How to Write a Movie in 21 Days: The Inner Movie Method!

In this classic bestselling screenwriting guide--now revised and updated--author and film consultant Viki King helps students go from blank page to completed manuscript through a series of clever and simple questions, ingenious writing exercises, and easy, effective new skills.

Viki King's Inner Movie Method is a specific step-by-step process designed to get the story in your heart onto the page. This method doesn't just show how to craft a classic three-act story but also delves into how to clarify the idea you don't quite have yet, how to tell if your idea is really a movie, and how to stop getting ready and start. Once you know what to write, the Inner Movie Method will show you how to write it.

How to Write a Movie in 21 Days, first published in 1987, has been translated in many languages around the world and has become an industry-standard guide for filmmakers both in Hollywood and internationally.

BREAKFAST WITH SHARKS: A Screenwriter's Guide to Getting the Meeting, Nailing the Pitch, Signing the Deal, and Navigating the Murky Waters of Hollywood!

By Michael Lent
 
Publisher: Three Rivers Press (May 2004)
 
Breakfast with Sharks gives a rough, broad overview of the business of screenwriting. The author, Michael Lent, spends a good portion of the book speaking about how a career is born, discussing such topics as the pros and cons of relocating to Los Angeles, and the various positions that can be held at the bottom of the industry totem pole that still allow time for writing. Lent also describes the business of spec and assignment work, offers advice on handling rejection, and recommends the best places to network, but writes mostly about how to deal with executives, agents, managers, producers, actors, and directors without really detailing how meetings with said important individuals are ever acquired or how to perform in these meetings once they are scheduled.
 
Summary of the Book:
 
What They Didn't Teach You in Your Screenwriting Course

Screenwriters, listen up! Breakfast with Sharks is not a book about the craft of screenwriting. This is a book about the business of managing your screenwriting career, from advice on choosing an agent to tips on juggling three deal-making breakfasts a day. Prescriptive and useful, Breakfast with Sharks is a real guide to navigating the murky waters of the Hollywood system.

Unlike most of the screenwriting books available, here's one that tells you what to do after you've finished your surefire-hit screenplay. Written from the perspective of Michael Lent, an in-the-trenches working screenwriter in Hollywood, this is a real-world look into the script-to-screen business as it is practiced today.

Breakfast with Sharks is filled with useful advice on everything from the ins and outs of moving to Los Angeles to understanding terms like "spec," "option," and "assignment." Here you'll learn what to expect from agents and managers and who does what in the studio hierarchy. And most important, Breakfast with Sharks will help you nail your pitch so the studio exec can't say no.

Rounded out with a Q&A section and resource lists of script competitions, film festivals, trade associations, industry publications, and more, Breakfast with Sharks is chock-full of "take this and use it right now" information for screenwriters at any stage of their careers.

The Script-Selling Game, A Hollywood Insider's Look at Getting Your Script Sold and Produced!

By Kathie Fong Yoneda
 
The essential guide to landing your script in Hollywood.
 
This revised and updated edition includes a new chapter on animation, another on using the Internet to market yourself, plus an expansive section on submitting for television and cable.
 
"Once again, Kathie draws on her wide experience of how the movie and TV game works, sharing the secret language and inner processes of The Biz." - Christopher Vogler, story consultant and author of The Writer's Journey
 
"Kathie shares her insider's knowledge on developing your screenplay and marketing it - including the exciting new market of the Internet." - Pamela Wallace, writer/producer and Academy Award-winning co-writer of Witness
 
"Thorough, essential, invaluable, and necessary. Kathie knows how the business works, how buyers think, and what writers have to know to get the script sold. Her insightful, encouraging style makes the impossible seem possible!" - Dr. Linda Seger, author of Making a Good Script Great
 
Kathie Fong Yoneda has worked in film and television for more than 30 years. She has held executive positions at Disney, Touchstone, Disney TV Animation, Paramount Pictures Television, and Island Pictures, specializing in development and story analysis of both live-action and animation projects. Kathie has presented seminars throughout the world.
 
By Michael Wiese Productions

Selling your Story in 60 Seconds by Michael Hauge!

 The Guaranteed Way to Get your Screenplay or Novel Read!

