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ONLINE BROCHURE
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| You've got a lot in common with Anaïs Nin, James Joyce, Theodore Dreiser, Sinclair Lewis, D.H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf and Gertrude Stein... The workings of the publishing world are filled with blunders editors have made by rejecting best-sellers they thought were bombs. The reasons? As mysterious as the smile on the Mona Lisa... |
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Writer Chuck Ross described
an experiment that he had conducted to test if unsolicited manuscripts were
actually read by major publishers, and if they were, to see how much careful
consideration was given by the readers. Ross typed and submitted Jerzy
Kosinski's Steps — a National Book Award winner and a book that had sold
over 400,000 copies in paperback — to publishing houses as a new,
unpublished work. Random House, the original publisher, rejected it. So did Houghton Mifflin, Doubleday and Harcourt Brace Jovanovich— all houses which had published other works by Kosinski. Ten other leading publishers rejected the work, as did twenty-six literary agents. Only Houghton Mifflin commented that the style reminded the reader of Kosinski, "though this new author was not in his league." As Ross quite rightly stated, "I thought I had made and proved my point about unsolicited manuscripts: they are probably ignored, or if they are read the readers at publishing houses do not recognize good work." |
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