Sentences with phrase «eventually sold it to publisher»

I published my novel in the most standard way possible: I wrote a whole book, I sent it to literary agents and signed with one, and eventually she sold it to a publisher on my behalf.

Not exact matches

I have made it clear that I truly believe that Amazon will eventually require all publishers, under a certain sales volume, to use their printing service if they want to sell on Amazon.
It will sell all Tor, Forge, Starscape, Tor Teen, and Orb e-book titles, and plans to eventually offer titles from other publishers as well.
Other self - published phenoms have eventually sold their books to traditonal publishers, but authors like Amanda Hocking, the first self - published million - copy Kindle seller, sold both print and digital (in her case, to St. Martin's Press).
Amazon has decided that your book may generate sales eventually on that particular domain and has permission from the publisher to sell the book globally.
The transitional turmoil in the publishing industry is prompting authors to ask publishers specifically what the benefits are when they sell the rights to a popular ebook to one of the â $ œbig sixâ $ to be eventually release as a pbook.
All of their infrastructure is completely transportable, as their infrastructure is essentially people (managers, publishers, editors), and it's not like they rely on business meetings that have to take place in a certain location in order to sell books (you can always fly in for those meetings, or if you're the big dog then maybe all the little dogs that you deal with will eventually relocate with you).
Eventually a publisher picked up her books, and since then, they have gone on to sell millions of copies around the world.
The problem with your «net pricing» idea, I think, is that it doesn't account for the fact that, in the digital download world, eventually most publishers WILL sell direct to end users even if they didn't in the past.
But one San Francisco book publisher tells Boston Review that Amazon can't continue to sell these ebooks at a loss, warning «Eventually, they're going to change their minds on this...» And at that point, it may not be Kindle owners who take a hit — but the publishers who are trying to sell their books at Amazon.com
Both of those authors eventually worked out deals with major publishers for bookstore distribution and both have gone on to sell millions of copies and are in the hall of fame (if there is one) of people who started out self - publishing.
But also: because someone else is taking care of everything, they never learn how to publish or market a book, which means, if eventually the publisher drops them because their books aren't selling, they are starting over from zero, with no knowledge and no platform, and have to learn everything from scratch.
Eventually, publishers and authors will need a better understanding of how eBook technology can increase opportunities to sell more of their content more efficiently wirelessly.
While it seemed like a great idea for EA to acquire such a valuable publisher, the two sides could not reach a common selling price and the deal eventually fell through.
But when SSRN was acquired last year by academic journal publisher Elsevier, a sibling company to LexisNexis, some scholars and information professionals became concerned that SSRN's free access would eventually be locked behind a paywall (even though SSRN said otherwise) or exploited to mine and sell user data.
The table consensus was that Reed - Elsevier eventually would sell off the remnants of LexisNexis to a book publisher at a fire sale price.
Eventually I discovered and studied the wit of Woody Allen, who dead - panned: «I sold the memoirs of my sex life to a publisher.
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