  • How to design, perfect and present the 60-second pitch
  • The 10 key components of a commercial story
  • The 8 steps to a powerful pitch
  • Targeting your buyers
  • "The best pitch I ever heard," exclusive advice from 40 major screenwriters, novelists, agents, and film and publishing executives
  • And much more, including pitching templates for every genre

"...Higher praise I cannot give." - Terry Rossio, Co-writer, Pirates of the Caribbean 1, 2 & 3; Shrek; Aladdin, The Mask of Zorro; Deja Vu

"When I pick up the phone for help, Michael Hauge is the call I make." - Shane Black, Screenwriter, Lethal Weapon 1 & 2, The Last Boy Scout, The Long Kiss Goodnight; Screenwriter/Director, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang

"...I wish this excellent book had been around when we were starting out..." - Bob Fisher, Co-writer, Wedding Crashers, We're the Millers

"A wonderful book. An absolute MUST for every screenwriter who wants to sell a script." - Dr. Linda Seger, Script Consultant; Seminar Leader; Author, Making A Good Script Great, Advanced Screenwriting

"...everything you need to know about packaging and presenting your stories..." - Christopher Vogler, Author, The Writer's Journey; Mythic Structure for Writers

Michael Hauge is the author of the best-selling Writing Screenplays That Sell, now in its 30th printing. He has presented his seminars and lectures to more than 30.000 writers and filmmakers worldwide. He has coached hundreds of screenwriters and producers on their screenplays and pitches, and has consulted on projects for (among many others) Warners, Disney, Columbia, New Line, CBS, Lifetime, Julia Roberts, Val Kilmer, Jennifer Lopez, Kirsten Dunst, and Morgan Freeman.

Michael Wiese Productions

Joel, Emily & The Alibris Story!


The Alibris Story

Before the browser
 
Richard Weatherford is a bookseller who loves old books and new technology. After teaching college for a number of years, Dick turned to selling antiquarian books via specialized catalogs from his home near Seattle. He soon realized that computer databases had a lot to offer the antiquarian book business. In 1982, he wrote a business plan for a company that would build an online database for antiquarian booksellers. He called the company Interloc because it would serve as an interlocutor (that's English professor for "go-between") to help sellers to locate hard-to-find books. Unfortunately startup capital was harder to find than a signed JD Salinger, in part because personal computers were still scarce, expensive, and difficult to connect.
 
In 1991, Dick was hired by Faxon, a book and magazine subscription service firm, to salvage BookQuest, an early online database for antiquarian booksellers. BookQuest failed, but it taught Dick a lot and it revived the idea of Interloc. Because computer use was growing exponentially, the idea seemed timely and Dick was able to raise nearly $50,000, mainly from booksellers who respected his thinking and vision. Interloc went live in 1993, prior to the widespread use of the world-wide web.
 
The first successful online bookseller service
 
Initially, Interloc was a database for professional booksellers only. It was not open to the public. Dick recruited Tom Sawyer, who in 1993 published Record Manager, the first desktop software for booksellers. The data standard that Tom developed for Record Manager, called UIEE, is still in widespread use today. Interloc enabled sellers to transfer files of book listings over modems using DOS-based computers. Interloc built the first system to match requests, or "wants" from customers with books available for sale. It was a pioneering system, and the small company became the first successful online service for booksellers.
 
A global vision from traveling the backroads
 
In 1997, Marty Manley asked an author friend how to find a copy of her book, which was out-of-print. Manley had what might politely be termed a nonstandard resume: among other things, he had been a machinist and a leader of several labor unions, a McKinsey & Co. management consultant, a sought-after turnaround expert, and Assistant Secretary of Labor for Bill Clinton. Over dinner, the author suggested that Marty use Interloc to track down a copy of her book. Marty found the book and was immediately hooked on Interloc's rich content. He sought out Richard Weatherford and was soon introduced to him in an office at the top of San Francisco's highest skyscraper.
 
There's actually many more to this story if you're willing to search the site (https://www.alibris.com) but do you know what matters? They decided to display my romantic drama into their site. They're actually many more sellers there who sell the book and if you're truly interested, you can always get it. Got it?

"Hey, come, see what we can do together"

 

Actually trying to keep the magic alive, here's another excerpt of my forthcoming book. I continue the story, so, here's how our two heroes continue, they continue:
 
“There are people who can see, my dear. You may be good at school, but hurting and mocking your classmates who may be more vulnerable than you means that you are impatient to ‘use power’.”
“We are all like that,” continued Jennifer sharply.
“It may be so, but the looking glass knows the consequences this will have for you as a grown-up. You may do that now, but hurrying, being impatient to act like an adult will get you disappointed later on. I came to you to fix that!”
“Are there only fixes in your mind, Jack? Can’t you act a bit more happily?”
The elf, partly dressed, as the winter had not come yet, with pointy ears, brown hair, brown pants and a backpack over his shoulders and at the same height with Jennifer, began playing music. The flute sounded wonderful to the little child as Jack started smiling, moving right and left and then making steps to dance.
“Hey, come, see what we can do together,” he continued.

