Now that might be a bit hard to believe with all of the criticism
surrounding paid book reviews, but it's a fact!
Not exact matches
Author mills often present themselves as «traditional», because they don't require you to
pay up front — but as with the vanity anthologies, their
books are marketed not to the reading public but to the authors themselves (who are pressured to buy their own
books for resale) and to «pocket» markets
surrounding them, such as friends and family.
My
book review operation was a success from the very beginning in terms of attracting publishers wanting to submit
books for review and being able to
pay any overhead expenses using review copies as a source of income by selling them to local bookstores and community libraries in Madison, Wisconsin and other
surrounding small communities hereabouts.
And, unlike with the free
books, you show up in the
paid listings alongside all of the other
paid books — being 99 cents when the
surrounding books are 2.99 and up can make yours look like as much, if not more, of a bargain as a free
book surrounded by other free
books.
I use those numbers because they're nice and simple to calculate with, then all he's getting for doing all the paperwork
surrounding your
book, and giving you your check, or your cash or backs payment or whatever, to finding it a space on the shelf, keeping it on the shelf, keeping an eye on it, remembering to
pay you at the right time or taking it out off the shelf if it's been there long enough and he doesn't think it will sell, to let you know that you need to collect it because it's on sale or return.
At GelbspanFiles.com, my main focus is to amass a collection of information which shows myriad problems with the accusation that skeptic climate scientists are
paid industry money to lie and spread misinformation, and myriad problems with the people
surrounding that accusation, including one of the main promulgators of alleged «core evidence» proving it, global alarmist
book author Ross Gelbspan.