![]() ![]() That doesn’t mean your only option is to self publish like mad until a savvy-agent-with-heart notices your brilliance and plops a fabulous offer to represent you – right into your lap. But finding and winning over the right agent takes time too. If you’re working on getting an agent – great. The big publishing houses (and most of their imprints) will not look at your manuscript if it doesn’t come from a literary agent (seriously, they’ll just toss it in the bin or hit “delete”). ![]() Getting published by one of these monster businesses means you’ve stepped up to seriously deal. What’s known as The Big Four publishing companies ( Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, Penguin Random House, and Hachette Livre), we know, all have serious weight. Time and patience are required – for many reasons, and all of them are valid. If you’ve ever worked with someone in the publishing world, you know this well. ![]() The traditional publishing business is slow. Self publishing will enrich your scope of knowledge and give you a greater appreciation for all the work that goes into getting a book on the market, and traditional publishing gives you other opportunities that will simply blow your mind (money, connections, clout). I’m a big advocate of Hybrid Authoring, essentially getting published via any and all ways. If you’ve finally decided to stop worrying about the best way to get published and are now ready to simply start submitting your work to some publishers, this is for you. This is a rare list of reputable publishers who are currently accepting submissions – without requiring an agent be involved. Just added SIX new publishers to this list, and updated an older link from Peachtree. Who are the publishers accepting submissions directly from authors and illustrators these days – but who are still SOLID and reliable? Here’s my list. Deleted or Blacklisted Writers: what publishers never want to see from writers.Publishers Accepting Submissions from Authors NOW.Private: How To Find the Right Publisher.Great Agents Looking for Children’s Books NOW.Author Scott Turow Speaks: the biggest issues facing authors today.Private: The Accidental Trilogy: mistake every writer makes no more than once.Traditional Publishers: the pros and cons.Illustrated Book Submissions: The 7 Don’ts.Private: 7 Types of Publisher Rejection And How To Deal With Them.Anyway, I’d appreciate recommends about publishers that might be interested in this historical memoir. The memoir is filled with charming stories and provides insight into a very different slice of 20th century life. In retirement, he mastered Akido and met Morihei Ueshiba. The memoir starts with his earliest memories growing up in Brooklyn in a store-front cigar-making family, his playmates, and neighbors discusses his hobbies (ham radio and listening in on conversations of famous people dancing - he learned to dance and assisted Oscar Duryea), his various jobs, including at Mutual Film Corp, where he met silent screen writers, directors, and actors being a notary, for which he spent a night in jail for notarizing a customer’s fraudulent claims working as a finger printer in Trinidad (1942) and Manaus, Brazil (1943), and managing Amy and Air Force Post Exchanges around the world (1944 – 1963), during which time he met Bob Hope, VP Richard Nixon, and others. My relative was a Zelig/Forrest Gump-like guy. I recently retyped and annotated the memoir of a relative (1897-1989) and am looking for a publisher that might be interested in it. ![]()
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