A love story of hope and ambition in Book Depository!

Book Depository (bookdepository.com) is a leading international book retailer with a unique offer -- over 20 million books and free delivery worldwide (with no minimum spend).

They ship thousands of books every day from their fulfillment centres in Gloucester, United Kingdom, and Melbourne, Australia, to more than 130 countries across the world -- displaying prices in 37 different local currencies.
Their vision is to provide “All Books Available to All” by improving selection, access and affordability of books.
Book Depository was acquired by Amazon in 2011, and since then they have worked together to ensure the best possible experience for all their customers worldwide. By working with Amazon, they have improved their customer service and delivery, and increased their selection of books to more than 20 million, so not only will you find a great read, but they hope you'll find your experience with them is even better.
They still have a dedicated team at Book Depository working to maintain the personal experience that they know their customers love. All of them, from Customer Service right through to Marketing and Finance are very passionate about books. They love making recommendations for titles and sharing the books they've loved with you, and they don't plan on changing that anytime soon. 
 
WEEE Directive details
 
The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive ("the WEEE Directive") is a directive from Europe. As a member of the European Union, the United Kingdom implemented the WEEE directive as UK law on the 2nd January 2007. The purpose of the WEEE Directive is to reduce the amount of waste electrical and electronic equipment (known as "WEEE") being disposed of to landfill by promoting the separate collection, treatment and recycling of WEEE for environmentally sound disposal, so as to minimize the potential effects on the environment and human health that may arise from the presence of hazardous substances commonly found in electrical and electronic equipment ("EEE").
 
As a retailer of electrical goods, The Book Depository (London) Limited (The Book Depository) is committed to complying with all applicable laws and regulations relating to WEEE ensuring that they are endeavoring to fulfill their environmental responsibilities at all times. The Book Depository will provide a free take back service on EEE to all customers who make a "like for like" purchase from The Book Depository.
 
So, you know where the wonderful is, folks? They display The Words of Emily Logan as a paperback on their e-shelves! Wanna know all about a book written in a movie format? Go check it and... why not, buy it!
 
Here is the link: https://bit.ly/3cYFFGw

"...There are people who can see..."

 
One day, Jennifer invited Jack to her house to sing, play music and eat together. The fall had already come and they had a wonderful time. Jennifer believed mirrors are magical. The little child believed that the mirror her family kept at the sitting room had extraordinary powers.
“Do you truly believe in magic, Jennifer?” asked Jack hopefully. “That’s been my greatest concern, since I came to you.”
“Of course, I believe, Jack! But why are you worried?”
“It happens that I know a few things about you!” stated Jack seriously. “I come from another world where a magical mirror judges all of us, including you.”
“Am I judged?! Really?! What do I do wrong?!” asked Jennifer surprised.
“There are people who can see, my dear. You may be good at school, but hurting and mocking your classmates who may be more vulnerable than you means that you are impatient to ‘use power’.”
 
Soon the magical book will be a publishing reality. What do you enjoy most about it?
 

They say our world is created out of music!


Jennifer believed in magic. One day, she met Jack, a rather short elf who played the flute, just outside their glamorous detached house, in the garden next to the plane tree. During their first time together, Jack told Jennifer something that she was meant to memorize.
“They say our world is created out of music,” Jack said.
“Who says that, Jack?” Jennifer continued.
“A lot of people, from our worlds, actually. I would die to show you what we can do together.”
Well, it’s true that some people don’t forget easily. So, Jennifer and the elf decided to find out what this meant. 
 
The above excerpt has been a piece from my forthcoming book! What do you think of it?

Once upon a time, there was little Jennifer... The inception of my fairytale fantasy!

                     

Hello folks, here's how my fairytale fantasy begins! I feel beautifully to share it's inception. Here's an excerpt to read at the pre-launch period. So, then, When Magic Truly Happens, enjoy!
 
Once upon a time, there was little Jennifer, a kind, extremely smart, polite, vibrant little girl. She liked reading fairytales and being the best she could at school.
“She is my best pupil,” her teacher, Kevin, once said.
Her family was proud of her and gave her warmth and love to forge the best in her, but, like all children, Jennifer was not just good. She also had weak points that could harm her as a grown up. She wanted to do everything with her classmates, be adventurous and think like grown-ups.
They even created alphabets of their own, depictions of symbols, so that, when they wrote paper messages to other students in class, their teacher wouldn’t be able to understand what they were saying, if he happened to take notice of them!

