Independent feminist periodicals, publishers, and booksellers are rapidly being driven out of existence. |
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To begin with, the new publishers were content to reprint and to produce abridged volumes. |
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I wrote my first book on spec, sent it off to nearly 100 publishers and in six weeks I had my first offer. |
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Unless Labour announces a tax-break for publishers in the next Budget this whole row should die down quickly. |
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But most American publishers always put the period and the comma inside the quotation mark. |
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The idea was to give journalists, editors and publishers a chance to ask questions. |
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The situation could be resolved by the publishers simply putting a penny on the cost of each paper or magazine to cover delivery to the outlets. |
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He spoke with a couple of New York publishers about putting it out, he says, but in the end decided to print it himself. |
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These are juried awards, which means two or three jurors are given all of the books submitted by publishers within one category. |
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A man can lose a contract from publishers by spending their advance on finishing a book for another publisher. |
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He was one of the first Indian publishers to send books abroad without asking for advance payment. |
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Publishers could afford to take the risk and the small publishers still do. |
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Then again, perhaps it's the market that's keeping the publishers in business. |
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Backhanders from the publishers, I shouldn't wonder, judging by the sycophantic drivel they've written. |
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While children reign supreme for advertisers, in the world of books, it is the parents who have the final word, according to publishers. |
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They have fallen into the trap the publishers laid down nearly 300 years ago. |
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I see too many publishers come in and expect to hit home runs the first time out of the box. |
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It has something to do with the book reviewing climate and the endless din buzzing around readers and publishers alike. |
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So it hurts Kapoor to hear the oft-repeated lament that Indian publishers don't pay royalties. |
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I owe some of my initial successes to old friends at Oxford who put me in touch with publishers and the like. |
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The fact that publishers can leapfrog this hurdle by agreeing to submit the full text of articles has fuelled publishers' grievances. |
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Veteran book publishers demanded a restoration of their former rights and privileges. |
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While most publishers don't sell to retail customers via the Internet, they do accept wholesale orders from galleries and art dealers. |
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The other streak that Gould does not mention in these essays is a streak of his own, though his publishers are not so reticent. |
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Nowadays, publishers are falling over themselves to bring conservative books to a mainstream audience. |
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But when we meet at the office of his London publishers he looks younger, his face less lined. |
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In 1888 there were more than 100 publishers in Tokyo alone who used lithography. |
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But copyright law did not apply internationally, which meant publishers overseas were free to pirate his works. |
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Writers would also like to see more subsidy for Scottish publishers, and for the arts and literature in general. |
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In the U.S. three major performance rights organizations collect royalties for songwriters, composers and music publishers. |
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To find publishers who sell high-end or low-end games, go to a software store and look around. |
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I get excited when publishers attach a short scrawled note, but this was a really in depth letter, and very constructive. |
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Timing is terribly important in the book trade and the publishers might have chosen to hold it back until a more auspicious moment. |
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If publishers have always been willing to take a flyer on a new, exciting voice, first-time authors suddenly became something irresistible. |
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A number of publishers availed themselves of the advertising opportunities and commissioned Smith to write books for them. |
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It is inappropriate to force search engine maintainers to establish from all publishers if there is a linking permission. |
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Both feminist publishers and feminist booksellers were sustained by the amount and length of time these backlist books were stocked. |
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The larger publishers mentioned above also publish magazines and books in areas outside of manga. |
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Of the three publishers she sent manuscripts to, only one asked for the rest of the novel. |
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Those with ready works will be guided towards shopping their manuscripts to established publishers. |
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How then do publishers respond to proposals or manuscripts from authors of How To Write books? |
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If he did approach publishers with the manuscript, a lot of people could have tipped off the paper. |
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Which is why there are a lot more manuscripts available for publication than there are publishers willing to pay for them. |
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Interestingly, publishers might also require a bailee policy, depending upon the ownership rights of works kept on site. |
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As with test publishers, the scramble to boost revenues sometimes leads test-prep companies to violate ethical standards. |
