Sentences with phrase «publisher went out of business»

Since the publisher went out of business last year, I got my rights back, and that enables me to rework it to be more of my current writing style (It was my first ever published, hence I don't like my writing).
The publisher went out of business, so I'm seeking to rework the novel since it was my first novel ever published.
Unfortunately, the publisher went out of business and returned my book shortly after it was published.
When my publisher went out of business last year he gave me my rights back and I self - published those titles.
Anthologies are what helped me resurrect my career after my first publisher went out of business in 2008.
the right to terminate if the publisher goes out of business, fails to publish the work or pay royalties due within stated periods of time, or fails to sell a stated number of royalty - bearing copies of the work within a stated time.
Say what you will about print, but at least your books will still work after the publisher goes out of business.

Not exact matches

After spending at least 34 months on one or more Amazon.com bestseller lists (Environment, Green Business, Business), the award - winning book Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green was taken out of print by the publisher.
«What I don't see is the money going to news outlets that are currently covering their communities, building out digital platforms and adapting to the new business realities,» said CNMA chair Bob Cox, who is also the publisher of the Winnipeg Free Press.
The trouble began two years ago when PlanetOut went on a shopping spree, acquiring the RSVP Vacations cruise business and LPI Publications, publishers of Out, OutTraveler, and The Advocate, as well as several pornographic magazines under the Specialty Publications brand.
Rather than publishers doing the price, larger stores could drive all their competition out of the business, and when you have no where else to go, bring the prices up.
The publishers had draconian terms that made companies such as Entitle and Oyster go out of business, while Scribd abandoned the unlimited model altogether.
I've seen friends literally lose control of their books because an inexperienced agent made a bad publishing deal with a new publisher who went out of business right after the book released.
Bottom line, though, when the industry fell upon hard times, and bookstores couldn't sell even 25 % of the books they ordered, publishers demanded their money, and chains like Borders went out of business, and Barnes and Noble and indie bookstores faltered.
I do think that over the next three years many stores will go down, many distributors will go bankrupt, and many publishers will be out of business.
You can wallow in your innate superiority over those disgusting self - publishers and go out of business.
A recent survey says that 77 % of educators think that publishers will go out of business if they don't offer digital content.
This causes issues if a publisher or service goes out of business, you lose access to everything you have ever purchased.
When B&N goes out of business, I desperately hope that book publishers will rally together to say no more to returns.
The pioneering manga publisher closed its doors two years ago (although it didn't entirely go out of business), but recently it announced...
This could be because the authors email address changed, publisher is slacking / went out of business or a million other things.
The reason why these companies went out of business is because of predatory pricing from the major publishers.
Publishers don't really know how to market books — that's why the publishing industry is going out of business.
Over 2,115 book publishers registered for VAT in 2012, which shows that the UK digital scene is vibrant with new players displacing the ones that go out of business.
While the large companies might be able to weather lost sales, for a small publisher with only a few books, having illegal downloads in the ten's of thousands while actually selling only a few thousand means going out of business.
-- The last couple of years at Anime Expo, I had noticed the declining number of manga - related panels — an indicator of how many publishers had gone out of business, or couldn't afford to send people to Los A...
When we buy a physical printed book no one is going to come and take it away from you if the publisher or distributor go out of business.
The publisher has gone out of business.
And as more and more brick and mortar bookstores go out of business, you know, that «distribution the publisher is promising seems less and less interesting.
Yet, while publishing may be thriving, many publishers seem not to grasp that business as usual may mean going out of business within a few years.
Small press publishers have better terms, but there you are rolling the dice, with a growing chance they will go out of business and leave your books in limbo.
Small bookstores are being shuttered, book chains are going out of business, libraries are suffering enormous budget cuts, and every publisher - and the people who work at these publishing houses - is feeling a great deal of pain and stress.
Musa, a wonderful publisher, has since gone out of business, and they turned all rights back to us.
Sadly, putting this together has reminded me of how much we've lost over the past decade as most manga publishers with significant josei output have gone out of business.
One other friend of mine left he was in the real estate space wrote a book with with a major publishing house and then a few years later stopped he left real estate and went into a really strong personal development business and the publisher went up well you're not promoting this book anymore and they took his book word - for - word and put somebody else's name on the cover of it and just put a new introduction on it no credit to anybody he had worked because he had two co-authors help him with it because he's dyslexic so they essentially were the ones that wrote it and he provided a lot of the content and the publisher gave those other authors no credit took his name off and put somebody else's name on the front and then the publisher was 100 % within their rights to do it so you know there's a lot of things that I challenge people to kind of think about what's important and if you're putting all your expertise into this book you want to make sure that somebody's negotiated a heck out of it giving you a contract that actually makes sense for you and your business.
Publishers are still figuring out how they're going to use POD because it sets up a whole new type of business relationship with the booksellers.
If a publisher associated with ComiXology goes out of business or loses the rights to a comic, you have no remedy.
Amazon could care less if one little publisher refuses to sell through them; that publisher will just go out of business and it won't affect Amazon one bit.
Smaller distributors sometimes go out of business, at which point the publisher's stock may end up at a remainder house, regardless of legal agreements to the contrary.
Basically he said Bungie's going broke — not an unusual call at the time, since developers and publishers were often going out of business — and they needed to be acquired.
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