When Magic Truly Happens Book To Be Published!

                                  

Dear folks, I am in the delightful position to say I just completed registration for international copyright at the U.S. Copyright Office, of the final version of my fairytale fantasy book When Magic Truly Happens!

It will be published as a pocket book (an ebook and a paperback) in the global internet. By this way, I would like to share my work with you, believing that word of mouth communication before actual publishing will give you a hint of my concept and trigger nice impressions!

Below is the Back Cover Script:

Little Jennifer meets Jack, the elf, who plays the flute and, through the looking glass, they're magically shifted to a fantasy realm known as Flux, a world created by music. Together with Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Jennifer makes new friends, while she discovers the magical mirror plays an important role in her life.

For all ages above 9 years old.

To Be Published!

The story of Joel & Emily in Blackwell's!

 

It’s all about the history and heritage of an Oxford family bookshop! For those curious cats that have a date with history, there’s a lot of mystery in discovering the art and alchemy of book making…!

Blackwell’s take the year of 1879 as their founding since it was on January 1st of that year that their bookshop on Broad Street, Oxford first opened its doors and they have been trading continuously from there ever since.

1879 was the year that Thomas Edison created the first lightbulb, Broad Street was cobbled and, no doubt, filled with the sound of hooves clipping along it.

Since then they have grown to become more than just one bookshop, with a chain of bookshops serving not only individual customers but also a host of libraries, universities, businesses and government departments.

The Oxford bookshop itself has grown; sideways, upwards and, most notably, underground.

Didn’t I tell you it’s all about the alchemy of success? Still interested though in love stories? Success or/and love stories? Get a chance to view The Words of Emily Logan before the fall.

Here it is: https://bit.ly/2Q6DGFv

A Drama Tale Written In A Movie Format In BetterWorldBooks!

 

 
Yo folks, here we are again, I would say... fine tuned to creative prospects! A book, its primordial inspiration is better described by social observation. There may be lots of different pools of ideas to get believable dialogue at first hand. But then comes setting and then comes language, I would say, words that culturally fit each character. But then comes the ironic twist and conflicts and climax... A climax to what extent? To feel creatively fulfilled at the beginning. And then comes vision and daydreaming and then you have to strike the market. Which market?! Let's get to know the market of BetterWorldBooks! Post-Graduation Blues, The Fortuitous Discovery, The Beginnings of a Social Venture, A Prize-Winning Plan, The Environment Becomes A Stakeholder Too, The Next Chapter, ... they're all down below for you to read it!

…And How it All Began

Post-graduation blues

It was a dark and stormy night in South Bend, Indiana. College friends and ultimate frisbee teammates Xavier and Kreece were sitting around after graduation wondering what to do next. The economy was in the gutter, the dot com boom had recently gone bust, and prospects for Internet businesses were slim. This didn’t bode well for guys with degrees in information systems and mechanical engineering.

The Fortuitous Discovery

The best gig they could find was tutoring the Notre Dame football team on the finer points of calculus and computer programming. A thankless job to be sure, and it didn’t exactly pay the tab at the ol’ Linebacker Lounge. Tired of seeing all the piles of old textbooks sitting around the apartment, Kreece tried a hunch and put his roommate’s old books for sale on the Internet. The campus bookstore never paid much for used books, but perhaps he could sell them on the Internet and get more. (Buying and selling stuff on the Internet hadn’t gone mainstream yet). Even though it was the middle of the summer, the textbooks started selling like proverbial hotcakes. Xavier, ever the entrepreneur, knew a good thing when he saw one and proceeded to sell off his old textbooks and those of all his roommates’ who had fled and left their books behind. He became intrigued by the online book market, and wondered how he could find a lot more books.

The beginnings of a social venture

The following winter, Kreece and Xavier talked often about a plan to collect all the unwanted books at Notre Dame. As the spring approached, in a burst of gumption, they decided to make it happen.

Having volunteered in the past at the local community center, they knew it had everything they needed: a great cause, a fast Internet connection, and a back room that could hold some books. Xavier convinced Jay, the center’s director, to take a gamble on this idea and then they were off. 6 months later, 2,000 books had been collected and resold and $10,000 had been raised. More importantly, Kreece and Xavier found themselves with the glimmerings of a revolutionary new business model.

