A web site offering manuscript publishing is www.publishamerica.com/submit.htm . The site will give you the choice to send your manuscript directly online via e-mail, or you can choose to send it by regular mail. The site gives you step by step instructions on how to submit your manuscript.
I suggest Lulu.com for self publishing. They will print your books on demand when purchases are made instead of having to pay for a large upfront order. Check out their website at: http://www.lulu.com/
The manuscript in press will be officially published when it is released by the publisher.
If you have a finished manuscript, you send it to the publisher and let the editor read it!
It depends on postage -- unsolicited means that you just send it to the publisher without being asked. A solicited manuscript is one the publisher asks you to send.
The publisher is the company that buys the book, makes it into a book from a typed manuscript, and sells the book to bookstores.
Twelve paged of draft should boil down to one page in the finished manuscript
Sending a copy of an unpublished manuscript to a publisher for editing is commonly known as submitting a manuscript for consideration. The publisher may offer feedback and editing suggestions before deciding whether to publish the book.
The word "solicit" means to ask for or request. If the publisher requested that you send it, it's solicited. If you just send it, it's unsolicited.
You can typically find the publisher of an online news article by looking for the byline, which usually includes the author's name and often the name of the publication or news organization. Additionally, you can scroll to the bottom of the article to find information about the publisher or check the "About" section of the news website.
In general this is done in conjunction with a publisher. You would find a publisher for your manuscript and they would hire an editor. If you're just starting out you could self-publish on Amazon.com for their Kindle and other e book readers.
find an online book publisher. not all of them are great, but you'll find one.
It depends on the publisher. Check the Writer's Market and see if they have the phrase "no simultaneous submissions" listed - if they do, then you just send it to them. If they don't specify, then you can send to multiple publishers.
Of course you can! Just send the manuscript to them the same as you would to a Canadian publisher.