M'good-friend-'n'-colleague
moshui has just learned that his editor has relocated to elsewhere in the US and elsewhere in the company, and is his editor no more. So he's been reassigned, for the second time; and - naive, sweet thing that he is! - he wonders if this is perhaps a record, to have three editors on a single book between commission and publication?
Needless to say, I laughed him out of court. To the best of my recollection, my own book Paradise ran through five editors during its process. And a wholesale takeover of the company. Oh, and three different publishing plans which would have set it in three different genres (without ever changing a word of the text).
Kids today. They know nothing, I tell you. Nothing...
Needless to say, I laughed him out of court. To the best of my recollection, my own book Paradise ran through five editors during its process. And a wholesale takeover of the company. Oh, and three different publishing plans which would have set it in three different genres (without ever changing a word of the text).
Kids today. They know nothing, I tell you. Nothing...
(no subject)
Date: 2008-11-18 12:48 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-11-18 09:52 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-11-18 02:38 am (UTC)::runs away::
(no subject)
Date: 2008-11-18 09:27 am (UTC)I signed the contract in 1996 for this title, about an obscure graphics extension to my favourite programming language. I signed it with Addison-Wesley, after talking it over with my then editor. Who promptly left on maternity leave just as my job disintegrated. Six months later she was back, briefly -- but then she left for good, handing the book to her boss. (I was then working in a dot-com and running a little behind schedule for side projects, shall we say.) Addison-Wesley then merged with Longman. $editor[2] left, and was replaced by $editor[3]. Then Addison-Wesley Longman was acquired by Pearson, and I got $editor[4]. This was circa 1998. Then Pearson Group closed down their European editorial operations and moved everything to the USA, and I haven't heard back from them. Except for the annual plaintive ping from the mainframe, the book is gone; it exists only as a record in a database.
Good thing I never wrote it then, isn't it?
(no subject)
Date: 2008-11-18 09:48 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-11-18 08:25 pm (UTC)(Besides, the other 50% of the advance payable on publication is £500, and likely as not the book wouldn't earn out.)