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  2. Vanity press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanity_press

    A vanity press or vanity publisher, sometimes also subsidy publisher, [1] is a publishing house where the author pays to have the book published. [2] It is not to be confused with hybrid publishing, where the publisher and author collaborate and share costs and risks, or with assisted self-publishing, where the author pays publishing services to assist with self-publishing their own book, and ...

  3. Austin Macauley Publishers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin_Macauley_Publishers

    More recently, in 2019, the Writer Beware blog (sponsored by the SFWA) reported that Austin Macauley was the vanity publisher which was the subject of the "most reports and questions", noting that the vast majority of deals involve the authors paying the company to have their book published, while the occasional "fee-free" contract offered to ...

  4. America Star Books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America_Star_Books

    America Star Books, formerly PublishAmerica, is a Maryland-based print-on-demand book publisher founded in 1999 by Lawrence Alvin "Larry" Clopper III and Willem Meiners. . Some writers and authors' advocates have accused the company of being a vanity press while representing itself as a "traditional publis

  5. Vanity Publishing Is Booming, and the Big Houses Want ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/2009/12/16/vanity-publishing-is...

    It's a long-held truth of trade publishing: Only the most desperate authors would pay to get their books published. Vanity presses, the wisdom goes, handle books by the rank amateurs, the wannabes ...

  6. Publishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Publishing

    The contract varies according to what is negotiated between author and company, but will always include the surrender of some rights to the publisher. [34] Hybrid publishing is the source of debate in the publishing industry, due to the tendency of vanity presses to masquerade as hybrids.

  7. Hybrid publishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybrid_publishing

    A hybrid press is a publishing house which can be broadly defined by its source of revenue. The revenue source of a traditional publisher is through the sale of books (and other related materials) that they publish, while the revenue of hybrid publishers comes from both book sales and fees charged to the author for the execution of their publishing services.

  8. McFarland & Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McFarland_&_Company

    The company is known for its sports literature, especially baseball history, as well as books about chess, military history, and film. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] In 2007, the Mountain Times wrote that McFarland publishes about 275 scholarly monographs and reference book titles a year; [ 4 ] [ 9 ] Robert Lee Brewer reported in 2015 that the number is about 350.

  9. Tate Publishing & Enterprises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tate_Publishing_&_Enterprises

    Tate Publishing & Enterprises, LLC operated, in general, on the vanity press model in which most authors paid for the publication of their books. [1][2] Its publishing charges may have been refunded for books with sufficient sales volumes. [3] The company was founded by Richard and Rita Tate and was located in Mustang, Oklahoma.

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