Sentences with word «micropress»

Micropresses like to hang onto the title, because in many ways they are treated like self - publishers.
(By way of a late introduction, I'm an author as well as the founder / editor of micropress Panverse Publishing.
IPG carries many micropress and self - published titles.
I'd love to hear your thoughts sometime on how to make the jump from being an indie micropress (my Rutland Square Press so far only publishes my work), to publishing others — and doing so with at least modest profits.
I suppose that makes me even smaller than a small press - maybe micropress?
«New micropresses, small presses, and niche presses (like Marcher Lord Press) will meet the needs of many segments of the reading population that are not being served by the increasingly narrow and conservative titles that will be released by the major publishing companies.»
I've had good luck with several micropresses.
You can publish at a Big 5 press, publish with a small press, publish with a micropress, or self - publish both digitally and in print.
How is this likely to affect the micropresses like my own?
Bailiwick is a micropress that produces books and other products that inspire and tell unique stories.
The INSPY Awards are only open to print books from a publishing house (be it a large traditional house, a small press, or a micropress publishing as few as two authors).
Deux Voiliers Publishing is a micropress devoted to discovering new Canadian writers.
I wish you all good luck and many book sales for your micropress, and thanks for visiting.
Some micropresses sell straighforward freelance editing, graphic design, and / or marketing services by the hour in addition to publishing books.
The micropress «revolution» is over-hyped, there's plenty of dreck published, and there are certainly disreputable vanity presses.
Some of the micropress distributors who have gone under, such as Bookpeople, were quite reputable.
There's also a major difference in quality and service between the bigger distributors — such as Consortium or IPG, which are very selective about the publishers they accept, and are unlikely to take on a micropress or a publisher that doesn't have a varied backlist — and the several distributors that specialize in micropresses, such as AtlasBooks.
Great to have a micropress for your paper books, too.
The traditional small independent press is now often called a «boutique publisher» or a «micropress» to avoid confusion.
Filed Under: Self - Publishing, The Publishing Business Tagged With: Amazon publishing imprints, Big Six, DoJ lawsuit, indie publishing, Jack King, Micropresses, Mid-Sized Publishers, PublishAmerica, Publishing scams, Robin Sullivan, Small Presses, Vanity Publishing, Writer Beware
He also makes books by hand in Philadelphia for his micropress, Albion Books.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z