Can you guide me a little about publishing a fiction novel/book?

I suppose the simple answer is Yes I can give you some help and advice however I would like to know what country you are from and why publishing there is such a problem. Secondly, I need you to think long and hard about what you are going to do if and when your book is published. I am an Independent author and publisher, this means I self publish my own work via a 'Print on Demand' system.

What this means is that I am responsible for everything, having my work proof-read and edited by professionals. Once I am satisfied the work is as good as it can be then I get a professionally designed picture to go on the cover. Then and only then is the work ready to print or go for an E Book.

Once it is printed or available via electronic means I am responsible for selling the book and marketing the book to readers to generate sales. The alternative is to acquire a literary agent to represent you and put you into contact with a publishing company who will hopefully publish your book. However you need to understand two things; To do that first your work needs to be of the highest standard it can be, this means if it is written in English then it must be grammatically correct and the spelling and punctuation must also be perfect.

Your work needs to be set out in a laid down format as prescribe by the agencies you are approaching. The second thing you need to understand is that trying to find a literary agent to take you on is extremely difficult, and you must steel yourself for many rejections. This is not a reflection on your work it is just how the publishing business is.

There are literally thousands of writers out there trying to do exactly what you are trying to do and there are very few who make it. I do not say any of these things to put you off attaining your dream, I do so, so that you may recognise the challenge set before you and the high possibility that you may not achieve your goal not through lack of talent but through lack of opportunity. I hope this answers at least some of your questions and given you much to think about before taking the next step.

I understood many of your points. The two alternatives also cleared my mind a lot. I thank you for your sincere suggestions.

If you can post further answers in the forum (my question's post) than it will be possible to make the conversation going (it won't be allowed in the questions answers section, as you know). I would like to ask two things from your answer:1. "Once it is printed or available via electronic means I am responsible for selling the book and marketing the book to readers to generate sales"Selling and marketing a book by a novice with no name at all, will surely be a difficult task.

I won't get many readers you know (Correct me if I am wrong please). Is there any possible and productive alternative to 'only' this one? (assuming that I was doing everything independently as you do, till the sales and marketing part)2."Your work needs to be set out in a laid down format as prescribe by the agencies you are approaching.

" Does it mean that I cannot work on my novel until I get the prescription from the agencies? I assumed to work on it, complete it and then convince publishers to publish it? Should I not start writing in the way I thought it to be written?

I present here scans from expired Heritage Auction listings, following up on a October 2011 post of mid-20th-century science fiction and fantasy illustrations (Fantastic Plangent). "Paul remains the undisputed king of the pulp artists"—Arthur C. Frank Rudolph Paul (April 18, 1884 - June 29, 1963) was an illustrator of US pulp magazines in the science fiction field.

He was born in Vienna, Austria and died at his home in Teaneck, New Jersey. A discovery of Hugo Gernsback (himself an immigrant from Luxembourg), Frank R. Paul was influential in defining what both cover art and interior illustrations in the nascent science fiction pulps of the 1920s looked like.

Two books of Paul's work (with the same material?): From the Pen of Paul: The Fantastic Images of Frank R. Paul and Frank R. Paul: Father of Science Fiction Art.

All artwork (c) Frank R. Paul estate ("If you are interested in obtaining rights to reprint Frank R.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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