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Books published by publisher MBA for Writers

  • Publishing 101: A First-Time Author's Guide to Getting Published, Marketing and Promoting Your Book, and Building a Successful Career

    Jane Friedman

    Paperback (MBA for Writers, Dec. 4, 2014)
    Whether you’ve finished a manuscript or just have the seeds of an idea, learn how to smartly approach editors and agents with your work, while avoiding the pitfalls of first-time authorship.Experienced editor and publisher Jane Friedman offers insights from more than 15 years of working on both sides of the desk, and offers step-by-step advice on: evaluating the commercial potential for your workfinding and approaching editors and agents professionally preparing query letters and book proposal materials marketing and promoting your work effectively protecting your rights and avoid infringing on others’ rights, and understanding the self-publishing and ebook market—and if it’s the right path for you. PUBLISHING 101 describes the dramatic changes underway in the publishing industry, as ebook sales increase and physical bookstores decrease in number. These changes affect how authors get book deals—meaning you need to be prepared to adapt to a risk-averse industry during a time of uncertainty.Avoid frustration—don’t embark on the submission process without being fully educated about how the industry works. You’ll better focus your time and energy, increase your chances of success, and learn to decipher the language of industry professionals.
  • Woodiss Is Willing

    Henry Woodiss, George Dalrymple

    language (Help for Writers, Aug. 26, 2016)
    Henry Woodiss was the simple English gamekeeper whose affair with his boss’s wife thrust him into one of the most sensational scandals of the 1920s. He was vilified in the Press, a common man who had seduced a lady. She was Edith, the wife of a severely disabled war veteran, Sir Conngsby Coninsby-Clarke. Many years later, Woodiss wrote his account of these events. He tells how Lady Edith, who had artistic pretensions, ordered him to pose naked in the woods, sketched him, then shamelessly exploited her social position to seduce him. Underlying the affair was Woodiss’s relationship with Con. Woodiss had been born on the Coningsby estate, the son of the gardener. Despite the enormous gulf in status, he and Con had formed a deep friendship. At the outbreak of war in 1914, Woodiss, who had just left grammar school, enlisted in a local infantry regiment. Before he was twenty-one he had been grievously wounded twice, and twice returned to duty; he had been decorated for distinguished conduct and ordered to take a commission. Late in the war, Con was posted to Woodiss’s battalion, then in rest camp. Whilst there, he was involved in an incident which scandalised and embittered Woodiss, yet, at risk to himself, he protected Con, who escaped court-martial and certain disgrace. Any embarrassment either man felt was not prolonged. Within two days of going into the line, Con was on his way home. He would be wheelchair-bound for the rest of his life. Given the nature of his injuries, it is likely he was impotent. On leaving the army Woodiss set up in business, but finding it increasingly hard to make a living, he laid off his men and went to live with his father. Before long he was Con’s gamekeeper. He felt keenly that he was now a servant, and a badly paid one, for Con had not been generous. After their affair came to light, Woodiss suffered his first painful encounters with Edith’s relatives, notably her grandmother, the eccentric Dowager Lady Topbottom, and he endured a humiliating interview with her father, whose insults Woodiss never forgave. Despite this traumatic start, the couple developed a loving relationship. After her divorce, Edith married Woodiss. She had financial support from her family, on condition that woodiss kept out of sight. They settled in a house, provided by her family, in an obscure northern town. This was Birstall, in the former Heavy Woollen District of the West Riding. In his memoir, Woodiss, who disguised most names, calls the town Briarmains, a name borrowed from the Bronte novel, SHIRLEY, which is set in a town based on Birstall. Edith’s passion for Woodiss did not diminish, and the couple enjoyed a loving and contented life until her untimely death. Shortly after Edith died, war broke out and Woodiss, a Territorial Army officer, was called up. The war seemed a welcome distraction, but it was not long before he was again seriously injured and, to his dismay, discharged from the army. On his return to civilian life he came under the influence of an extreme millenarian sect. His involvement with the sect - and especially its female members - was to have a dramatic effect on his life. His story is presented in fictionalized form, as a comic novel, satirical, raunchy and bitterly satirical. He lampoons everybody - not least himself, whom he depicts as a buffoon, at the mercy of religious zealots and a succession of predatory women. What he did with his manuscript is not clear. Until recently it was in the possession of an old man whose father was one of Woodiss’s drinking companions. Perhaps Woodiss realized that he had revealed intimate information about several women - one of whom had become a national figure – and it was to protect them that he chose not to publish. For more information on Woodiss, visit www.henrywoodiss.com
  • Dreamcastle

    Steve Bowkett

    eBook (Help For Writers, May 29, 2012)
    The time is 2050. The place - everywhere. Suit up, hit 'Play' and be who you want to be; go places you won't believe - But be prepared to pay the price. Dreamcastle: the meanest and most venomous of all the countless thousands of virtual reality gamezones in the Web. It's the ultimate test. A vast maze of tunnels and rooms haunted by firedrakes and stormdragons and at its very centre, the Dark Lord. For Surfer, tired of the hassles with his parents and bored with small town life, Sreamcastle is where he feels alive. And now he's met Xenia there, the most beautiful girls he's ever seen. But in the virtual world of the Web, nothing is what it seems...
  • Catch & Other Stories

    Steve Bowkett

    eBook (Help For Writers, May 15, 2012)
    Catch & Other Stories by Steve Bowkett.What dreadful secret is the new girl in school keeping from her friends? How does a shy, quiet boy deal with the bullying he suffers? Who lives alone in the heart of a mysterious stretch of woodland? Why does a normal, ordinary kid go fishing in a darkened room in a tumbledown old house?Tales of Horror, Science Fiction and Fantasy all come together in this collection of short stories from Steve Bowkett, author of Halloween Pie, Dreamcastle (from Orion’s popular Web series), Roy Kane TV Detective, the Wintering Trilogy and the romance novel Love at the Fairground (published by Urbantopia Books September 2012).‘Steve Bowkett has a rare flair for creating an atmosphere of fear and horror out of the most prosaic of situations. Edgar Allen Poe would have been proud!’Steve Bowkett’s writing ‘catches the stuff of adolescence.’ The Observer.
  • Panic Station

    Stephen Bowkett

    eBook (Help For Writers, June 22, 2012)
    'The light washed towards Leila and crashed over her - and through her - tingling along every nerve, spilling a kaleidoscope of pictures into her brain. She screamed again, feeling her senses slipping away, panicking now that she would be drawn into this nightmare and be turned into a faint and pathetic ghost, as her brother had been. TV detective Roy Case could be the only hope for those trapped inside a network of terror and torment.'