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How
to get started in publishing
By Ronald Pynn
Most books come
out of experience. Authors find a need in the field. They discover the
existing texts have weaknesses, miss important topics, or simply do
not excite their students. It may very well be there is no book on the
particular topic they are teaching, or that the author is on the developing
edge of an emerging area in a discipline.
Betty Azar, author
of Understanding and Using English Grammar, said: "Experience
tells me that first an author should see a need in the field. If the
book you want to write fills a need you have in your own teaching, you
can be fairly sure it will do the same for other teachers. Some of the
best books have come from teachers like myself who develop their own
materials for their classes because there was nothing available in the
marketplace to meet their teaching needs, and then turned these materials
into texts."
Here are some ways
to get started in book publishing:
Look at what
exists in the field. The best place to start in determining where
your book might fit into the marketplace is with your own bookshelf,
and then expanding your research from there. Make lists of existing
books' strengths and weaknesses. Then ask yourself how your idea fits
in. Does it offer some unique approach to the field? Does it present
material in a different and more effective manner? It is imperative
that prospective authors know they market they want to reach. A good
book directed to too narrow a market will fail.
Talk to book
representatives. They know the market. Being in the field, they
see what is being used and what is not. They talk with faculty and hear
their likes and dislikes. Use their knowledge to help shape your idea
into a more concrete proposal. Book representatives are always on the
look out for book proposals. They know what their company seeking, and
which areas have the biggest draw in interest at any given time.
Talk with other
faculty and/or published authors about your book idea. Have them
read your proposal.
Establish your
reputation with a publisher before submitting your first proposal. Review manuscripts for publishers, doing a good, reliable job so that
your name becomes known to them with a favorable impression. You might
ask to be considered for writing supplements to an existing book, such
as a student learning guide or a teacher's manual, or offer to design
the website. These projects get you into print and establish you as
a competent writer who can bring projects in on deadline.
Write an article. Elementary English education author Lee Mountain advises authors to
write their great idea for a textbook as an article first, and get it
published in a professional journal. "You can approach a commercial
publisher as an established authority in your field, and maybe you can
use the article as a sample chapter in your textbook proposal," she
said. "It has worked for me repeatedly, and also for some of my doctoral
candidates."
Ronald Pynn has
written several books on political science, including Watergate
and the American Political Process, American Politics: Changing Expectations
(5th Edition), Political Economy, and The Election of 1994.
Pynn was a charter member of TAA, serving as a senior member during
its formation. He has twice been President of TAA (1992-93, 1996-97),
and he served as TAA's Executive Director from 1995-2005. He presently
resides in Burlington, Vermont. This article was adapted from a publication
Pynn wrote for TAA called "Tips for Successful Authoring."
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