![]() ![]() MG: Hello, Jackie. First of all, let me thank you for your time and congratulate you for getting LBF off the ground. I understand you have five new titles coming out in a few months, can you tell me a little about them? JDM: Hi, Michael, we're pretty excited about these titles. To choose which ones were first was not an easy task. Ironically, they are all different genre's and that wasn't pre planned. We have a wonderful vampire/werecreature novel, Vintage Blood and the Sacred Scepters. If you are a LOTR fan, Chronicles of the Planeswalkers is for you. False Impressions is a wonderful, quick read mystery. Rhyming Pittsburgh a dramatic novel, and Revolutions is our first poetry book.
MG: What all is involved in starting a publishing company?
JDM: Money, patience, dedication, and time. With publishing, there are no 'right-away' profits. Every dollar, every hour, every moment of frustration is all an investment to the eventual sales that will come in. There is so much more than just saying, "Hey, I'm gonna publish some books." You have to register your company, purchase ISBN numbers, know who will edit, do art. You have to put time in effort into devising a marketing plan, and finding distributors that you will court after the book comes out. Sure, you can go with just Baker and Taylor, but the most effective distributors are the small specialty ones and they don’t take every book. All that doesn't include the book preparations. All of this takes time, seven days a week, long hours, and no paycheck for those hours. I work at least 70 hours a week for LBF because I believe in what we do and the books we take. I also figure if I work hard for our authors, our authors will work hard for LBF and together we can all be a success.
MG: Did you have any authors lined up at the starting gate, or did you have to go looking for some?
MG: What are the genres that interest you the most? JDM: Me, personally? I love End of the World novels. Not ones that take place a hundred years from now, but modern day, nuke, plague, stuff. I love it. Next to those, horror and comedy.
MG: Do you see a future for short story collections in general?
MG: Do you work with multiple imprints? If so, what are those imprints and what kinds of manuscripts are you looking for in each one?
MG: How can an author best get your attention with a proposal?
MG: What should an author send you in their very first communication? Do you prefer a simple query letter at first, or do you want some samples of the
MG: What is the easiest way for an author to turn you off?
MG: Do you accept email submissions? If so, do you prefer email or snail mail?
MG: How long does it typically take for you to decide on a manuscript once it
MG: Once you’ve accepted a manuscript for publication, what is the process the author can expect to go through before finally holding their book in their
MG: Must have been rough getting those first five out and about. Quintuplets, huh? Where do you see LBF ten years from now? |