Blog, non-fiction

Finding A Publisher For Your Non-Fiction Project

In a perfect world you’d have a signed contract for your work before you started writing. The life of a writer isn’t usually that simple. Novels need to be finished before you approach a publisher. I didn’t know this when I wrote my first published contemporary romance, The Italian Billionaire’s Virgin. I sent the publisher my first three chapters and a synopsis as soon as I’d finished writing them. When they replied asking to see the complete manuscript, I still had half a dozen chapters to write! 

It’s a bit different if you want to write non-fiction. You can pitch your idea before you’ve finished the book—you can find out more about the process here. It means planning down to the last detail to produce what is in effect a business plan, but there’s nothing like a publisher showing some interest to give a project wings. 

Photo by energepic.com on Pexels.com

Start by studying the type of book you want to write. Read as many as you can to get a feel for the style and content. Make a note of how many words are in each book, and how many chapters. Publishers like submissions that are close in size and style to the work they already publish. They want more of the same…but different. If you ask them what this means, they’ll say, “We know what we want when we see it.” That great catch-all statement allows them to snap up both the obscure and lengthy and the short and snappy, but for a first attempt play it safe. Make sure your manuscript conforms.

For further clues, get hold of a current copy of The Writer’s and Artist’s Yearbook. It’s the writer’s bible, listing the details of literary agents and publishers throughout the UK.

It has helpful articles about the writing business, too. There are pieces in the 2019 edition about crowdfunding your novel, how to become a poet and writing a cook book, so there’s something for everyone.

If you don’t have an agent, make a list of publishers who will accept submissions from unagented authors. Visit their websites, and narrow down your list to include only those who publish books like your prospective project. There’s no point sending your self-help manual to a company that only deals with botanical text books.

Once you’ve produced a shortlist, study their requirements for submission. You can get a good idea of what the individual editors like to see by following their posts on Facebook and Twitter. Give them exactly what they want, and if your idea hits the spot, you’ll be a winner!

Publishers are deluged with manuscripts. After the holiday break I’ll be showing you how to make your manuscript stand out from the crowd. To find out how to automatically give your submission the edge over 90% of other writers, follow this blog!

Bristol, non-fiction, Representation of the People Act 1918, research, Women Of Bristol 1850-1950, Women's Lives

What Do You Know…about Bristol?

Clifton Suspension Bridge

I’m starting an exciting new non-fiction project. Women’s Lives is a series of books to be published by Pen And Sword Books  in 2018, to coincide with the centenary of women over the age of thirty being given the vote in the Representation Of The People Act.

One volume of Women’s Lives will be devoted to a single city in the United Kingdom. My family have strong ties with the city of Bristol, which go back hundreds of years. I was born a few miles away in a village which was then in the Somerset countryside but is now on the outskirts of the city. My first full-time job was in the Bristol offices of a life-assurance company, and after I married I  went to work for Rolls-Royce Aero in Filton

Ancient And Modern…

When I heard about the Pen And Sword project I was keen to get involved. I’ve been writing romance for a long time, but I started my writing career contributing non-fiction articles to newspapers and magazines. This was too good a chance to miss, so I’ve now started work on the Bristol edition of the series.

In writing Women’s Lives: Women of Bristol 1850-1950 I’ll be going back to my roots in a big way. It will mean spending a lot of time combing through the archives, but nothing beats a real-life anecdote.

Do you have any stories to share about life in the City of Bristol in the years before 1950?

A Countryside Christmas, Authorsoundrelations, Facebook, non-fiction, Rachel Brimble, Special offer, stress-busting

What’s On In January…

Eleven days into the new year, and I’ve just about managed to stick to my resolutions. How are you doing?

This month, I’m working on a non-fiction project that’s very close to my heart. I’m lucky enough to have lived in the countryside nearly all my life, but most people these days live in towns. The disconnect between living and working peacefully at our own pace and the frantic pace of city life is at the heart of a lot of the world’s problems.  The working title of my current Work In Progress, Country Into Town, gives you an idea what it’s about. It’s a year’s worth of  small, stress-busting changes anyone can make to their busy life. I’ve already written a short magazine article called A Countryside Christmas, ready for publication in December this year. How’s that for forward planning?

Today (11th January) I’m blogging for Rachel Brimble, and on 14th January, I’ll be blogging for authorsoundrelations in my usual monthly spot.

For news of a very special offer coming later this month, follow me on Facebook by liking my author page.