It's
largely up to the author to sell their book, then once they prove it's selling, the publisher puts some marketing muscle behind it.
Not exact matches
The data from the study demonstrate that KZFP partner
up with transposable elements
to create what the
authors call «a
largely species - restricted layer of epigenetic regulation.»
One often - touted option —
largely by
authors who are reaching their fed -
up points with Amazon — is shifting everything over
to Ingram Spark.
But while the Big Five aren't closing
up shop entirely any time soon — despite recent mergers and rumors of future mergers — and self - published
authors continue
to earn accolades and income, one entity in the publishing industry has been
largely overlooked: literary agents.
While technically true, it's also
largely irrelevant, because those «extra» dollars — even if they add
up to a significant total — only end
up going
to a tiny handful of
authors at the very top of traditional - publishing's pay scale.
Most green
authors don't realize that it is
largely up to them
to promote their book; publishing houses don't sink a lot of money into «unknown»
authors.