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Tor's book publication process in detail

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Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by NervousEnergy   » Wed Jul 06, 2016 3:18 pm

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http://www.tor.com/2016/01/13/winds-of-winter-book-publishing-process/

Some of y'all may have already read this, but if not it's a GREAT article on exactly what goes into that typical year of work at Tor between when an author turns in his completed draft and when the book hits the shelves, and how that process can (and has) been shortened and what kind of work that process compression entails.

This entire article was written to explain a blog post that GRRM made about his upcoming 'Winds of Winter' SoIaF book that his publishers could get the book out in 3 months. Not all of this is applicable to the MWW as his writing and editing style is different, but most of the discreet process steps stay the same, with the same time requirements.

It's a timely thing to bring up, with Himself stating that he 'has about a week of work left' on the next Safehold book. Note that while David sells well, he doesn't sell on the GRRM level, so it's doubtful Tor would execute all of those process-shortening contingency plans for AtSoT, but even if they can shave just a few months off we may still be looking at a February 2017 date.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Lunan   » Wed Jul 06, 2016 3:58 pm

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That article is very interesting. and yes i could see tor also rushing a DW book. I'd love to see a reaction to this from say Toni as baen has historically been alot faster then many other publishers on turn around from turn in to paper product available in stores


NervousEnergy wrote:http://www.tor.com/2016/01/13/winds-of-winter-book-publishing-process/

Some of y'all may have already read this, but if not it's a GREAT article on exactly what goes into that typical year of work at Tor between when an author turns in his completed draft and when the book hits the shelves, and how that process can (and has) been shortened and what kind of work that process compression entails.

This entire article was written to explain a blog post that GRRM made about his upcoming 'Winds of Winter' SoIaF book that his publishers could get the book out in 3 months. Not all of this is applicable to the MWW as his writing and editing style is different, but most of the discreet process steps stay the same, with the same time requirements.

It's a timely thing to bring up, with Himself stating that he 'has about a week of work left' on the next Safehold book. Note that while David sells well, he doesn't sell on the GRRM level, so it's doubtful Tor would execute all of those process-shortening contingency plans for AtSoT, but even if they can shave just a few months off we may still be looking at a February 2017 date.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Louis R   » Thu Jul 07, 2016 12:00 am

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Baen is faster largely because they're smaller. They're doing fewer new books per month, which makes it easier to give each one the attention it needs at the sign-off level. They also tend to start many of the long-lead items well before turn-in, so when a manuscript is turned in six months prior to publication the cover art and design may well be finished and marketing and sales already under way.

Lunan wrote:That article is very interesting. and yes i could see tor also rushing a DW book. I'd love to see a reaction to this from say Toni as baen has historically been alot faster then many other publishers on turn around from turn in to paper product available in stores


NervousEnergy wrote:http://www.tor.com/2016/01/13/winds-of-winter-book-publishing-process/

Some of y'all may have already read this, but if not it's a GREAT article on exactly what goes into that typical year of work at Tor between when an author turns in his completed draft and when the book hits the shelves, and how that process can (and has) been shortened and what kind of work that process compression entails.

This entire article was written to explain a blog post that GRRM made about his upcoming 'Winds of Winter' SoIaF book that his publishers could get the book out in 3 months. Not all of this is applicable to the MWW as his writing and editing style is different, but most of the discreet process steps stay the same, with the same time requirements.

It's a timely thing to bring up, with Himself stating that he 'has about a week of work left' on the next Safehold book. Note that while David sells well, he doesn't sell on the GRRM level, so it's doubtful Tor would execute all of those process-shortening contingency plans for AtSoT, but even if they can shave just a few months off we may still be looking at a February 2017 date.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Peter2   » Thu Jul 07, 2016 6:19 am

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Louis R wrote:Baen is faster largely because they're smaller. They're doing fewer new books per month, which makes it easier to give each one the attention it needs at the sign-off level. They also tend to start many of the long-lead items well before turn-in, so when a manuscript is turned in six months prior to publication the cover art and design may well be finished and marketing and sales already under way.

Lunan wrote:That article is very interesting. and yes i could see tor also rushing a DW book. I'd love to see a reaction to this from say Toni as baen has historically been alot faster then many other publishers on turn around from turn in to paper product available in stores


[snip]


I've always appreciated Baen's website, and one of my occasional pleasures when I've got half an hour or so to spare is to go through their catalogue and publishing schedule (and eARC list!). I've tried doing that to the TOR website on number of occasions, but I've found it much less rewarding.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Louis R   » Fri Jul 08, 2016 12:26 am

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The ironic thing is that 15-20 years ago, Tor's site was arguably the best in the business. They even had links to all the other SFF publishers' pages - that's how I found Baen's Bar - and they posted sample chapters before Jim did it consistently. Unfortunately, that site was a side-effort of one employee, and when he left it collapsed.

