Submission Guidelines for Contributors
PART I - Getting Started:
There are no rules in the creative art of writing. Every rule which has ever been proposed
has been ignored by some writers who have successfully done just the opposite.
However there
are practices which have evolved through many years of hard experience
and writers who do not
seriously consider these guidelines should be prepared to suffer the consequences.
Here are a
few basic steps to get new writers started:
1. Writers can write what they like. Writing is very therapeutic,
but writers cannot expect anything they write to be published.
It is not the publisher
who decides what should or should not be published.
It is the reader, and readers can be very
choosey inspite of any hype.
So the Number 1 Rule for writers who want to be published is 'Study the Market'.
Those who don't study the market, will not market their studies!
2.
Note the published works of your chosen publisher.
The categories which we have open to writers are shown in this web site.
These are all open to experienced and new writers with talent and potential.
Our published authors have set a high standard for others to follow.
Look at a few previously published
books to get a feel for the wide range of general
fiction and non-fiction
we publish. If you don't want to buy a few sample books,
someone in your local
Writers' Circle will probably have a few copies you can borrow.
3.
Email your idea in a nutshell, ie, no more than 25 words (this sorts out the writers from
the wafflers).
Your appointed editor will either:
i)
Reject you proposal and tell you the obvious reason why.
(It is expected that contributors will take any criticism
in the spirit it is given, that is blunt,
but honest and we hope helpful for you next time).
ii)
Invite you to submit a synopsis and first chapter.
4. On receipt of your submission,
your editor will either:
i)
Reject your synopsis and tell you the most obvious reason why.
ii)
Make constructive comments and invite you to submit your complete manuscript.
5. We can consider proposals and manuscripts posted as typed or photo-copies,
hard copy printouts,
or (to save postage) files on disk or as emailed attached files.
All manuscripts will be considered fairly, without bias or favour, always on merit, never on recommendation.
We receive many enquiries from all over the world.
Unfortunately
we cannot reply to any by post unless a UK stamped addressed envelope (or IRC) is enclosed
6.
When submitting manuscripts by email or on disks, bear in mind that your beautifully
laid out manuscript
when loaded into a different page size, will look chaotic!
So let us have your MS in plain text!
You can save us a lot of time
labouriously reformatting your work if you:
i) Use a common word-processing program,
eg Word, or WordPerfect, to compose
straight-forward text files, without any
fancy desk top publishing layouts.
ii)
Avoid using different type faces and font sizes.
iii) Avoid using spaces to centralise headings and columns.
iv)
Leave headings, footers, page numbers, page columns and variable margins to be set by the
publisher.
v) Use a single left tab key to indent new paragraphs.
vi) Use the wrap around facilty not the hard return key (carriage return) to start a new line.
Ruby Rules for Raconteurs:
* Don't just be better, be different.
* Publishers prefer their books to be made to measure, not off the peg.
* Writers who don't study the markets, will not market their studies.
* Brevity is the essence of modern writing.
* Leave preaching to popes, priests, pontificators, preachers and politicians.
* The best way to write better stories is to read better stories.
Frequently asked question:
Can you recommend any sample books
for new authors to read?
Answer:
Let us know more about yourself and we will recommend the most appropriate
(with our reasons for doing so).
Tel (UK): 01249 720563
or email: pipersash@supamasu.com
PARTS II - XII Writers' Guidelines are available
free of charge on request with book orders