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However, many developers and publishers are already getting headaches from the thoughts of ballooning development teams and costs. |
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To try to make their submission stand out, desperate publishers have taken to theming their entries. |
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Some speculate that libraries may become small-scale publishers by selectively transferring the flow of electronic information into print. |
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Several mainstream game publishers are releasing bawdy games containing nudity and explicit sexual content. |
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The fact that several self-published writers have sold well and gone on to sign up with big publishers has helped. |
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In a very real sense, I think the big commercial publishers now are clearly calling our bluff. |
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Be sure to bookmark this page and return in about 10 days to read about one of the other Tin Pan Alley publishers. |
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The publishers as well as the journalists of sensationalism have gained fortunes but certainly not honor. |
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He is named in the colophon as one of the publishers and Isaac is named on the title page as the printer. |
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Then again, the other side of the sword is that the end result is publishers end up giving the Green light to me-too titles. |
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As a result, ordinary academic books have been sexed up by mainstream publishers and heavily promoted in the mass market. |
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How did it ever get published by one of the flagship publishers of academic and serious trade books? |
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Well, right after I wrote that book and it got on the best-seller list, publishers came to me with offers. |
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But I do slightly bewail the way publishers pack the talent into the second half. |
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He also revived or bought several publishers for different editions and translations of the book. |
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Now I do understand it is difficult for publishers to have polytonic Greek on hand, but if that was the problem, why not just transliterate? |
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Our publishers recognized this by publishing, simultaneously, a hard-copy version and a Web version, which will be updated two years hence. |
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And big publishers definitely want to make big bucks out of the kiddie segment. |
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I sent that opening to the publishers as a try-on, thinking they'd want it changed. |
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I have to admit that my own seven volume, 3,000 page magnum opus is still mouldering in the slush piles of various publishers in London. |
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It's a monumental and costly task, and publishers have given no reason to believe they can do it for themselves. |
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This circumstance seems to be the result of an unholy alliance between education schools, publishers, and state departments of education. |
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Now there are more than 30 book-related businesses in town, from publishers to bookbinders. |
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Aiming to tap this holiday mood, a number of publishers and booksellers are organising book exhibitions in the city. |
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The increasing demand for books is reflected in the inventories of the stocks of booksellers and publishers. |
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The earliest publishers were booksellers who sold authors' works direct to the public. |
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She does not read articles about her, unless they are sent to her by her publishers. |
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Should unpublished writers starting out worry about copyrighting material before sending it out to publishers and agents? |
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That figure includes millions owed to a number of unsecured creditors, many of whom are small Canadian publishers. |
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Most major publishers no longer accept unsolicited submissions, which are now sent almost entirely to agents. |
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In fact, some sections of the book were so crude and historically distorted that the publishers omitted them from the Greek language edition. |
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The event tomorrow will be solely dedicated to writers and publishers who are based in the county. |
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His books and articles were often refused or censored by publishers and editors. |
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The legal action comes from a group of 52 independent songsters and publishers says a report in the San Jose Mercury. |
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Indeed, some modern newspapers and book publishers could do with harder editors. |
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Then there is the usual plethora of niche presses, ranging from outright vanity endeavours to highly respectable small publishers. |
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Do the same publishers who complain about Autolink also complain if different browsers display their websites in different ways? |
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All the redundant publishers could be retrained as viniculturists and grape-tramplers. |
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And such, I'm afraid, are the daily nonsenses with which writers are assailed by publishers. |
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The company itself controlled its members through by-laws giving exclusive rights in certain books to certain publishers. |
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In the second world war, the shortage of paper meant that publishers were hard put to stay in business. |
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And there were also some old-time publishers and their employees who were reluctant to adopt new ways of doing things. |
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Mock biographies of fictional characters have long been a staple joke of publishers. |
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Mr Betteridge opines that publishers should stop putting their content into walled gardens, and make them easily accessible. |
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A number of the country's biggest publishers say the strategy amounts to blackmail and are refusing to cave in. |
