Difference between revisions of "Publish America, LLP"

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==Criticism==
 
==Criticism==
Critics Argue that Publish America presents itself as a traditional house, but acts like a vanity publisher. Writers who contacted [http://www.publishersweekly.com Publisher's Weekly] in 2004 had complained that Publish America sells books to which it no longer holds the rights, offers authors only a 30% discount, doesn't pay royalties it owes, engages in slipshod editing and copyediting, sets unreasonable list prices (National average for a trade paperback is $16, PublishAmerica's is closer to $20 [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24113-2005Jan20.html]), and makes little effort in getting books into bookstores [http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA481863.html]. On average, data indicates Publish America sell less than 100 copies of each title [http://www.critters.org/sting/].
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Critics argue that Publish America presents itself as a traditional house, but acts like a vanity publisher. Writers who contacted [http://www.publishersweekly.com Publisher's Weekly] in 2004 had complained that Publish America sells books to which it no longer holds the rights, offers authors only a 30% discount, doesn't pay royalties it owes, engages in slipshod editing and copyediting, sets unreasonable list prices (national average for a trade paperback is $16, PublishAmerica's is closer to $20 [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24113-2005Jan20.html]), and makes little effort in getting books into bookstores. [http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA481863.html] On average, data indicates Publish America sells less than 100 copies of each title. [http://www.critters.org/sting/]
  
 
While Publish America doesn't charge for printing the books, it does require authors to provide a list of friends and family, and then markets to them heavily, according to the authors. [http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA481863.html]
 
While Publish America doesn't charge for printing the books, it does require authors to provide a list of friends and family, and then markets to them heavily, according to the authors. [http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA481863.html]
  
 
===Sting===
 
===Sting===
In 2004, after a representative of Publish America made derogatory remarks about the genre of Science fiction, a host of well-known sci-fi writers, headed by James D Macdonald[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_Nights] conspired to prove the publisher a vanity press. At the time, the house claimed to reject 80% of all manuscripts submitted.  
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In 2004, after a representative of Publish America made derogatory remarks about the genre of Science fiction, a host of well-known sci-fi writers, headed by James D Macdonald conspired to prove the publisher a vanity press.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_Nights] At the time, the house claimed to reject 80% of all manuscripts submitted.  
  
The result was a 41-chapter novel where each chapter was written by a separate author except for 17 (repeat of Chapter 4), Chapter 21 (missing), and Chapter 34 (written by the [http://www.critters.org/bonsai.html Bonzai Story Generator]). Authors worked from a loose outline that included an "it was all a dream" ending, and were encouraged to include "obvious grammatical errors and nonsensical passages". [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_Nights]  
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The result was a 41-chapter novel where each chapter was written by a separate author, except for 17 (repeat of Chapter 4), Chapter 21 (missing), and Chapter 34 (written by the [http://www.critters.org/bonsai.html Bonzai Story Generator]). Authors worked from a loose outline that included an "it was all a dream" ending, and were encouraged to include "obvious grammatical errors and nonsensical passages". [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_Nights]  
  
The manuscript was accepted for publication on 7 December 2004 without comment, despite the claim made by PublishAmerica that "We read every single submission before we accept or refuse."
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The manuscript was accepted for publication on 7 December 2004 without comment, despite the claim made by Publish America that "We read every single submission before we accept or refuse."
  
 
The Manuscript can be read here: [http://www.cs.du.edu/~aburt/StingManuscript.pdf Altanta Nights] (''Warning: PDF'')
 
The Manuscript can be read here: [http://www.cs.du.edu/~aburt/StingManuscript.pdf Altanta Nights] (''Warning: PDF'')
  
And the history (including the acceptance letter) is available at: [http://www.critters.org/sting/ The Critter's PublishAmerica page]
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And the history (including the acceptance letter) is available at: [http://www.critters.org/sting/ The Critter's PublishAmerica page].

Revision as of 23:10, 17 September 2007

Publish America is a Maryland-based book publisher founded in 1999 by Lawrence Alvin "Larry" Clopper III and Willem Meiners. It has been the subject of controversy because it has been accused of being a vanity press or author mill by some writers and authors' advocates despite its claims to be a "traditional" advance- and royalty-paying publisher. [1]

Services Offered

Publish America pays a "small" (US$1 [2]) advance to its authors, and claims that all expenses involved with acquiring, producing, manufacturing, and publishing a book. [3]

Official Site

Publish America

Criticism

Critics argue that Publish America presents itself as a traditional house, but acts like a vanity publisher. Writers who contacted Publisher's Weekly in 2004 had complained that Publish America sells books to which it no longer holds the rights, offers authors only a 30% discount, doesn't pay royalties it owes, engages in slipshod editing and copyediting, sets unreasonable list prices (national average for a trade paperback is $16, PublishAmerica's is closer to $20 [4]), and makes little effort in getting books into bookstores. [5] On average, data indicates Publish America sells less than 100 copies of each title. [6]

While Publish America doesn't charge for printing the books, it does require authors to provide a list of friends and family, and then markets to them heavily, according to the authors. [7]

Sting

In 2004, after a representative of Publish America made derogatory remarks about the genre of Science fiction, a host of well-known sci-fi writers, headed by James D Macdonald conspired to prove the publisher a vanity press.[8] At the time, the house claimed to reject 80% of all manuscripts submitted.

The result was a 41-chapter novel where each chapter was written by a separate author, except for 17 (repeat of Chapter 4), Chapter 21 (missing), and Chapter 34 (written by the Bonzai Story Generator). Authors worked from a loose outline that included an "it was all a dream" ending, and were encouraged to include "obvious grammatical errors and nonsensical passages". [9]

The manuscript was accepted for publication on 7 December 2004 without comment, despite the claim made by Publish America that "We read every single submission before we accept or refuse."

The Manuscript can be read here: Altanta Nights (Warning: PDF)

And the history (including the acceptance letter) is available at: The Critter's PublishAmerica page.