Monday, May 06, 2013

The flip side of getting published

   





A few months ago, I got a ms. of mine back from its publisher -- NOT Little, Brown. The publisher had:
  • rewritten most of the book
  • added two pages of text that contradicted the main message
  • completely changed the ending
  • changed the title

-- and all without asking the author, me.  By the time I saw the edits, the book was in pages, with all the art in place. This wasn't a work-for-hire project; it was a contracted book.


I wrote a couple of emails to the publisher, requesting changes as politely and firmly as I could; the first was ignored. They replied to the second saying they had, in an editor's words "gone as far as we can" (which wasn't very far: they changed a few words). At that point, I let it go.

EVERY author, I think, has high hopes for every book -- but sometimes, you have to just move on. Thanks partly to the wise advice of friends,  I did. I put it out of my mind and went back to the novel I'm now rewriting.

Luckily, my agent will be the one submitting this, not me.

2 comments:

Meghan McCarthy said...

Wow. That's interesting! I'd be FURIOUS! Really. I wouldn't stand for a MS of mine being rewritten and for me to lose control. How awful!

Libby Koponen said...

Thanks Meghan! And yes, I am mad -- disgusted maybe is a better word.

Glad you're back on the blog and love your post about B&N.