Poets & Writers

Your Rights Revert

STEPHANIE DICKINSON is an Iowa native who lives in New York City. She is the author of three books published by Spuyten Duyvil, including the novel Half Girl (2008), the novella Lust Series (2011), and Love Highway (2014), a true-crime book based on the 2006 murder of Jennifer Moore. Her other books include Heat: An Interview With Jean Seberg (New Michigan Press, 2013) and Flashlight Girls Run (New Meridian Arts Press, 2017). Her work has been reprinted in Best American Nonrequired Reading, New Stories From the South, and New Stories From the Midwest 2016. She is the editor of Rain Mountain Press.

YOU and your manuscript have survived the grueling search for a publisher—the queries, the contests, the pitches, the rejections—a process often as demanding as the writing itself. You’ve found a small, independent press—maybe a new but ambitious one, whose growing reputation is matched by its impressive catalogue—whose mission and vision are just the right fit for you and your book. You are, in a word, euphoric. After the high of signing a contract, the integrating of editorial suggestions, the proofing, the weighing of each deletion and addition, and the thrill of receiving author copies, you celebrate your book’s release with a launch party. The book appears on Amazon, the review copies are in the mail, and you’re building momentum and settling in for the long-distance moment has arrived.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Poets & Writers

Poets & Writers1 min read
Connecting New Yorkers With Writers
Every year since 1970, Poets & Writers has paid writers to participate in readings and teach creative writing workshops in New York State. Last year we distributed more than $240,000 to 557 writers participating in 1,148 readings or writing workshops
Poets & Writers5 min read
Lit Mags Confront a Serial Plagiarist
After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Julie Weiss, a poet living in Spain, wrote “Pink Bunny” to express her sorrow, shock, and fear of a wider European conflict and how it might affect her two children. Her poem was published in One Art in April 20
Poets & Writers2 min read
EDITOR’S Note
WHEN I WAS TEN YEARS OLD I LEARNED A HARD LESSON ABOUT trust—and the value of hard work and the power of humility, but mostly trust—that has endured over the years, solidifying into a kind of fence post in the center of my mind that I’ve held on to d

Related