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The reason, publishers said, was because members of the Cayuga Nation believed the essay unfairly analyzed the Cayuga land claim case. |
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Events can always outrun expectations, of course, and publishers were ready for another Florida-style debacle of recounts and lawsuits. |
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Overall, I'm confident the great majority of publishers and opinion page editors embrace diversity. |
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The publishers retain the courage to chalk out a new path in subsequent editions as well. |
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Not that my publishers had sounded overly impressed when I'd pitched them the story line. |
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Horne pointed out that the test's publishers supplied the only research available on the test. |
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I bet publishers are falling all over each other trying to pick up the rights to that sure-fire bestseller. |
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On Saturday, July 3rd, for the third straight year, publishers big and small banded together under the banner of free swag for everyone. |
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We can only hope that the publishers will soon issue an inexpensive paperback edition. |
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Many other artists and publishers also threw Artexpo bashes at various Manhattan hot spots. |
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The manuscript had been circulated among various publishers, most of whom shied away from this provocative treatment of a sensitive subject. |
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Still, many publishers seemingly remain reluctant to take this first step into citizen journalism. |
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We hope all those publishers who turned the book down give themselves a pat on the back for yet another job well done. |
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With such a patronization, publishers can price such journals at will, and still sell them. |
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Artists and publishers have incentives to engage in payola because copyrights allow them to collect rent on each song played or record sold. |
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Were you personally responsible for bringing all those independent publishers together for the first time in the States? |
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It was also a time of collating and comparing material, and contacting a number of publishers with a view to their publishing his work. |
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My publishers are farting around at the moment but they will bring it out in a kind of lavishly tooled arty-farty volume. |
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As publishers implemented SGML, photocomposition vendors developed import and export routines to handle it. |
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After her novel was turned down by publishers and dropped by her agent, she created the site to commiserate with other aspiring authors. |
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The largest publishers would have their own shops, or agents selling books on commission, in other cities as well as their own. |
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Music fans are happy that they continue to get the music they want, now, and publishers have the means to get compensated. |
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It has also made suing infringers easier for publishers by permitting suit against the facilitator of copyright infringement. |
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Perhaps there should be a petition to publishers that writers nominate books that ought to be back in print. |
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Such instant solutions are neither necessary or desirable, said some traditional girlie publishers and printers. |
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One of the reasons the situation in America is as bad as it is is that bookstores were conglomerated at the same time as the publishers were. |
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The session brought textbook authors, publishers and curriculum planners before the middle school students. |
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In recent years, software publishers have hit consumers with a double whammy that very likely escapes the consumer price index. |
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Edward de Bono has seemingly cornered the market, and publishers are reluctant to try to take on the champ. |
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Vast layoffs, pay cuts and a floundering economy have been difficult factors for galleries and publishers to deal with. |
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American publishers of popular music were quick to cash in on the vogue of mountain songs. |
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Insofar as such writers flunk the tests laid out by textbook publishers, they risk slipping quietly out of circulation. |
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Major publishers are seeking authors who already possess the basic writing skills. |
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Several major publishers donated books, and forgave debts or extended credit. |
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The publishers believe this is a book that crosses over from business into pop culture. |
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Now, with print circulation in free fall, publishers have got to serve ads and collect revenue from somewhere. |
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Open-access publishers charge study authors a printing fee and release the information freely. |
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Amara has announced a new platform that allows YouTube publishers to crowdsource subtitles and translation for their published videos. |
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Again, the most critical error occurs when publishers do not show the consultant the final galley proof. |
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Do any professional publishers understand, one wonders, how precarious their position is? |
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If precedent holds, it won't be publishers of tax-help books alone who benefit. |
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Dawson reaches for a Danish pastry from the basket proffered to him by his publishers. |
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Mass-market calendar publishers and black presses are opening the floodgates of African American theme products this coming year. |
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And of course, we'll still churn out new and classic game reviews and the latest previews as developers and publishers gear up for Christmas. |
