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text 2016-11-29 09:02
Authors.me "match" manuscript to non-existent pages, vanity press

Back on November 16, 2016 I had an email from David O'Brien, the founder of Authors.me https://www.authors.me

 

Authors.me call their site, "The platform that connects writers, agents and publishers to find manuscripts, manage submissions and get books published."

 

I imagine anyone who has uploaded work unto their site got the same email. Here's what it said:

 

"We have a lot of major publishers and media companies looking at doing business with us. Every one of them has asked us, "What do your writers say about the service?" Well, I am writing to ask you to put together some honest writer quotes for a presentation I am making.

 

Here are the categories in my presentation under which I will need a quote. Please feel free to fill in one or more of the categories with your personal quotes (not someone else's). Just type your quote into the space provided below and reply back to me. Be creative and succinct. I will be grateful.

 

INSPIRE (How AUTHORS.me inspires  you)

 

ENGAGE  (Your experience working the platform, i.e., easy, hard, comprehensive, etc.)

 

LIBERATE  (Frees you up to be yourself)

 

EMPOWER  (How it makes you feel more like a professional writer)

 

LOVE  (Why you love using AUTHORS.me)

 

 

I would also like to hear your thoughts on the new layout. Please note we are not done polishing it, but would still love to hear from you.

 

Thanks again for being a part of the AUTHORS.me family.

 

Respectfully,

David O'Brien

Founder, AUTHORS.me

david@authors.me

 

 

I have four of my novels uploaded to this site.

 

Initially, my understanding was agents and publishers would log on and be able to quickly see if anything caught their interest. Evidently, none of my novels did. I've had no action whatsoever.

 

After I received this email I checked my work on the site again and I see that Authors.me have found "matches" - a publisher or agent who is looking for a novel similar to mine.

 

Well, that's encouraging.

 

A quick check and it becomes apparent this is not quite the case. Take for example, my novel Loving the Terrorist - a contemporary romance with subplot that addresses an important environmental issue (eco-fi).

 

Fifteen matches yield the following:

- 2 sites where "the page does not exist", ebooks2go, Library Tales

- 2 sites that are without a doubt pay for play - called hybrid but are nothing more than vanity press. BookLogix and Lift Bridge Publishing

- 2 sites that are duplicated equaling four sites. Grand Central/Forever Yours and Skyhorse - and by the way, Skyhorse is not accepting romantic fiction.

- which also goes for Lamar University Press - not accepting genre fiction

- Bound , is a company that claims "we deliver stories in an easy-to-engage format that combines prose fiction, stunning visuals, and dramatic audio." Huh?

 

Sixty percent actually don't match, don't even exist or want me to pay to publish my book. Of the others, they’re accepting “adult romantic fiction”, not specifically my novel.

 

 I sent these findings to David because he said said he'd love to hear from me and it would be rude not to respond to someone who considers me "part of the family".

 

Just for the hell of it I hit the submit button on five "matches" that seemed legitimate. According to the tracking window of the site my work has been declined by one agent.

 

Only one publisher has sent me an email to acknowledge that they received my submission.

 

So there you have it – no inspiration, no liberation, no empowerment, no love - and no response.

 

But then isn't that just like family.

 

Stay calm, be brave, watch for the signs

 

30

 

 

Find reviews, blurbs and buy links to my seven novels and two plays at

http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003DS6LEU

 

Facebook for writing news, my experience as a writer as well as promotions, contests, giveaways and discounts regarding his books

https://www.facebook.com/Rod-Raglin-337865049886964/

 

Video book reviews of self-published authors now at

Not Your Family, Not Your Friend Video Book Reviews: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH45n8K4BVmT248LBTpfARQ

 

Cover Art of books by self-published authors at

https://www.pinterest.com/rod_raglin/rod-raglins-reviews-cover-art/

 

More of my original photographs can be viewed, purchased, and shipped to you as GREETING CARDS; matted, laminated, mounted, framed, or canvas PRINTS; and POSTERS. Go to: http://www.redbubble.com/people/rodraglin

 

View my flickr photostream at https://www.flickr.com/photos/78791029@N04/

 

Or, My YouTube channel if you prefer photo videos accompanied by classical music

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsQVBxJZ7eXkvZmxCm2wRYA

 

 

 

 

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quote 2014-12-06 09:26
“I submitted manuscripts to publishers. This was not so much a feeling that I should be published as a wish to escape the feared and hated drudgery of normal work.”

~ Tanith Lee

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url 2013-12-04 19:25
NYRB: "How the Greeks Got There" -- Exhibit “Measuring and Mapping Space: Geographic Knowledge in Greco-Roman Antiquity” (NYU Institute for the Study of the Ancient World)

 

A folio from a fifteenth-century Latin translation of Ptolemy's Geography

 

From the article:

 

"Around 450 BC, Hanno, the King of Carthage, led a fleet of sixty ships on a colonizing expedition down the west coast of Africa. Along the way he kept a log, recording the locations of the colonies he founded and the sights he saw: a race of men called the Troglodytae, said to run faster than horses; “a country burning with fire and perfume;” a towering volcano called the Chariot of the Gods. This type of log was called a periplus, an ancient wayfinding document that listed the ports of call and natural landmarks navigators could expect to find when sailing from one location to another. According to the exhibit “Measuring and Mapping Space: Geographic Knowledge in Greco-Roman Antiquity,” these texts, which often incorporated literary description and even myth (many, for instance, have debated the veracity of Hanno’s periplus), were among the preferred means of navigating for ancient mariners.

 

'Measuring and Mapping Space,' at NYU’s Institute for the Study of the Ancient World through January, aims to explain how Greeks and Romans thought of the world around them, and how these beliefs were in turn represented in maps, globes, and even coins and pottery. Unfortunately, though a number of ancient geographical treatises still exist today, almost no actual maps have survived. But the show’s curator, Roberta Casagrande-Kim, has dealt with this brilliantly. By displaying, among much else, a striking collection of illustrated Renaissance manuscripts on geography and cosmology—themselves reconstructions of the work of classical geographers like Ptolemy—the exhibition manages at once to suggest not just what ancient maps may have looked like, but how ancient geography influenced modern notions of topography and geography."


Man, I'd like to see this one ...

Source: www.nybooks.com/blogs/gallery/2013/dec/04/ancient-maps-how-greeks-got-there
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url 2013-11-13 22:40
Scientists reveal new fragments by Euripides and an unknown ancient commentary on Aristotle in medieval manuscripts

Source: www.medievalists.net/2013/11/12/scientists-reveal-ancient-texts-in-medieval-manuscripts
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review 2012-12-01 00:00
Illuminated Manuscripts of Germany and Central Europe in the J. Paul Getty Museum - Thomas Kren,J. Paul Getty Museum Nice production quality, decent introductory essay for those unfamiliar with the general outline of medieval history. Most of the manuscripts themselves didn't wow me, but I've probably seen more medieval illumination than most people from the Western US. If you don't have the opportunity to see collections in the UK and Germany, the Getty's is nice enough. Since this book seems aimed at non-specialists it might have been helpful to include more extensive captions.
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