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I don't know who published Twilight but Random house may have picked up 50 shades to compete or to use Twilight as a stepping stone.
In any case someone recognized a cash cow when they saw it.
Every publisher hopes that every book they publish a cash cow. You just don't hear about the ones that don't let down their milk.I don't know who published Twilight but Random house may have picked up 50 shades to compete or to use Twilight as a stepping stone.
In any case someone recognized a cash cow when they saw it.
Every publisher hopes that every book they publish a cash cow. You just don't hear about the ones that don't let down their milk.
This leads me to another question however. Many people have claimed Shades is poorly written. PL even had a thread with a link to a blog that was ripping its grammar apart.
So question is, if its that poor why wouldn't Random house have edited it? Isn't that what they do?
Just seems odd.
I am a book editor for mainstream publishers. There are two types of editors in a publishing house--the content editor, usually the acquisitions editor, and the copyeditor. (I have done the former in house but now only do the latter as a freelancer.)
Any messing with the "written" aspect as you seem to mean it, is supposed to be done between the acquisitions editor and the author before the book is sent out for copyediting. The copyeditor is supposed to clean up what's there, not rewrite it or beef it up/trim it down--although the copyeditor can ask questions about failings they see in the content. Increasingly acquisitions editors are spending little time with the author recasting the book, just selecting "the best of the lot in the theme hole in next spring's catalog," buying it, and shoving it on to the manuscript department. Only a few "good potential" authors are getting help in improving the manuscript--not the best seller authors, because no one wants to fight with them over telling them their book could be a bit better and not with the "it will do" authors, whose books are just being shoved through to maintain sales volume (and because "the readers don't care that much about quality anymore anyway.")
The copyeditor the book is sent out to is given x-number of hours to do what they can and have it back by x date. Since not all that many leave school literate any more and since there are so many "it will do" books coming through the channels, the copyeditor only goes "so far" down from the tip of the iceberg in cleaning the book up and then it's out the door.
The whole layers of in-house manuscript editors to go through the manuscript picking out the glaring issues, both in content and style, who used to do a pass both before and after the manuscript was sent to copyediting in addition to the proofreading phase in house are gone, having died when the need to keep the cost of books down slammed up against production costs and inflation.
And when you selected a book because you are trying to counter or ride on the tail of something already out there and soaking up money from that audience, you speed up your production time--and start tossing out timeouts for rechecks.
What is "quality literary" exactly?
Anyway, I came away from the experience monumentally unimpressed with the professional skills and discernment of erotica 'editor' and 'publishers'.
There must be a commercial niche out there somewhere for character-driven erotica. When I first started posting on Lit I was expecting to get downvoted for making people read through pages and pages of character development to get to the sex, but judging by the feedback there are readers who are crying out for exactly that.
There must be a commercial niche out there somewhere for character-driven erotica. When I first started posting on Lit I was expecting to get downvoted for making people read through pages and pages of character development to get to the sex, but judging by the feedback there are readers who are crying out for exactly that.
There must be a commercial niche out there somewhere for character-driven erotica. When I first started posting on Lit I was expecting to get downvoted for making people read through pages and pages of character development to get to the sex, but judging by the feedback there are readers who are crying out for exactly that.
Crappy plots and storyline won't make the cut in the first place unless it is an old name author or something that the publisher thinks will sell like hotcakes.
I'm reminded of Laurell K. Hamilton's two series, one about vamipres, etc, one about the fey.
You're still buying hardbacks?![]()
LOL Occasionally, but usually when they've hit the remainder table.
LOL Occasionally, but usually when they've hit the remainder table.