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First party has to do the heavy lifting to prime the pump so the publishers can follow suit. |
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Finally, in these essays, Rexroth profiles dozens of active poets and names the publishers printing their works. |
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Malmesbury town councillor Judy Jones's book about escaping the rat race has been so successful her publishers are printing another edition. |
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The publishers printed what was left, so readers remained unaware that the narrator survives the shipwreck. |
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His account of the discovery was sent to the publishers in 1775, but took two years to appear in print. |
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They're also all books that have been published in multiple printings for decades or longer by multiple publishers. |
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We usually buy our stock directly from publishers, sometimes being invited to share in special printings. |
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Then you can shop it around to publishers or start investigating print-on-demand services while you complete the rest. |
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Instead of expensive offset printing, which mainstream publishers use, print-on-demand relies on a glorified digital printer. |
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Austrian legislation prohibited publishers from including such prize competitions in their papers. |
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The net effect of giclee is that it has opened up tremendous opportunities for artists, publishers and people who want to own art. |
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Since there was no copyright law, Beethoven sold his music to publishers for a flat fee. |
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Such practices should only be attempted by experienced journalists and desperate music publishers. |
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The biggest challenge for book publishers is interesting boys in their product. |
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Under US copyright regs, publishers don't need permission to produce a revised edition. |
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The ceremony celebrates the nation's favourite books, authors and publishers. |
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It is absolutely essential for the big publishers ' financial health that most such books should succeed. |
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The agent offered the book to publishers as one of a series following the course of Caesar's life. |
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You hear of people sending books to 15 different publishers and having them thrown back at them. |
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The artists were needed to create the music, the publishers to distribute and market it. |
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They invited various publishers, including the managing director of News Corp, to bid for them. |
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It becomes in a way the despair of philosophers, just like it was the despair of Proust's publishers. |
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While artists and publishers worked around the comic code, it wasn't until graphic novels that comic art, as an form of expression rebounded. |
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Embeddable tweets will offer some publishers a new way of gaining exposure on a topic. |
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The intention of the Act was to prevent writers and publishers evading the law by remaining anonymous. |
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Agents and publishers can demand exclusivity from writers and then do nothing, as happened to me. |
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Nor is there any suggestion that publishers are hopelessly inaccurate when estimating future sales. |
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But publishers will doubtless exploit Lulu and similar sites to scout for their own future bestsellers. |
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They both supply the ecommerce and digital download backbone for software publishers. |
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In order to get material to put on their sites, the on-line libraries have made partnerships with a myriad of corporate publishers and university presses. |
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One of the most principled aspects of their decision was that political pressure on publishers to exercise a form of self-censorship should be resisted. |
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Currently, we are working on a playable demo for potential publishers. |
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Some people were making a lot of money out of it, but usually it was the producers and publishers and promoters, and all they wanted was a quick buck. |
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That is something all its previous owners and publishers understood and respected. |
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Ah, you will say, but if publishers don't bother with small fry, then eventually they will run out of big fry, because the big fry will have nowhere to learn their trade. |
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It would expand on a current program that lets shoppers read a table of contents, a first chapter or a few selected pages provided by the publishers of certain books. |
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I'd love to write a cookery book one day if any publishers are interested. |
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However, the main grouse of these publishers is that they do not get much by way of advertisement support from corporates, which prefer the English publications. |
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Similar picturesque thatched cottages with lattice windows are illustrated in the children's picture sheets issued by early nineteenth-century publishers. |
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The controversy did, however, motivate publishers to downplay evolution in their public school textbooks. |
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From there she compiled a book of horoscopes for women, and it was only a hop, skip and jump to convince her publishers to let her write nincompoopish novels aimed at women. |
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It has always been irksome to publishers that they actually have to pay money to those weirdo deadbeats who wander in with manuscripts under their arms. |
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This is the first volume in what will be a multi-volume set devoted to a bibliography of over 25 publishers of Victorian yellowbacks and paperbacks. |