A prize-winning plan

Encouraged by the success of the book drive, the new partners decided to draft a business plan. They recruited their friend and classmate Jeff from the world of investment banking to help build the business. They envisioned a different kind of company with a built-in social benefit. By generating revenue to fund literacy, they would also earn profits to support and grow the company. And in funding literacy, they would help give struggling people the world over the skills and self-esteem necessary to thrive and succeed.

The three founders submitted the idea to a Notre Dame University business plan competition, and won “Best Social Venture.” With $7,000 in prize money and some guidance by a competition judge named David Murphy (who would later become CEO of the company), the entrepreneurs then set off to run Book Drives for Better Lives on campuses across the country.

The environment becomes a stakeholder too

Always on a quest for untapped sources of used books, Xavier soon made a discovery that changed the business model – and the environment – in a major way. Every year thousands of libraries had millions of excess books as they made room for new editions. Some books sat in storage, and others were given away. But some were simply thrown out. Tossed. Abandoned to the landfills for all eternity.

Convinced that something could be done to rescue these discarded books and help the planet a bit in the process, the founders set about partnering with librarians all across the country. Not only could they rescue books from landfills, they could also sell those books and raise money for the libraries themselves. Environmental and social impact all in the same story.

The next chapter

To date, we have raised millions of dollars for literacy, saved millions of books from landfills, created jobs for hundreds of people, and provided wonderful books to millions of readers worldwide. The rest of the story is still being written. We invite you to join us on our journey. It’s only going to get better.

Still interested to get to know the story that started it all? Get a view of my book by clicking at the link below!

Here it is: https://bit.ly/2PVbgye

A love story of hope and ambition in Booktopia!

 

 
Hi y’all once again! It will be interesting for many of you to get to know where my book goes through the print-on-demand campaign of it, meaning, ordering the book and putting the money before it is being produced as a paperback, for the purposes of eliminating stock.
 
So, to the point, today, what do you think of Joel and Emily so far? In the end, it is proved that destiny has a way of catching up with the man and changing his way of thinking. But how, exactly? You can read the book to find that out. Where to find it? Let’s get to know the market of Booktopia!

Booktopia is a 100% Australian-owned online-only retail store selling books, eBooks and DVDs Australia wide. Based in Sydney, Australia we offer over 4 million books from our database which have been categorised into a variety of subjects to make it easier for you to browse and shop.
 
As well as physical books, Booktopia offers Australian readers thousands of eBooks from a wide variety of international and local publishers. Whether you access your eBooks via your computer, tablet, iPhone or Android smartphone, or electronic reading device - online or offline, wherever you go, your eBooks will be there and accessible to you.
 
If you want to order eBooks as well as physical books and DVDs we've made it easy, you can order them all together on the one order.
 
If you’re truly interested to buy The Words of Emily Logan, as a paperback, you can click at the link below and navigate through the website of Booktopia. 
 

Intellectual Property and Folk, Arts and Cultural Festivals!



This Guide provides general information about intellectual property (IP) and cultural interests. It identifies the main IP challenges faced by festival organizers and outlines some practical elements of an effective IP management strategy, following a step-by-step approach. (By The World Intellectual Property Organization: WIPO)

(From the Preface):

This Guide is produced by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), a United Nations specialized agency dedicated to the promotion of innovation and creativity for the economic, social and cultural development of all countries, through a balanced and effective international intellectual property (IP) system.

WIPO is working with those involved in the organization of cultural events, notably folk, arts and cultural festivals, to develop and apply appropriate strategies to deal with the various IP issues that can arise before, during and after those events.

The program of WIPO's Traditional Knowledge Division addresses the protection of the traditional knowledge (TK) and traditional cultural expressions (TCEs) of indigenous peoples and local communities, which are frequently displayed, represented and shared at festivals around the globe.

Selling Foreign Rights! From Book Writing to Global Exposition!

For most authors, whether traditionally published or self-published, the thought of selling foreign rights seems daunting. The common mindset is authors lack the capability to exploit foreign rights on their own. It was hard enough to sell the book in the U.S., right? Who can think about selling it internationally?

You can. Why? Because foreign rights can be valuable. For some authors, foreign sales usurp what the author makes from the initial sale in the U.S. For other authors, foreign sales diversify and expand earnings with minimal upfront costs. So pull up your socks. Sit down. And together we will hash out this big, scary topic.

What are Foreign and Translation Rights?

