Here’s what you’ll need to prepare if you want to pitch yr academic book project to a publisher this year:

1. A working title for the book. Don’t worry, you can change it later.

2. A project description or overview. Summarize your main argument, how you prove it, why it matters
3. A description of yr intended audience. Don’t get too complicated. A simple, clearly targetable audience is better than like 10 different possible readerships

4. A brief discussion of other bks that share a topic, approach, or audience with yrs. They don’t have to be identical
5. A projected table of contents + summaries of every chapter you plan to include. These can change later too, but make sure you have a clear rationale for why every chapter needs to be there
6. Book specs: full word count (not page count), number of images, type of images, whether you already have or can get the right to print them

7. Manuscript status: how much is finished now, when will the rest be done?
8. Author bio: your qualifications to write the book and your track record of reaching the kinds of people who would read the book

Some presses/editors will also want to see sample chapters right away, so be ready with one or two
If you need more help figuring out how to write the proposal, my newsletter archive should help

If you can wait until July, THE BOOK PROPOSAL BOOK: A Guide for Scholarly Authors will help even more: press.princeton.edu/books/paperbac…

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More from @lportwoodstacer

27 May 20
This is a thread for ppl who just finished their dissertation & want to turn it into a book. 1st, congrats, you’ve completed one the hardest projects (maybe the hardest) you’ll ever do in your life. Recognize this accomplishment & don’t discount it by thinking yr diss is trash
The first thing u shd do is TAKE A BREAK. If u can manage it, stop working on scholarly stuff altogether for a few wks. I know it feels like yr already behind but recharging will make u more effective later & above that u deserve to get in touch with other things that bring u joy
It’s crucial to get distance from the diss work. You can do a lot to work toward your book *while also* keeping away from the diss itself. Here are 6 things you can do:
Read 11 tweets
11 May 20
For a little over a year now, I’ve been tracking questions that prospective authors ask me. I’ve got a spreadsheet of about 400 Qs so far—not all unique, so I can track what comes up most frequently
One of the most asked questions is how to revise a diss into a book that publishers will want. There are helpful books on this whole topic, so I point ppl there first. Luey’s REVISING YOUR DISSERTATION. Germano’s FROM DISSERTATION TO BOOK. Harman et al’s THE THESIS AND THE BOOK
It’s ok if you didn’t “write your diss as a book” b/c a diss doesn’t have to fulfill the same needs for readers. Having worked w/ a bunch of academic writers on first books, I have my own list of 6 things a book really ought to have that a dissertation may or may not have.
Read 11 tweets
25 Feb 20
This is a very simple editing tip but maybe it will help someone who is stuck today. When I'm working on a chapter draft that I know needs developmental help & find myself getting overwhelmed by all the moving parts, here's what I do:
On a separate pad of lined paper, I list the chapter's content passage by passage. Every new idea gets a line, and I note the page numbers and section breaks as I go. The clean paper is key because it helps me clear my head from the actual MS draft, which is covered in my notes
As I write out the chapter's contents on the pad of paper, I use a different color pen to make notes on what's going to happen to each passage, e.g. need to add clarification here, cut repetition here, could move these three passages up to the end of section 2, etc.
Read 4 tweets
27 Feb 19
Welcome to my unfortunate new series, A Baby Is Awake and I’m Giving Writing Advice. Tonight’s offering: book proposal overviews (for academic books).
Perennial caveat: you don’t *have to* use this structure in your project description. Try it if you’re stuck or don’t know where to begin. Change it up as needed to make it fit your voice and your project (and the format requirements of your target press, if applicable)
Ok here’s a structure I like for book proposal overviews (each ▪️ is a paragraph):
▪️hook + big takeaway
▪️central arg + conclusions in more detail
▪️what’s at stake
▪️describe evidence & methods used to build arg
▪️lay out structure/narrative arc of bk
▪️audience + press fit
Read 11 tweets
20 Feb 19
A baby has awakened me at 2am and for some reason I now feel the need to offer you my standard template for book introduction chapters.
First, a caveat: you do not *have to* structure your intro this way. This is merely a tool that may be useful if your current draft isn’t working or you have no idea where to start. I can’t stress this enough. You do you.
Another caveat: I’m sure some ppl think using a formulaic structure = stultifying, but I don’t. Just bc you give readers an expected structure doesn’t mean the content of what you say has to be predictable. In fact, structure that doesn’t show off can allow the content to shine.
Read 13 tweets

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