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Meanwhile the big publishers and the big retailers probably won't disappear, any more than the local supermarket will close if a few sensible people go to the farmers' market. |
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Other publishers applaud the addition of giclee to the market. |
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What's so galling is that if something goes wrong, a bunch of bloggers, with no editors to call and no publishers to threaten, are the worst possible people to have around. |
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For publishers, grants encourage publishing quantity over quality. |
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The publishers have also been extremely fastidious in their selection of the book's 325 illustrations, providing a pictorial record spanning over a century and a half. |
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But we can trace the current system of fears and balances back to 1908, when music publishers claimed player piano rolls violated music copyrights. |
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So Hachette and the other publishers were all ears when Steve Jobs came a-calling with a surefire way to jack up e-book prices. |
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If the writers win, the publishers fear they'll be vulnerable to lawsuits by ink-stained wretches and so will be forced to excise freelance articles from their databases. |
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The bane of my existence is the synopses that publishers request for a new novel or series. |
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As publishers and record companies looked for the earmarks of potential long-term hits, several releases in late 1941 exploited early returns from the front. |
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As if publishers don't have enough to worry about, suddenly the man who oversees one of the greatest multimedia powers on earth is spoiling for a turf war. |
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The answer, then, to keeping our second-hand bookshops in new stock is for our book distributors and publishers to let second-hand book dealers have access to their overstock. |
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All products issuing from established publishers are not gold. |
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Now the SBOE is considering what textbook publishers have produced in response to the TEKS requirements. |
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While several publishers have found success in reaching women through psychographic segmentation, not all shared psychographic attitudes can support a magazine, says Merskin. |
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Mainstream newspaper publishers have been wresting with falling readerships and generational market shifts for at least a decade, with little apparent success. |
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The presence of gold farmers in a game is not necessarily popular among people who are playing for fun, and game publishers try to limit it, with little success. |
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His skill is to suggest that his operation is that of a book club and to buy run-ons of current bestsellers direct from the publishers at cut-down prices. |
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In the nineteenth century, publishers cranked out endless streams of literary and semi-scientific ramblings by Oxonian and Cantabrigian dons with too much time on their hands. |
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The enthusiast has financed the latest book himself and, based on the previous projects, expects the 1,500 copies printed by publishers Country Books to sell quickly. |
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The books which these new publishers issued were nearly all originals. |
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Like it or not, some companies will need to function as a counterbalance if publishers are to survive as a species. |
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Books under copyright will be excerpted at varying lengths, depending on whether Google has agreements with their publishers to carry longer excerpts. |
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If you're a first time author, do publishers just reject books like this? |
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During her visit, her publishers throw a swish party for her. |
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These books will be available in English and the publishers have plans of bringing these comics in Bengali, Hindi, Malayalam, Punjabi, Tamil and Telugu languages too. |
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Web publishers can also review advertisers' campaigns to present counter-offers as well as open up negotiations on issues such as compensation and timing. |
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My criticism is that most publishers are very bad at making a profit. |
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As well as the author, the publishers are also to be commended in allowing a liberal selection of maps and illustrations as well as footnotes at the bottom of each page. |
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New technology means publishers are prepared to print books on demand. |
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They'll tell us so much, and no more, and demand handsome sums because they know publishers are desperate to get their names into print and shift some trees. |
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These days, you have to be very good indeed, or very lucky, to be pulled out of the mountainous slush piles on the desks of children's publishers. |
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Too often, publishers believe reporting ethics can be stapled to a couple of universal standards and delivered to each and every journalist for ingestion. |
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There are a number of situations that present potential liability for artists, galleries and publishers in the area of fakes, forgeries and stolen art. |
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There are certain men and women who by reason of their genius, eminence, achievement, or idiosyncrasy seem to exercise a sort of magnetism on biographers and publishers. |
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But publishers argue that the report mixed apples and oranges. |
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That data is available only to publishers through their vendors and is proprietary unless released to the public. |
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In the era of the Internet, the efficacy of the name suppression orders was always going to be severely strained, but some online publishers took the issue seriously. |
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Presumably, the publishers thought that a potted pre-Union history of Scotland and England would bring the general reader up to speed in preparation for the rest of the book. |
