Why Publishers Reject Good Books Every Day – And What Writers Get Wrong About It
At bookstore events, there is a specific type of conversation that takes place, usually by the wine table, where a […]
At bookstore events, there is a specific type of conversation that takes place, usually by the wine table, where a […]
No one, living or dead, has ever successfully read a book that is kept in a climate-controlled vault at Yale
When you walk into any Barnes & Noble, you’ll almost instantly notice the gold and silver foil stickers that are
The organizers of the International Booker Prize ceremony in London this past May revealed a series of numbers that caused
Almost all authors experience an uncomfortable realization at some point, usually between signing a contract and getting a finished copy
The fact that Daniel Defoe was almost sixty years old when he published Robinson Crusoe is somewhat noteworthy. By that
Fiction is the only way to arrive at a certain kind of knowledge. Not because nonfiction is false, but rather
There’s a moment every writer recognizes — sitting with a finished manuscript, or something close to it, and realizing they
There’s a particular kind of exhaustion that settles over debut authors about six weeks after their book goes live. The