Wow! Very nice, Deb. So thoughtful of her.
Harmony ,'Conviction (1)'
The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
I actually wondered why you hadn't done that, Deb, and figured it was because the rights were sewn up/too expensive to get back.
Theo, the idea was that there might be a desire for someone else to buy it, in which case, the POD thing would be a legal issue.
That's the kind of thing that you could ask your agent about -- in some ways, an active POD for a book proves to a publisher that the rights are desirable, you can point to a measurable interest in a book. Plus, why would POD degrade the desirability of your copyright? You're issuing completely legal and legit copies of the book so long as you have the rights reverted to you, and if you then decide to lease them to a new publisher, it's much the same as if they adopted the book from another publisher -- it's not First World Rights or anything with "first" in the name, anyway.
True - something to discuss with Jenn, and see what she thinks.
askye's here!
Deb, any nibbles on Still Life?
Linda Marrow still has it. That's all I know. It hasn't been at the top of my conscious mind for the past couple of weeks....
Man, this is a weird little thing I've got going here.
Famous Flower is scheduled (at the moment) to be released in October 2004. It's been on Ruth's desk since April. A year ahead of schedule.
Matty Groves is (at the moment) scheduled to be released in October 2005.
I just passed 58,000 words. This sucker is likely to be done by Christmas.
So, figuring beta reads and edits and back and forths before my publisher ever sees it, it should still be totally ready for submission by, say, 1 March 2004. Nearly 18 months ahead of schedule.
Which may make my editor completely nuts. I wonder if the move isn't going to be "Hi! Matty Groves is done! Just letting you there's a completed manuscript awaiting you whenever you want it...."
Any minute, I expect them to start making up deadlines, just to see if they can throw me a curve.
your productivity is inspiring, Deb.(and I don't mean that in that hokey way.)
erika, thing is, publishers seriously don't like it when you produce this fast. They get cranky, because they're supposed to be reading, editing, and generally focussing on things that are next upm on the publication slate. A year and a half ahead of schedule makes them snarl.