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The author of this new, third biography of the poet notes that Cummings signed his name in capitals in his personal correspondence, dealings with publishers and his diaries. |
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Backed into a corner, the publishers finally made a desperate gamble. |
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When I retired I intended to go on working in the traditional way, offering my work through a literary agent and being published by mainstream publishers. |
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The publishers are trying to get this changed, for until it is there are a number of authors' agents who won't let the publishers license their authors' audiobooks to audible. |
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He regarded publishers, agents and reviewers as stupid and venal. |
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I'm not talking about quickie paperbacks, the kind that publishers toss off in a matter of weeks in response to an event or news story that captures the popular imagination. |
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Brown confirms that mid-range authors are now dropped by publishers rather than being allowed the steady development and natural progression that they once were. |
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Lauren Child's spiky, sophisticated artwork offers an edgy alternative to the cosy anthropomorphism with which publishers tend to pad their lists. |
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Surely, as roxanne also suggests, their publishers need to do a better job of promoting their books here. |
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The Web has created an interesting and sometimes awkward situation for periodical publishers offering both print and online versions of their articles. |
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With globalisation have come huge conglomerations of multinational publishers who swamp the limited Australian market with publications from the USA, the UK and Europe. |
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Between 1840 and 1890, publishers began printing and distributing inexpensive fiction variously called dime novels, story papers, or cheap libraries. |
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They found a way to combine the economic interests of publishers, bookstores, and poets to overcome the financial marginality of serious literature. |
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The girls changed agents, changed publishers, and were, as you might expect, subject to a certain amount of backbiting and jealousy among the writing community. |
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But the variability of sales throughout the year, in what remains a soft market, is a perennial problem which he acknowledges publishers play a role in exacerbating. |
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Barnaby Rudge This novel, his fifth, had several false starts and passed through the hands of a number of publishers. |
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Authors complain loud enough when their publishers don't do it. |
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Paperback publishers distributed their titles in african-american neighborhoods because it expanded their market base. |
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I feel that those who portray an aggressive, vulgar, debased attitude towards life are conniving in that life, and I think publishers should reject them. |
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There was a glazed look in our eyes as we imagined our new love nest brimming with books, half finished manuscripts and acceptance letters from publishers. |
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The publishers promised to delete objectionable paragraphs from the book. |
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Over the next three months, The Big Bounce was rejected by eighty-four publishers and film producers. |
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All these libraries spend their funds on purchasing third-rate books with the grants available to them and publishers churn out only these works as they are in demand. |
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As with many publishers of newspapers, Tribune Company has experienced drop-offs in revenues from classified advertisement. |
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Today many publishers not only use e-mail for straight marketing efforts but also for delivery of free e-zines as part of fulfillment. |
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Walter the Farting Dog has sold 80,000 copies across the US and the publishers now plan to release it here. |
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Coyne advised publishers to design their sites accordingly, obviously avoiding, for example, a right-hand-side tool bar. |
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Classified ad revenue declines continued to hammer publishers as the first of the April results reports came in last week. |
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Vintage publishers have said that they were recalling the misprinted copies and replacing them with correct versions. |
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Across the industry, publishers are considering free e-mail newsletters as more than giveaways. |
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Consumer publishers had an average conversion rate of 35 percent and renewal rate of 64 percent. |
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It might reappear at some point, as an '80-page Borgesian novel', or as the natural history book his publishers want him to write next. |
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Their relationships and know-how will help us bring Crowd Control to even more publishers. |
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Where annotations are used, they are in most cases descriptive blurbs provided by publishers with value judgments edited out. |
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Such apazines are contributed to the bundle by their publishers without charge, being considered exchanges for the other members' fanzines. |
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The tours to the binderies and to the printers and publishers lasted on the average of 1.45 and 1.71 hours respectively. |
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The author had the last laugh over the publishers who had rejected her now best-selling book. |
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In the late 1870s, Furnivall and Murray met with several publishers about publishing the dictionary. |
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Income from audio books helps not inconsiderably to keep authors, and publishers, afloat. |
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Music publishers begin to print music that amateurs could understand and play. |