Foreign rights are the right to publish a book in its original language in countries different from those in which the book was originally published. Translation rights are the right to publish a book in languages other than the original language. If the book was published in the U.S. in English, then publishing in any other country other than the U.S., and in other languages other than English, would be considered foreign rights or translation rights, respectively. These two rights are different but related, and are often lumped together under the term Foreign Rights.

How do I get Foreign Rights?

Foreign Rights stem from the rights granted via your U.S. copyright, which for a U.S. citizen starts automatically the moment anything is written. As a brief reminder, these rights include the exclusive right to reproduce, distribute, perform, or display your work, or adapt it into new works.

As for international copyrights, there is no single international copyright law that applies in all the countries of the world.  Instead, most countries provide copyright protection to foreign creative works under certain conditions via a network of international treaties and conventions (that almost all the nations of the world have agreed to). Because of these international conventions and treaties, international protection is automatically extended once the U.S. work is created. For more info see my earlier article on International Copyright Protection.

How do I know if I still own my Foreign Rights?

For the traditionally published author, check your publishing contract. Foreign rights are assigned to the publisher under the main grant of rights clause. Typically, this clause includes a “Territory” that specifies the geographic region where the publisher is entitled to publish the book. This clause can also be restricted by a particular language for publication.

Most U.S. publishers want rights to publish the English edition of the book in the U.S., the U.S. territories, and Canada. Sometimes the territory will extend to other English-speaking countries, like the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and all British Commonwealth countries. Some of the larger publishers have international affiliates and will demand publishing rights in foreign countries in which they operate. Sometimes publishers ask for “world-wide rights in all languages,” which gives the publisher the right to sell the book in any language, anywhere in the world (i.e., all your foreign and translation rights). So read your contract carefully to determine what foreign rights you own and what rights you have licensed.

If the territory clause has not scooped up foreign rights, then look at the subsidiary rights section (which will include foreign rights, as well as rights like movie, audio, book club, and other rights related to potential publication markets). If the publisher has not grabbed the foreign and translations rights, then you have still retained your foreign rights.

For self-published authors, check your self-publishing services agreement or your POD provider to determine if you have given away your foreign rights. If so, then you will have to terminate the contract, or renegotiate those rights before you exploit your foreign rights.

How do I sell Foreign Rights?

There are a few avenues for authors to sell foreign rights.

1. If you have licensed your foreign rights to a publisher, the publisher usually markets your foreign rights through a foreign agent or at international book fairs (e.g., Frankfurt Book Fair, London Book Fair, and Book Expo America in New York City).

2. If you have retained your foreign rights, but have an agent, your agent can market your foreign rights through a foreign agent, hopefully one who specializes in the book’s genre and is well-connected in the international publishing world. Foreign rights agents should have an intimate understanding of the markets in which they represent work and have the ability to match books with foreign publishers who publish similar works. If your U.S. agent is well-connected abroad then add foreign representation into your agency agreement. If you want to cut out the middleman, you can go the DIY route and find a foreign rights agent or contact foreign publishers directly (see self-publishers below).

A few points to remember –

  • If you have retained your foreign rights, your domestic publisher may demand to share the income if you sell the rights yourself.
  • If you use multiple agents, one for domestic and one for foreign deals, make sure the commission structures do not penalize you. You should not pay a double commission, only an increased commission. A rule of thumb is five percent more than the basic agent commission.
  • With multiple agents, the agreements should be clear as to each agent’s role and authority.
  • Here is a great chart from a foreign rights agent about the process. I would add another segment to this chart, one that follows the self-publisher’s DIY approach (see below).

3. If you are self-published, you have several options for how to handle your foreign rights. Thankfully, the emerging opportunities for self-published authors have made exploiting foreign rights possible.

One option for the self-publisher is to contact foreign agents to handle all the foreign rights like a U.S. agent would do. This would require: 1) researching foreign rights agents and international book publishers to determine who would be a good fit (here are two resources for locating foreign agents and international publishers — The International Literary Market Place and IPR License); 2) sending the agent or publisher an email that sells your book. Include a summary of the book, reviews, endorsements, sales figures, and links to your website, and author page on Amazon. Offer to send a copy of the book should they be interested; and 3) negotiating and signing a contract with the foreign agent or publisher.

