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  2. PublishingPaidMe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PublishingPaidMe

    #PublishingPaidMe is a hashtag, used mainly on Twitter, and a grassroots campaign to expose racial disparities in pay in the publishing industry. The hashtag was created by writer L.L. McKinney on June 6, 2020, and culminated in the development of a crowdsourced Google document in which authors shared their advance payments.

  3. List of largest book deals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_book_deals

    Contrary to popular belief, J. K. Rowling's advances for the individual Harry Potter books or series overall do not appear on this list. For the first two books in the series (1997's Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone and 1998's Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets), she received an advance of £2,000 apiece. [1]

  4. HarperCollins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HarperCollins

    HarperCollins Publishers LLC is a British-American publishing company that is considered to be one of the "Big Five" English-language publishers, along with Penguin Random House, Hachette, Macmillan, and Simon & Schuster. HarperCollins is headquartered in New York City and London and is a subsidiary of News Corp.

  5. Penguin Random House-Simon & Schuster Merger Won’t ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/penguin-random-house-simon-schuster...

    UPDATE: Penguin Random House’s proposed merger with Simon & Schuster will not drive down author advances and they will “continue to go up,” the attorney for the publisher said in opening ...

  6. Collective Ink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_Ink

    Collective Ink (formerly John Hunt Publishing) is a publishing company founded in the United Kingdom in 2001 under the name O Books. [1] The publisher has 15 active imprints, the largest of which are Moon Books, O-Books and Zero Books (styled Zer0 Books). After changing ownership in 2021, in June 2023, John Hunt Publishing was renamed to ...

  7. Vanity press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanity_press

    Hybrid publishing is the source of debate in the publishing industry, with some viewing hybrid publishers as vanity presses in disguise. [7] However, a true hybrid publisher is selective in what they publish and will share the costs (and therefore the risks) with the author, whereas with a vanity press, the author pays the full cost of production and therefore carries all the risk.

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