Articlexpo
Search:    Main :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Url :> Submit Article   
 

ECG Course

ECG course or electrocardiogram interpretation is one of the important clinical tests taught at medi ... - Eric Morris
 

Introduction to PHP

A quick, easy-to-understand introduction to creating dynamic Web sites with PHP 5, the latest versio ... - Ali Rizvi
 

Be Your Own Publicist with "From Book to Bestseller" by Penny Sansevieri

What are three words that authors hate to hear? Promotion, promotion, promotion! A writer is someone ... - David Tucholski
 
 

Ten Days to a Publishable Poem

While there is no perfect plan to create incredible poetry, there are literally hundreds of possible ... - Danielle Hollister
 

Scholarships, Fellowships and Government Grants, Oh My!

Nearly every student is eligible to receive free funding for his or her education expenses. Both the ... - Amber Lowery
 

Apparition or Reality

There are instances in one?s life which are strange, inexplicable and bordering on the supernatural. ... - Uma Nagpal
 

Blown to Bits; The Book Review

One of the most fun business books I have ever read is; Blown to Bits: How the New Economy of Inform ... - Lance Winslow
 

A Guide To Ballet

Ballet is a dance that beautifies our movements and builds gracefulness into our body and limbs. Tra ... - Jennifer Bailey
 
 

Main » Education & Learning » Course Books
 

Writers and Predators

 
Author: Susan Scharfman
 

Masters of deception pervade every facet of our lives, so why not the writing life? Time and again scams are perpetrated on writers whose desire to get published overshadows caution. If you've been to Africa or watch Animal Planet, you're aware that predators prey on the weak and unsuspecting. We humans are no different.

During a period of left brain malfunction, Id contacted the New York Literary Agency. Although they were listed as not recommended by Preditors & Editors, a writers watchdog website, I wanted to believe some covetous rival had maliciously bad-mouthed them. They have an impressive Madison Avenue, New York address, a professional looking website and a reasonable, if not questionable, spiel as to why they operate differently from most agencies. The latter should have been my red flag. But when you dont want to believe something, reason becomes clouded by delusion.

The Literary Agency Group is an umbrella for six other agencies, apparently under common ownership: Childrens Literary Agency, Christian Literary Agency, New York Literary Agency, Poets Literary Agency, The Screenplay Agency, and Stylus Literary Agency. If you run across any of these agencies, keep running. They have no tangible address and no phone number. Their Madison Avenue address is nothing but a mail drop. They are a Catch Me If You Can outfit that operates out of airports and phone booths. Its no wonder they deride such respected organizations as the Association of Artists' Representatives (AAR), among others.

My initial submission to The New York Literary Agency had been a synopsis of a manuscript. They fired back a reply faster than an automatic response website. In a boilerplate apparently cranked out to all writers, they assured me there would be no fees, and asked to see the complete manuscript. The normal waiting period for a traditional agent or publisher can be six weeks to six months. After I sent the manuscript they responded within a few days saying they would represent me, but with the caveat I pay a polishing fee to a third party in order to make the manuscript saleable.

At that point the clouds dispersed and I began self-flagellation with tree branches for having fallen for the come-on. No self-respecting agent or traditional publisher charges fees of any kind. This agency has since been denounced by countless writers who have been conned by their unprincipled practices.

Author Victoria Strauss presides over a website on fraudulent literary agents and dishonest publishers and unethical upfront fees and fake addresses and fake contests and everything you never wanted to believe about con artists who take advantage of unwary writers. Granted, Strauss is a successful author who would like you to buy her books. But her Writer Beware website, http://www.sfwa.org/beware is maintained on a voluntary basis by members of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America. It contains considerable documented evidence on literary fraud and how to avoid it. Youll also learn a whole lot about the industry in general, including vanity publishers, print-on-demand publishers and how they differ.

In the life and times of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Edna Ferber, John Steinbeck, Eugene ONeill and the restsomeone took care of business while the geniuses wrote. Today, unless you have the means, there is no escaping to the left bank of the Seine, or the sand dunes of the Hamptons to contact your muse. Publishing is a business and taking care of business is the writers job. Unless you are able to separate the predators from the valid editorswell, writers beware.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Interview for "A Circle of Dreams" Author Annie Rogers
 
SmithKline Licenses Software
 
Review for "It's Springtime in My Backyard," author Kathy Mazur
 
ECG Course
 
Let's Get Dirty
 
Sociology Schools Focus on Social Hierarchies
 
Appraisal Basis for Texas Teachers
 
The Tiamat and the King [Chapters 1& 2 of Six Chapters]
 
Culture
 
Comic Book Stores
 
 
 
Add URL
 
 

Teens & Children

 

Food & Recipe

 

Automobiles

 

Adventure & Sports

 

Society & Communities

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Science & Research

 

Computers & Networking

 

Self Help

 

Government & Politics

 

Employment & Careers

 

Music & Entertainment

 

Shopping Online

 

Culture & Art

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Events & News

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Business & Commerce

 

Family & Home

 

Estate & Realty

 

Banking & Finance

 

Education & Learning

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

Fitness & Health


 
Main :> Privacy :> Terms of Use  
Copyright © 2008 www.articlexpo.com