Another option for the self-publisher is to sell the English edition book to foreign markets via online retailers and local distributors. Online retailers like Amazon sell through Kindle in different countries allowing authors to distribute books to international markets in English (e.g. Canada, France, Germany, Italy Spain, Japan, Brazil, and the UK). Then you can use a foreign agent to sell the foreign and translation rights you are not exploiting. Or if you want to cut out the middleman and do the work, contact the foreign publisher directly regarding foreign publications. This may require networking at the international book fairs to have direct contact with foreign publishers. An author can also have their book translated, and then sell books directly to readers but this can be time-consuming and expensive. Unless you have the resources and time, this may not be the best option for most self-published authors.

One other point to consider before making your decision about foreign rights, not every book is suited for international publication. Research whether your content would appeal to foreign publishers and agents. Questions to ask yourself—Does the book have universal subject matter? Is it easily translated? Is it a popular international category like self-help, personal empowerment, or business related? Has the book gained notoriety, broad appeal, or high US sales?

If you then feel your book is ripe for international exposure, at least now you are more informed about how to proceed. If you need additional information, see these resources:

  1. Jane Friedman, Selling Your Books Internationally;
  2. Mindy Klasky, Foreign Rights: Contract Terms Made Easy; and
  3. How Authors Sell Publishing Rights, Helen Sedwick and Orna Ross (ALLi How-to for Authors Guidebook Book 

Literary (Book) Agents Info from Poets & Writers Network!

Introduction

If you have a book-length work of fiction or creative nonfiction that you’d like to sell to a commercial publisher, an agent is crucial. Literary representation will increase your chances with editors, who rely on agents to present manuscripts that are polished and marketable, and that match their interests. Visit our Literary Agents database to find the best agents who represent fiction and creative nonfiction.

Literary agents take a standard commission of 15 percent from the sale of your book. Note that agents typically do not represent poets.

What a Literary Agent Can Do For You

As your representative in the literary market, your agent may perform a range of tasks, including offering editorial guidance, establishing contacts for you with editors and publishers, explaining the language of contracts and negotiating contract terms, selling the rights to your work, and helping you find new opportunities for publishing.

Finding The Right Literary Agent

The first step in finding a literary agent who is right for you and your work is to put together a list of recent books that you admire or that you think are similar to your work. Then, find out who represents the authors of those books. Many authors list their agents on the acknowledgments page in the front or back of their books, or on their website. If you can’t find the agents this way, search online for the authors and their publishers; often you will find some mention of the agents involved.

Once you have a list of agents you are familiar with, send a query letter to each one. A good practice is to send out five letters at a time, with each letter tailored to the specific agent you are querying.

An interested agent will ask to see a few chapters or your full manuscript. Before you send it, find the agency’s submission guidelines, and follow them closely. Aside from our Literary Agents database and our long-running series Agent Advice, in which agents answer writers’ questions, another useful resource for finding detailed information on how to find and obtain an agent is Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors, and Literary Agents (New World Library, 2017).

As you send out your letters, consider noting each one in our Submissions Tracker to keep track of all your correspondence with publishing professionals.

The Query Letter

A query letter to an agent should be extremely well written and very brief—three paragraphs that take up less than one page.

In the first paragraph of the letter, explain why you are contacting the agent and why him or her specifically. In the second paragraph, give a three-to-four-sentence synopsis of your book. Avoid going into detail about the twists and turns of the plot. In the third paragraph, include a short bio, offering information about yourself that pertains to your work or your writing skills.

Close the letter with a direct statement of your ultimate purpose, expressing that you’d like to send the agent your manuscript.

What You Should Know Before Signing A Contract

Once you have found an agent, and before you sign a contract, find out who else the agent represents, what books the agent has sold and to which publishers, what the agent’s percentage (or “cut”) is, and what additional charges will be billed back to you.

Also, be sure to find out about the contractual obligation between author and agent: Are you required to sign a contract?

Finally, ask questions about the agent’s general game plan. Where will the agent send the book? To how many publishers? Are there any plans for selling secondary rights such as film, foreign, audio, or electronic rights?

Literary Agents & Poets

Agents rarely represent poets, as the selling of poetry books doesn’t usually generate enough income. Most poets, after building up several publishing credits in respected literary journals, send out manuscript submissions to small presses on their own.

If you are submitting individual poems to literary magazines, an agent is unnecessary. For a collection of poetry, be sure to follow the submission guidelines of the individual publishers you want to send your collection to. Also, check deadlines for chapbook contests and first poetry book awards in the Grants & Awards section of Poets & Writers Magazine.

Fee-Charging Agents

Legitimate literary agents do not charge writers for the opportunity to represent them. If an agent asks for a reading fee up front or a fee to edit your work, you should seek representation elsewhere. Check the Association of Authors’ Representatives website for a database of literary agents who do not charge fees. None of the agents in our Literary Agents database charge fees.