Peter2 wrote:I've always appreciated Baen's website, and one of my occasional pleasures when I've got half an hour or so to spare is to go through their catalogue and publishing schedule (and eARC list!). I've tried doing that to the TOR website on number of occasions, but I've found it much less rewarding.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Peter2   » Fri Jul 08, 2016 5:06 am

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Louis R wrote:The ironic thing is that 15-20 years ago, Tor's site was arguably the best in the business. They even had links to all the other SFF publishers' pages - that's how I found Baen's Bar - and they posted sample chapters before Jim did it consistently. Unfortunately, that site was a side-effort of one employee, and when he left it collapsed.

Peter2 wrote:I've always appreciated Baen's website, and one of my occasional pleasures when I've got half an hour or so to spare is to go through their catalogue and publishing schedule (and eARC list!). I've tried doing that to the TOR website on number of occasions, but I've found it much less rewarding.
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This is so often the case in so many areas – a valuable service depends on one guy, and you don't realise its value until he leaves. When I started buying science fiction books, I used to get catalogues from a guy called Ken Slater (he ran a small operation in eastern England) because in those days I couldn't get more than the odd one anywhere else. But even when the larger bookshops started to stock SF, I still used to get a large proportion of mine from Ken, simply because if people like me didn't support him, we'd lose a valuable service. Now, of course, we have the internet, and that invaluable source of second-hand books, bookfinder.com.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Keith_w   » Fri Jul 08, 2016 7:03 am

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Louis R wrote:Baen is faster largely because they're smaller. They're doing fewer new books per month, which makes it easier to give each one the attention it needs at the sign-off level. They also tend to start many of the long-lead items well before turn-in, so when a manuscript is turned in six months prior to publication the cover art and design may well be finished and marketing and sales already under way.

quote="Lunan" That article is very interesting. and yes i could see tor also rushing a DW book. I'd love to see a reaction to this from say Toni as baen has historically been alot faster then many other publishers on turn around from turn in to paper product available in stores


NervousEnergy wrote:http://www.tor.com/2016/01/13/winds-of-winter-book-publishing-process/

Some of y'all may have already read this, but if not it's a GREAT article on exactly what goes into that typical year of work at Tor between when an author turns in his completed draft and when the book hits the shelves, and how that process can (and has) been shortened and what kind of work that process compression entails.

This entire article was written to explain a blog post that GRRM made about his upcoming 'Winds of Winter' SoIaF book that his publishers could get the book out in 3 months. Not all of this is applicable to the MWW as his writing and editing style is different, but most of the discreet process steps stay the same, with the same time requirements.

It's a timely thing to bring up, with Himself stating that he 'has about a week of work left' on the next Safehold book. Note that while David sells well, he doesn't sell on the GRRM level, so it's doubtful Tor would execute all of those process-shortening contingency plans for AtSoT, but even if they can shave just a few months off we may still be looking at a February 2017 date./quote


It was a very nice article, and it was interesting that GRRM does a lot of his own editing, but it probably wouldn't be necessary to compress the publishing process if he wrote the things a little faster! Rather than have DWW go through the "Winds of Winter" process for each of his books, I would much rather that he stick to his current method where we get a few books every year instead of 1 book every 10 years or so.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by OrlandoNative   » Tue Jul 12, 2016 9:10 pm

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Louis R wrote:Baen is faster largely because they're smaller. They're doing fewer new books per month, which makes it easier to give each one the attention it needs at the sign-off level. They also tend to start many of the long-lead items well before turn-in, so when a manuscript is turned in six months prior to publication the cover art and design may well be finished and marketing and sales already under way.


LOL, if that were the reason, then a one person publishing house should be able to get a book out in a week or less.

Realistically, assuming proper staff size for whatever processes the publishing house follows in publishing a new book, they should all take about the same amount of time.

However, since like all businesses profit is the major motive, staff probably isn't always optimal. After all, if a book is delayed, they can always reprint something that's recently been selling well and that's already gone through everything previously.
"Yield to temptation, it may not pass your way again."
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Thrandir   » Thu Jul 21, 2016 6:44 am

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Nice little article to pass the time with but honestly I would only use GRRM's GoT series to heighten the blaze in my log heater. Which is blasphemous for me to do this to a book.
I know GRRM work is selling but IMHO RFC is a far better writer than GRRM. I again think it is more the TV series that is fuelling his sales more than his writing.
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Re: Tor's book publication process in detail
Post by Peter2   » Thu Jul 21, 2016 12:37 pm

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Thrandir wrote:Nice little article to pass the time with but honestly I would only use GRRM's GoT series to heighten the blaze in my log heater. Which is blasphemous for me to do this to a book.
I know GRRM work is selling but IMHO RFC is a far better writer than GRRM. I again think it is more the TV series that is fuelling his sales more than his writing.



Although there are minor variants of this, I am reminded of Dorothy Parker's famous quote "This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be flung with great force."

I've never burned a book. I have, however, resold quite a few, and returned some to their lenders with almost indecent haste. Stephen Donaldson's Thomas Covenant novels come to mind.
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