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The Steve Laube Agency

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Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » Archives for 2018 » Page 25

Archives for 2018

Are You Curating or Creating?

By Dan Balowon January 23, 2018
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Every once in a while, a book proposal crosses my desk and catches my attention with its creativity and approach. It is engaging and makes me think.  Whether I agreed to work with the author or not, I needed to give them kudos for their great work.

Rarely, if ever, does something catch my attention (in a good way) which is simply assembled from or built entirely on the thinking of someone else.

I like authors who create rather than curate.

Textbooks are almost always curated information so students can grasp the salient points from multiple sources in a convenient collection. But commercial non-fiction of any kind, needs to be original thinking and not exclusively reacting to or responding to something else.

Sure, there is little or nothing new under the sun. It really can’t be said something is entirely new or unique, but a book proposal constructed completely by re-stating and organizing the thoughts of others is generally not something a publisher would like to see, unless it is a very specific project requiring it.

Make your own points. Create your own approach. Pave your own way.

Of course, authors of Christian-based non-fiction start and end with the foundation of scriptural principles, which are not new. In a sense, every Christian book is a curated list of Biblical truth, but successful non-fiction authors need to shed light on the truth in their own creative way.

Textbook writers are more curators than creators of content. Poets are at the other end of the creative spectrum. The continuum between them encompasses all authors, and everyone falls somewhere on it. Knowing where you fall is an important piece of self-awareness.

Often a writer is paid to work as a journalist, but maintains their creative equilibrium by writing poetry. Still, they never forget what pays the bills. Journalists can be creative, but for someone with creative “flair,” journalism can be limiting.

Thankfully, there are many, many plots on the line between textbook editor and poet, curator and creator.

For Christian authors, this discussion is the metaphorical “body of many parts,” found in scripture. Everyone is not an ear or an elbow. If everyone were an ear, how would they walk or talk?

There is a role for any good writer appearing anywhere on the line between curator and poet, but the proposals which catch the attention of an agent or publisher, are generally the ones more on the creative side of the line.

Any subject is best written with style. Certainly, there are times when we “just need the facts” without the creativity, but successful commercial non-fiction is almost always creative and engaging.

Far too many writers of non-fiction skip the creative aspect of the process and focus on information, attribution of quotes and explanations. It is as if they are saying, “If I can lecture you long enough, I will prove my point.”

Sounds like fun. I am more than happy to pay twenty dollars to be lectured at for three hundred pages.

While novelists are admonished to “show, don’t tell,” when writing their stories, I believe a similar goal is present for writers of non-fiction. But in their case, it is “show and tell.”

Most non-fiction readers know when they come across a good book. Their enjoyment is almost always related to the presence of appropriate and engaging stories, examples, parables and related experiences. A book which is a pure transfer of information has a purpose, but usually isn’t to entice someone to spend money on it, unless you really need a book on replacing the oil and air-filters in your 2009 Hyundai.

So, where do you fall on the line between a textbook author and poet? Every point has intrinsic value, but some might have more “commercial” value.

Successful writers of non-fiction generally strike a good balance of curation and creativity.

 

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Category: Book Proposals, Craft, The Writing Life, Writing CraftTag: book proposals, Creativity, Nonfiction

How Do You Count Lifetime Book Sales?

By Steve Laubeon January 22, 2018
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A key element in a book proposal is your sales history. Of course, you can ignore this if you’ve never published a book before. But if you have published, either with a traditional publisher or independently, your sales history must be included in your next book proposal. Here is an example: Sales History: The Bestest Book Ever (XYZ Publishers, 1996) – 12,449 sold The Other Bestest Book I Wrote …

Read moreHow Do You Count Lifetime Book Sales?
Category: Book Proposals, Book Sales, Get Published, MarketingTag: book proposals, Book Sales, Independent Publishing, Traditional Publishing

Fun Fridays – January 19, 2018

By Steve Laubeon January 19, 2018
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Could you make a paper airplane out of a manila folder? Maybe. But doubtful it would look like this. I found this story to be a metaphor for those who write. Those who choose each word carefully with the precision of an x-acto knife. Painstakingly crafting their art over years. And being unafraid to delete what doesn’t work.

Read moreFun Fridays – January 19, 2018
Category: Get Published

It’s All About You — Sometimes

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon January 18, 2018
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When I visit the bookstore or library, I seldom fail to see at least one novel where the entire back cover consists of an author photo. That’s it. No endorsements, no story blurb, no author bio. Just a picture of the author. And usually the front cover doesn’t offer many clues, either. Maybe a vague illustration, along with the title and author’s name. To my mind, this means this author has built …

Read moreIt’s All About You — Sometimes
Category: Branding, MarketingTag: Book Sales, Branding, Marketing

Fix These 16 Potholes on Grammar Street

By Bob Hostetleron January 17, 2018
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Don’t worry. I hated grade school grammar as much as the next guy. Still, as a magazine editor and, later, as a freelance book editor and (now) literary agent, I have come across far too many grammatical and usage mistakes in writing submitted to me. Not all of us can be Strunk or White (though every writer should own their valuable book, The Elements of Style). But we can profit from a little …

Read moreFix These 16 Potholes on Grammar Street
Category: Book Proposals, Craft, Writing CraftTag: Grammar, Writing Craft

You Think The World is Bad Now?

By Dan Balowon January 16, 2018
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History has always fascinated me. Once you look deeply into it, you see the seeds of an important event being planted years, decades or even centuries before. Nothing happens out of thin air. For instance, it is widely agreed World War Two was a direct result of the way World War One ended. A hundred years ago, Adolph Hitler was a disgruntled corporal in the defeated and humiliated German army. …

Read moreYou Think The World is Bad Now?
Category: Publishing HistoryTag: Publishing History

Morality and the Book Contract

By Steve Laubeon January 15, 2018
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Seven years ago I wrote a post about the morality clause in book contracts. It was met with a collective yawn. Today the landscape is a little different and I hope you will take the time to read this carefully. From Hollywood suddenly trying to find a moral compass to corporations trying to define bad behavior, the issue has become the latest buzzing conversation. The issue is not one to be …

Read moreMorality and the Book Contract
Category: Contracts, Legal Issues, The Publishing Life, The Writing LifeTag: Contracts, Legal Issues, moral turpitude

Fun Fridays – January 12, 2018

By Steve Laubeon January 12, 2018
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A fun video to start of the new year. Get your toes a tappin’.

Read moreFun Fridays – January 12, 2018
Category: Fun Fridays

The Year of Kindness

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon January 11, 2018
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This past year, my colleagues in Christian publishing have treated me with immense kindness. Thank you. I wish I could say I have witnessed the same kindness in other arenas. If you follow current events even as a casual observer, I don’t need to recount the bitterness and rancor over ideas, processes, and how to deal with misdeeds. But processing debates helped me progress in my own attitudes. …

Read moreThe Year of Kindness
Category: Personal, Social Media, Theology, TrendsTag: Personal, Trends

Three Things I’ve Learned as an Agent

By Bob Hostetleron January 10, 2018
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Just over six months ago, I became a literary agent with the Steve Laube Agency. Hoo boy. It has been some ride.  Lots o’ fun, lots o’ work, and lots o’ learning. So I thought I’d take a few minutes (it’s all I have before the boss calls and starts yelling at me again) to reflect on what I’ve learned in that short period of time. It’s not an easy task, considering I already knew pretty much …

Read moreThree Things I’ve Learned as an Agent
Category: Agency, Agents, Book Business, Indie, Self-Publishing, The Publishing Life, The Writing LifeTag: Agency, Agents
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