If you and the publisher are not legally bound by any contract - simply walk away and cease dealing with them.
It depends on the specific language of the contract between the author and the publisher.
You can write the publisher in care of the author and the publisher will forward the letter to the author .
Books are by an author, from a publisher.
Jacquline Davies is the author. Sandpiper is the publisher.
Yes. In most cases the copyright is held by the author/artist, the publisher, or the originating newspaper (depending on the terms of the creators contract).
R.L. Stine <><><> Stine was the author. Scholastic Publishing was the publisher.
Your ACTs don't matter. To be an author you just have to get a publisher. And to get a publisher, you just have to be a good writer.
A publisher is a company that produces and distributes written works, while an author is the individual who writes the content. The publisher typically handles tasks such as editing, marketing, and printing, while the author is responsible for creating the original material.
You need to identify the holder of the copyright, usually the author, or perhaps the publisher. Then you negotiate a contract with them for either a license or an exclusive license for the copyright material, depending upon what you want to do with it.
Normally a commercial publisher takes care of that. An individual author has to depend on his publisher.
The publisher of the Goosebumps book series is Scholastic Inc.
Not necessarily. An author is the person who writes the content, while the publisher is the entity responsible for producing and distributing the work. In some cases, an author may act as their own publisher, but they are often separate roles within the publishing industry.