from the big New York publishing houses). The Right Agent or Publisher You can use the same basic research method to find both reputable
agents and publishers. Do careful research up front and target only those agents and
publishers who will help you produce a high-quality book. Agents and
agents you target should be able to point to previous success in
profitably selling books similar to yours. This means you need to zero in on agents and publishers that would
represent your work in the best light, give you the best benefit, and be
the most reputable available. Unfortunately, unless you don’t mind making
no money or taking a loss on a book you’ve spent considerable time
writing, the ability to sell books like yours should be the bottom line in
your evaluation of your agent and publisher options. How to Find the Right Agent or Publisher There are several ways to find out what agents and publishers are
available and to zero in on the best fits for your book. All of these ways
can be employed to obtain a master list of possibilities: When you have a list of appropriate agents or publishers, you can start
focusing on the most desirable of these. Managing Your Agent of Publisher Hunt Set up a record-keeping system to keep track of the status of your
submissions. At minimum, you should include check-in categories of where
you sent queries and follow-up material (with specific names and contact
information), dates of submissions, and dates and content of responses.
When you send queries out with self-addressed stamped envelopes
(SASEs), remember to use the individual addressee as the return address so
you can identify who is sending a response to you. (Agents/publishers
sometimes send short form letters that don’t identify themselves.) I Have My List and System Now What? You are now ready to review all of the information you have gathered on
your master list and categorize. Arrange listed agents/publishers from
those most attractive (offer good benefits and services and
represent/produce books close to the content and style of your book) to
the least desirable. Concentrate on the top three or four categories (but save the
categorized master list--you may eventually have to consider querying
agents/publishers in the lower categories). Find out all you can about the
reputations of these agents and publishers on the following publishing
industry watchdogs: [And, of course, see what the buzz about a particular agent is in the
WritersNet Literary Agents forum.
You will more than likely find someone with first hand experience of
dealing with the agent you are considering. Ed.] This process of determining who will actually deal with you honestly
will have weeded out a high percentage of the agents and publishers you
had on your master list. Don’t mourn over how short your vetted list now appears. Take heart
that the time and money you are now going to put into querying agents and
publishers has a higher probability of success. Think of all those
aspiring writers who didn’t vet their choices first, who are now engaging
in unproductive and ultimately expensive and disheartening discussion with
unsuitable and/or disreputable agents and publishers. Copyright 2003 Gary Kessler. All rights reserved. Gary Kessler, a frequent contributor to the WritersNet discussion board, is a
novelist and freelance book editor who has edited more than eighty-five
published books for some twenty traditional publishers since 1997. He has worked
inside both trade and academic publishing houses and has released books of his
own in traditional publishing, POD-production, and electronic publishing forms.
He is the editor of the two-volume Writer’sNet Anthology of Prose, which
was released in 2002. Gary’s previous career was with the U.S. Government’s
foreign media news agency, for which he served in embassies in East Asia and the
Mediterranean and also served as the news agency’s managing editor. He provides
writing and publishing tips for authors on his professional website at
www.editsbooks.com.
Reprinted from Writers Net http://www.writers.net On-Line Writers resources
Author's
Network-for writers about writing based in Europe, but
interesting-
http://www.author-network.com/
There are multitudes of writing resources available
on the Internet. Go to any search engine and ask for writer's resources,
writer's markets, writer's contests, writer's conferences, etc
DWL OFFICERS:
President Joni Latham
(
joni1957@verizon.net) - 940/243-5200
2002 Guide to Literary Agents, by Donya Dickerson
Literary Agents, a Writer's introduction, by John F Baker
Confessions of a Slush Pile Reader, by Patricia Chui
Nine Tips for Finding an Agent, by Todd James Pierce
Method in the Madness: Finding a Good Agent or Publisher
Date: 27-03-03
whom - note, especially, the “Hot Deal” section.
Copyright Forms-
http://www.loc.gov/copyright/forms/
Dallas Sceen Writers- http://www.dallasscreenwriters.com/
Denton Public Library -
http://www.cityofdenton.com/pages/library.cfm
National Association of Women Writers -
http://www.naww.org
National Writers Union - http://www.nwu.org/
New Writer's Market
http://hge.members.atlantic.net/
Para
Publishing Website - a good writing, publishing, and promotion source -
http://parapub.com/getpage.cfm?file=/homepage.html&user=#user
Preditors
and Editors-a resources to check out agents and publishers
http://www.anotherealm.com/prededitors/
Ralan's Webstravaganza-speculative fiction resource
http://ralan.com/
Society of Children's Writers and Illustrators - http://www.scbwi.org/
Texas Coalition of Authors, Inc. -
http://www.texasauthors.org/
Texas Writers League -
http://www.writersleague.org/
The Market List-the online resource for genre fiction writers
http://www.marketlist.com/
The Novelist's
Workshop-essays and advice on how to publish your book-
http://www.monash.com/writers.html
Writer's Exchange -
http://www.writers-exchange.com/epublishing/
Writer's Market -
http://www.writersmarket.com/index_ns.asp
Writers Net-source
for information for writers, editors, agents, and publishers -
http://www.writers.net
Writing-World.Com
- http://www.writing-world.com
The Zuzu's Petals
Literary Resource Homepage-for both writers and poets-
http://www.zuzu.com/
Vice President
June Powell - 940/565-1013
Treasurer Joseph Marino
Newsletter George Avera
( gavera@chatter.com) - 940/382-8161