"I had many things to write, but I will not with ink and pen write unto thee..."
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SHEEMA KALBASI
has been published and translated or are forthcoming in various anthologies, literary journals and on line magazines. Her latest collection is Echoes in Exile. After leaving Iran, KALBASI has worked for the United Nations and the Center for non-Afghan Refugees in Pakistan, and in Denmark. Today she lives with her husband and daughter in the United States.

SHEEMA KALBASI
Kaddish			

And on the eighth day 
God created his bloody sore, 
the Middle East 
Where only the streets 
silently 
speak of the dead, 
where the buttercups 
cups, cups are red 
from blood, 
where bodies are tossed 
in oil, oil, 
hot hot oil.  

Don't burn your finger God 
on the ziz, 
red, red ziz.  

Allah-o-Akbar!  


NOTES

Allah-o-Akbar: Arabic for "God is Great".
Kaddish:, Jewish prayer for the dead.
Ziz: a flower, a cleft or pass, probably that near En-gedi, which leads up from the Dead Sea in the direction of Tekoa; now Tell Hasasah.
poet: SHEEMA KALBASI inside poet: L. S. SHEVSHENKO poetryREpairs navigation
"Poetry endangers the established order in the soul."
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JD 88 x 31

DIANE EBLE has 28 years experience in the publishing industry as an editor (magazines, fiction and nonfiction books), author (11 published books, more than 350 articles), and copywriter. She is now a book publishing coach as well. For more information on how to write a book proposal that sells, check out Jump Start Your Book: 12 Questions You Must Answer Before You Write Your First Word.
DIANE EBLE
How Publishers Decide to Publish a Book (or Not)

Have you ever wondered how publishers go about deciding whether to publish a manuscript?

I recently talked to Andrea Mullins, the publisher of New Hope Publishers (who just happen to be the publisher of my book, Abundant Gifts). Andrea outlined the process in great detail. Though this process might differ slightly from publisher to publisher, most follow the same basic process. (I know, because I've worked with at least a dozen of them, as an author, editor, and/or book coach.)

Note that many publishers do not accept unsolicited manuscripts or book proposals. That means that you usually have to have an agent, or some prior contact with an editor who has given you the go-ahead to send in your proposal. If you do not have an agent or the go-ahead from an editor, the book proposal is routinely returned with a form letter. It will be returned only if you included a self-addressed, stamped mailer for the package to be returned, by the way. Otherwise, you can guess where it's dumped.

If a publisher does accept unsolicited proposals, they usually have guidelines, posted on their web site. Make sure you follow these guidelines to the letter, or you'll waste your time and your chance with that publisher.

Here's what happens to your book proposal, once it arrives at a publishing house:
1. The proposal gets added to the pile along with a lot of other book proposals. Depending on the publisher's submission guidelines (check these ahead), the proposal may be screened first by someone. If an agent has contacted an editor, the proposal will end up on that editor's desk. He or she will look it over, and make an initial decision whether to bring it before others in the publishing house.

2. If the editor deems the proposal worthy of pitching, he or she will take it to the next "pub board" meeting.
Usually the "pub board" consists of the publisher, an acquisitions editor (usually the one who first sees your proposal), a marketing person, a sales manager, and a "numbers cruncher." The acquisitions editor champions your book, persuading the others as to why this book is worthy of being published. The editor will have nothing to go on but your proposal, so that's why it has to answer any question a publisher might have about what the book is about, who the audience is, why the author is qualified to write the book, what the competition is, what kind of marketing the author will put into it.
(It's important to know that there are any number of reasons why a publisher might reject a book, even if they love the idea. They may already be publishing a book like it, or know that another publisher is going to publish a similar book. They may have done research already, and they know that "those kinds of books" don't sell. I recently pitched a book to a publisher. They loved the idea, but their research on prior books like it told them that this particular book doesn't sell enough to warrant publishing.)

