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Tips for writers 7
The seventh set of our new pages of tips for writers
deals with informing yourself about what’s going on in the book business
Keep up to date
- To improve your chances of becoming a published writer it’s important
to keep up with what is happening in the book world. The machinations of
big publishers, the state of health of bookselling chains and the economic
conditions affecting the book business may seem remote from you sitting at
your computer, but all of these are going to have an impact on your writing
career. Our weekly News Review and
free newsletter are an
immediate source of information and try also our series such as
Changes in the book trade.
Beyond that you could consider subscribing to the Bookseller in the UK
or Publishers’ Weekly in the US, or checking out whether they’re
available in your local library. Publishers Lunch (US) and
Bookbrunch (UK) offer daily online news updates.
- Keep a close eye on your favoured genre. If you’re writing fantasy
or crime fiction it’s obviously important to know who’s selling and what the
new trends are, but the same is equally true for non-fiction, where you may
suddenly find that someone else has published a book on a subject you’ve been
working on. It used to be rather laborious to get hold of publishers’
catalogues but now they are online, so it’s very much easier to do your
research. Browse in bookshops too and see what else is out there.
- It’s well worth considering a subscription to a writers’ magazine.
Our Writers’ Magazine Reviews
will help you find the right one for you, whether it’s Mslexia
for serious women writers, the more mainstream Writers’ Forum and
Writers’ News in the UK, Writer’s Digest in the US, ScriptWriter
magazine or The Self-Publishing Magazine. We carry reviews of all
of these on our site, so you can work out which one would be right for you.
- Don’t underestimate the amount of useful information stored in writers’
reference books. There’s the listings of course, some of which can be
found online (as in our own Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook
agents’ listings). But some of these
books also have a mass of useful articles from real authorities in the field,
many of whom are bestselling authors – and again we’d recommend the
Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook and its excellent sister publication, the
Children’s Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook.
- Consider also the many books for writers. Most of these concentrate
on advising on how to improve your writing, but there are some that take a
wider approach to the book business. Track them down and buy them through a
large bookshop or online through our
WritersBookstall.
- The web is a huge source of information and by tracking down
interesting blogs, as well as sites for writers and publishers’ websites, you
can find out a great deal about what is going on.
- Use the huge resources on the WritersServices site to build up your
knowledge of the book world and to find out how you can improve your
writing. Go to Advice for
Writers to find links to what is available.
- The result of all this will be that you have a clearer idea of what is
going on in the book world and will be able to make better informed decisions
about what to write and how to go about getting it published or deciding to go
for self-publishing.
Tips for Writers 1: Improving
your writing
Tips for Writers
2: Learn on the job
Tips for Writers
3: New technology and the Internet
Tips for Writers 4:
Self-publishing - is it for you?
Tips for Writers
5: Promoting your writing (and yourself)
Tips for
writers 6: Other kinds of writing
Tips for
writers 8: Submission to publishers and agents
© Chris Holifield 2008-9
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