Snake Oil Publishers

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When we were actively publishing it seemed I spent half my time warning wannabe writers to watch for the con artists. Writers give birth to a story. Because it is their baby they are willing to do almost anything to see it in print. Whether they are thinking of being the next Tom Clancy and famous and rich or just famous, the author stops thinking of risk.

The con artists know a new writer is an easy mark. Be it the agent who is going to "submit" the manuscript to "well known" publishers or the publishers themselves, the writer is an easy money cow. Many of the old tried and true lines go like this.

"Your idea and story is a Best Seller. Send us X amount of dollars for editing, making copies, filing fees, copyright fees, staff fees, and we will submit it to X publisher. (usually those fees start out pretty small, less than a thousand dollars) But the fees for whatevers never stops and the writer is promised the big payout is just ahead. If the writer is gullible enough he or she will mortgage the house, take out a bank loan, borrow from relatives, until there is no more money to be had.

The agent or publisher will write the poor victim off with a letter of apologies. It just needed a tiny bit more money to grease the wheels to success as they hope the poor sap will take the bait one last time.

God, how many times have I heard or read that tale of woe from writers who got into that financial nightmare? So I tell them, "No, I'm sorry we can't publish your story. We aren't that kind of publisher. We are "On Demand Publishers". No, we aren't Vanity Publishers. We take your manuscript and turn it into a book whether you want one or a thousand. No, we do not print your books and wait for you to sell them to receive a payment. We aren't your credit company. No, I can't help you get your money back from them other people. We aren't lawyers."

All this came back to me this morning as I was reading an advertisement from another one of "those book publishers" promising me my book would be in print and I would be a published author. (Sign up and we will disclose the details) wasn't part of their advertisement. I did a Google search and review of them. AuthorHouse aren't nice people. http://authorhouse.pissedconsumer.com/

Writers, please be careful and take time to read the fine print. Ask about satisfied customers and call them to make sure they are real people. The bottom line is you do NOT pay for anything. Agents will take you on if your story is good. If they ask for money, run.
Publishers will take you if you have connections and the story is good. If they ask for money, run.

You want to see your story in print and have twenty or thirty dollars spare change. Use an On Demand Book Publisher. They will print you out one or more at a very small cost.

I wish everyone may achieve their hearts desire in life. You were given a chance. What you do with it isn't always up to you and it isn't always fair. If you don't try, you lost before you began.

always,
Barb

Comments

Thanks for your experience in this

Angharad's picture

I hope things are getting a little better especially with e-books although it always pays to read the small print in any contract.

Angharad

The rule of the 7 P's

persephone's picture

Barb is absolutely right.

Kindle, Kobo and Lulu (the big three in the self publishing world) will not cost you money to publish.
If you need a proof editor (beyond friends and family) look one up online or (for the old school amongst us) in yellow pages.
If you out source the marketing of your baby (sorry, book) to a third party then vet them like you would any child minder.
Be prepared to work a damn sight harder on selling your book than you did on writing it.
Be realistic. You are in serious competition for people's reading time.

As for the rule of the 7 P's...
Prior preparation and planning prevent p*** poor performance.

Persephone

Non sum qualis eram

Doppler Press

erin's picture

We (the BigCloset staff) are now operating as a small publisher, Doppler Press. We are not charging authors upfront but share in profits at reasonable contracted rates and our contracts have clauses for the author to reclaim all rights. We already have a backlog of books to publish and we are trying to do two a month this month, then four next month then we will see. :) We will pay small advances on request from an author at time of contract signing. If you would like to know more, we'll be making a big announcement here soon or you can PM me. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Advice for new writers wanting to be Published Writers...

Do your homework. Writer's Digest has scads of information on the market. They publish the Writer's Market book that lists publishers and their markets (fiction, non-fiction, periodical, romance, science fiction, LBGTQ, etc).

Another great resource is Preditors &Editors http://pred-ed.com/ . This is a list, built from real world feedback on who's on the up and up, who's shady, and who the crooks are.

Writing is fun, when it's being posted to free sites. When you start getting a paycheck for your writing, it's a business and a job. Treat it as such.

You don't pay a real publisher, a real publisher pays you. A publisher that wants you to pay them is either a vanity press, or a scam artist.