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Across continental Europe, but in France especially, booksellers and publishers had to negotiate censorship laws of varying strictness. |
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The Enlightenment had produced many writers, pamphleteers and publishers who could inform or inflame public opinion. |
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National magazine publishers in the region include Key Publishing, Mortons of Horncastle and Bourne Publishing Group. |
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The claim that his dog wrote the poems was laughed out of court by publishers. |
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Established authors may be represented by a literary agent to market their work to publishers and negotiate contracts. |
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Publishing companies often produce advanced information sheets that may be sent to customers or overseas publishers to gauge possible sales. |
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Although newspaper and magazine companies still often own printing presses and binderies, book publishers rarely do. |
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This, therefore, poses an interesting question that challenges publishers, distributors and retailers. |
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Payment terms are much closer to those of Amazon and less favorable than those they offer to more established publishers via Lightning Source. |
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Book publishers represent less than a sixth of the publishers in the United States. |
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Most books are published by a small number of very large book publishers, but thousands of smaller book publishers exist. |
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These publishers produce mailing lists, telephone books, and other types of directories. |
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Academic publishers are typically either book or periodical publishers that have specialized in academic subjects. |
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One of the key functions that academic publishers provide is to manage the process of peer review. |
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In 1746, a group of publishers approached Johnson with an idea about creating an authoritative dictionary of the English language. |
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She was still helping to support her father, and they looked out for publishers for each other. |
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Meanwhile, he had to cope with rival claims of publishers Gollancz and Warburg for publishing rights. |
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He submitted it to his publishers as a balm to readers who were hungry for more from him after the success of The Hobbit. |
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Various booksellers and publishers offered their works to the Frankfurt Parliament for a parliamentary library. |
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The Statute of Anne gave the publishers rights for a fixed period, after which the copyright expired. |
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The London, the anonymous international market of the Netherlands, publishers in Hamburg and Leipzig generated new public spheres. |
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The publishers equipped them with prefaces that referred to Huet's treatise. |
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In the 19th century the relationship between authors, publishers, and readers, changed. |
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In 1902 he became managing director of Chapman and Hall, publishers of the works of Charles Dickens. |
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The publishers had passed the manuscript to Kingsley Amis to read on holiday, although they did not use his suggestions. |
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Plomer liked it and submitted it to the publishers, Jonathan Cape, who did not like it as much. |
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Amongst book publishers, the University of Wales Press, founded in 1922, has been influential. |
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He made it clear to his publishers that this slim book was in no sense a full autobiography. |
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Incidentally, she formed a working relationship with producer Salaam Remi through these record publishers. |
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At that time all printing presses and publications were required to be licensed, and publishers were liable to the Court of High Commission. |
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Witherby Seamanship, established in 1740, is one of the oldest publishers in the United Kingdom. |
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Due to the inelastic demand for these journals, the commercial publishers lost little of the market when they raised the prices significantly. |
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After the war his wife decided to send some of his short stories to three publishers, who all accepted the scripts for publication. |
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Temple Press is amongst the leading publishers and distributors of a wide range of radical and occultural material. |
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It offers design and editorial services for publishers, distributes grants for authors and publishers, and provides services for libraries. |
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This dramatization of The Lord of the Rings has subsequently been made available on both tape and CD both by the BBC and other publishers. |
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Consequently, the publishers were increasingly demanding stories that would focus on Thomas at the expense of other characters. |
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Nonetheless, the format was imitated by publishers Ian Allan for their Sammy the Shunter and Chuffalong books. |
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Several LGBT charities, publishers, social and support groups are also based in the city. |
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The main newspaper's publishers are Yomiuri Shimbun, Asahi Shimbun, Mainichi Shimbun, Nikkei Shimbun and Sankei Shimbun. |
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Map publishers using the term Southern Ocean on their maps include Hema Maps and GeoNova. |
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With the coming of the global market, publishers in different countries can reprint maps from places made elsewhere. |
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This is a two volume work with detailed information and the publishers Beadle and Adams, lists of titles and authorial biographies. |
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Major trade publishers have also issued edited volumes on Latin American history and historiography. |
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