Other Resources

Each literary agent has individual tastes and interests, so be sure to research appropriate agencies before submitting your query. Our Literary Agents database includes areas of focus, tips for submitting, client lists, and contact information for literary agents who represent literary writing. Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors, and Literary Agents (New World Library, 2017) or Writer’s Market (Writer’s Digest Books, 2017) can help you narrow down your choices.

With the January/February 2008 issue, Poets & Writers Magazine launched Agents & Editors, a series of in-depth interviews with dozens of publishing professionals, including agents Lynn Nesbit, Nat Sobel, Molly Friedrich, Eric Simonoff, and Georges Borchardt, and many others. These interviews provide timely, insider advice on what agents look for in books and clients and how authors can best navigate publishing. In addition, Poets & Writers Magazine’s annual Literary Agents issue, which includes a special section on what to expect from the evolving relationship between author and agent, is published each summer.

You may also take a look at The Poets & Writers Guide to Literary Agents, which is edited by the staff of Poets & Writers Magazine and contains a collection of articles with straightforward advice from professionals in the literary field and additional resources with insider tips.

Online sources that offer guidance include the Association of Authors’ Representatives website. Other useful websites are Agent Query, Publishers Marketplace, and, of course, the websites of individual literary agencies.

Source: Poets & Writers: https://www.pw.org/content/literary_agents#q-a_05

The Narrative Triangle of Robert McKee, On Structure of Scripts


Yo folks, let’s start today’s discussion on another pattern of thinking and writing which consists of the view of Robert McKee, one of the greatest teachers of screenwriting (and possibly writing, I would say), on structure of scripts. Clearly indicating that experience is overestimated, studying and reading materials as well as social observation constitute a greater power for the author of the book, who has created The Narrative Triangle, meaning, 3 different types of plot and structure. 

In this triangle exists the entire set of the cosmology of screenwriters, and writers I would say and their multi-level visions of what they dream, hope and act for. For you to understand your position in this universe you have to study the coordinates of this map, make the comparison with your work and let it direct you to the point at which you can share with other… writers, the same vision with yours. Robert McKee suggests that behind policies around funding, awards and distribution there is a cultural gap which is being reflected at the edges of this triangle named hyper-plot, mini-plot and anti-plot. Hyper-plot consists of global cinema including Hollywood. Even to Hollywood, someone who is being directed to the other sides, shrinks the audience! 

Simply put, it rises doubts to the nature of intellectuality. Through hyper-plot the protagonist confronts mainly outside forces of competition. One of the most important aspects, before moving on, suggests the notion of non-cohesive reality. People jumping from one reality to another, one behavior to another, so as the narrative events jump without sequence as well, leading to a sense of absurdity… Based on coincidence and not causality maybe? But let’s view this concept analytically:

Hyper-plot: Causality, Closed finale, Linear time, Outside conflicts, One protagonist, Cohesive reality, Active protagonist

Mini-plot: Open finale, Inner conflicts, Multiple protagonists, Passive protagonist

Anti-plot: Coincidence, Non-linear time, Non-cohesive realities

Closed finale and open finale simply mean that all questions related with the story and all feelings provoked are being answered or not answered (at an open finale). The audience leaves having experienced a balanced story, no doubt, no sense of unfulfilled.

Outside versus inner conflicts, mean that at hyper-plot even though characters face outside forces, emphasis is being put at problems with their personal relationships, social institutions or forces of nature!! Contrary, to mini-plot even though the protagonist faces outside forces, with the environment maybe, it’s a psychological battle confronting emotions and thoughts.

Even though many of you understand linear with non-linear narrative, this aspect of the triangle contradicts at hyper-plot circular narrative or in medias res. What we’ve been saying about intellectuals, meaning, an in medias res narrative begins from the middle and circulating around it. Or perhaps making circles.

Active versus non active protagonist suggests that the active one follows his desires by conflicting outside people and the world surrounding him. The non-active one even though being inactive from an outside point of view, follows his desire inwards, conflicting elements of his personal nature.

Last but not least, causality versus coincidence, points that causality has consequences, consequences bread new consequences, even though anti-plot suggests a sense of coincidence and randomness, that breaks causality chains and leads to a scattered reality including absurdity.

I hope you enjoyed this analysis!  

Amazon & Goodreads Human-Hand Review For My Book!

Good morning folks! I feel delighted this morning as I realized immediately with the start of the day, I had received my first, human hand b...