Not exact matches
We represent nonfiction and
fiction, both literary and
commercial for the mainstream trade
market.
She also represents a range of women's
fiction, from literary to upmarket
commercial, to romance, as well as crime
fiction (mysteries, thrillers), and the occasional literary or
commercial novel not aimed at a female
market.
And differentiated
marketing might be used for a few «
commercial» - style
fiction books.
Karen is specifically looking for literary and
commercial fiction, primarily for the adult
market.
It is important for authors to know what their
marketing category and genre are before they write a word of
commercial fiction.
My decision is based largely upon my current work load, the tight
market, and the fact that I handle only a limited array of
commercial fiction as much as the merits of your project.
Similarly, like Sarah Hutchison commented to this article, I had some great feedback from several agents about my novel but the general consensus was, my novel «The First Sense» was not
commercial enough for them to
market in today's competitive publishing industry (its genre is future
fiction / sci - fi).
Adrienne has crafted
marketing campaigns for a wide variety of non-
fiction and
fiction books including
commercial, historical and literary works by first time authors and established bestsellers.
Come learn about
marketing categories and genres for
commercial fiction, and the associated tropes, so you know what you need to make your reader happy.
«In the real world, literary
fiction is a vibrant
market, albeit smaller in sales than
commercial fiction, and so far not an attractive purchase for your average Kindle user.
My current
fiction is probably
commercial enough for the traditional
market, so I may decide to query it, although I am very happy with my indie sales so far.
She seeks Christian romance
fiction (fresh stories within the romance novel framework);
commercial or general
fiction that 1) has a place in the Christian Booksellers Association, and 2) has romantic elements; general
market (secular)
fiction that involves a clean story and disrespectful elements toward faith, and nonfiction from writers with an excellent platform.
One of the hottest topics in
commercial fiction is the New Adult
market.
[1] One of the hottest topics in
commercial fiction is the New Adult
market.
In fact, I was so interested in this phenomenon that I did an MA dissertation about why people write without certain
markets once, and doing my research I worked out that there are roughly around 99 % more people writing
fiction than would get accepted by
commercial houses, i.e. 1 % would get taken on, if that.
Communications Manager to handle publicity,
marketing and author support for 8 — 12 new Mystery and
Commercial Fiction releases each month.
Annette Green Authors» Agency — The agency was founded in 1998 and has a well - respected reputation for discovering first - time literary authors, although we also handle
commercial mass
market fiction as well as some genre
fiction, plus a whole range of non-
fiction.
Bookouture's sales growth in 2015 was exceptional — but the sales level sustainable — built on high quality
commercial fiction, a fusion of traditional publisher expertise, smart digital
marketing and good old - fashioned attention to detail.
As well, my concern as a professionally published author is that aggressive
marketing (TV
commercials, Youtube trailers, fancy websites etc.) are creating a successful viral
marketing paradigm for self - pubbed
fiction that has the potential to impact trad publishing & leave writers wondering «why bother with the arduous and often heartbreaking process of queries, rejection slips, the endless waiting, etc. when the neighbor simply threw up a website, hired a gang of
marketing professionals and bingo, Neil Gaiman is reviewing their book before it's even published?!»
Getting away (momentarily) from the topic of literary
fiction and into the purely
commercial reality of
marketing and sales, no matter what genre one writes in, how in the world will we sell our books if we don't know what people find attractive to read?
Author Elizabeth Marro discusses literary vs.
commercial fiction and what she learned from the sale and
marketing of her first novel.
With 100's of dog food companies basting you with
commercials and
marketing gimmicks in the hopes of raising their own profits, we decided to help separate fact from
fiction.