Rachel’s
Comments
(group member since Jun 13, 2011)
Rachel’s
comments
from the Riptide Publishing group.
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Congrats! We're all looking forward to diving in to the open call subs soon :D

I never me..."
Glad you do, thank you! :D

There's leeway for genres where that kind of word count may truly be necessary (mostly epic fantasy or a hugely sweeping historical, I'd say), but contemporary, mystery/suspense, that sort of thing, no, not really, and if you've busted that count, then odds are you have a lot of fat you could be trimming, or you're writing more than one book (iow, you have more than one climax or multiple false endings or six acts or the like).


I'm afraid I don't know much about this, or why a specific IP might be blocked (the o..."
I've sent an email to our webmistress, who will check it out :)

I'm afraid I don't know much about this, or why a specific IP might be blocked (the only IPs we ever block, afaik, are those engaged in DoS attacks), but I can forward this on to the tech team if you'd like.





http://sfpl.lib.overdrive.com/94DCC4A......"
It's very exciting to see :) Over the last four months or so, we've started distributing with Overdrive, who supplies libraries, and we've been fortunate to make several hundred library sales all over the world. If you frequent your local library and want to see our titles there, by all means put in a request--we love libraries and love to see them lending our ebooks! :D



What? They said no because you don't have a blog? I think there..."
Our experience is that NetGalley lets in all comers, whether they have platforms or not. As a publisher, I wish it weren't that way, because it makes vetting requests a lot more work for us, but I can certainly understand why they do it; it's a good business decision for them to be able to claim the largest possible number of registered users.


What? They said no because you don't have a blog? I think there are those with just Goodreads accou..."
Not generally, no. We approve hardly any books for folks whose only platform is Goodreads/Amazon/Library Thing, and even then we'll generally only make such approvals if the reviewer is extremely active in communities on those sites. Otherwise, that reviewer won't be reaching an audience we're not reaching ourselves, in which case we can't justify giving them one of the limited number of free copies the marketing department is allowed to distribute. That means we really can only give free books to folks with fresh platforms.