3. If the pub board thinks the book has possibilities, usually they will crunch some numbers. Often this means going to special services they have access to, that tell them exactly how many books of a similar title sold. (Regular folk don't have access to such numbers from services like Bookscan, which tracks how many books sell per week in retail outlets including bookstores and other outlets such as Target or Wal-Mart stores.)
Publishers don't only look at the bookstore sales, thankfully. In fact, more than half of all books sold are sold through channels other than bookstores, such as mail order, warehouse clubs, special sales to a variety of outlets such as corporations, nonprofit organizations, or associations that might buy bulk orders. If a publisher knows a book will do well in these channels, and the publisher already has inroads into these special markets, they may publish the book even though they know it won't do well on the retail level. This is where it pays to do your homework, both about potential non-traditional outlets you may have contacts with, and about which publishers might have such contacts so you can target them knowledgeably. For instance, one of my clients has a book with a potential market for college students. We sent the proposal to a publisher that is associated with a college campus ministry.

4. If all lights are green—the publisher loves the idea, the author has a solid platform, the numbers work out to indicate the book will sell well—the publisher tries to determine how many books will be sold in the first year. Typically, they will figure a royalty advance based on this number. Of course, they will probably shoot lower at first, figuring there will be some negotiating on the part of the agent and/or author. They will then offer the author a contract.

If the publisher decides the book won't be profitable enough for them—for whatever reason—they reject the proposal or manuscript.

If you get a rejection from a publisher, it's good to determine, if you can, why the book was rejected. Sometimes they'll tell you; usually they'll just say "it's not right for us at this time." If you have an agent, the agent can often find out what was wrong.

If it's something you can fix—such as adding ballast to your platform—go ahead and take some time to lay some more ground work before moving on to another publisher. This is where an agent or book publishing coach can help you.

If the book just isn't right for that particular publisher, you move on and submit to another. Agents usually submit to several publishers on their "A list" first, and only move on to the "B list" once they hear back from everyone on the first round.

It's worth noting that you usually don't get a second chance with a publisher, so make sure your proposal is as strong as it can be from the outset. Study a publisher's list; see if you can determine what their unique stance is, and figure out how your book fits into what they're doing. Articulate that in your cover letter.

Look at the publisher's guidelines as posted on their site. However, I've always gone above and beyond what they request—and I've sold every one of the books I've ever proposed (11 in all, plus one book reprinted when three agents told me nobody is buying reprints).

Remember, even if you are rejected by one publisher, don’t take it personally. Even books that end up being best sellers were rejected by publishers. Hang onto your vision, make sure your book proposal and writing are as strong as they can possibly be, and never, never, never, never give up!


©2007 poetryREpairs (poetry on this site is published under first electronic publication rights; all rights revert to or are retained by the author/poet of the works published). page design ©2007 by poetryrepairs and JohnHorvathJr.

poet: SHEEMA KALBASI DIANE EBLE poet: L. S. SHEVSHENKO poetryREpairs navigation
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L. S. SHEVSHENKO
The Saddest in the World
			
 from MM.01:002 
 
discovered
something fine.
Some students
moved in
next door and
they were cool
always giving
things
a chemistry set
a chess board
the greatest books on earth:
Dante
Leo
and Lawrence.
I was forbidden
to bother them
but like everyone
at thirteen
I ignored 'the rules'.
They
seemed to like me
to feed their cats
and dogs
and I got to just
hang out
whenever I liked
and even watered
their tree of Christmas
growing
in that living room of light
. One morning
before school
I fed the animals
waited on the bus
at their house
in their house
listening to a music
which was unlike anything
than I had ever heard
. Bill's girl woke
she spoke softly
and
I watched her head
roll, up - 
and down

and as she saw me
and smiled
and never tried to hide
and she mounted him
riding
in these
beautiful rhythmic tones
these moans
of
motion
her hair
rising and falling
surrounding
those breasts
as the sun entered
and all I could do
was watch
sit there
and be
until
she finished.
She came
many times
to this abode
always
smiling at me
never saying a word
to the blushing
of my reserve.
And one day
going over
I found
Bill and them
had moved
in the middle of the night
the house had a strange emptiness
something beautiful had gone
it up and died
leaving me behind
to rot
in a pitiful existence
in false theory
of the past.
…once again
I was the saddest guy around.
	
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