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The Writer

WHAT BOOKS ABOUT PUBLISHING GET RIGHT (AND WHAT THEY GET WRONG)

“Write what you know,” goes the old saying. Perhaps it’s surprising, then, that there aren’t more books about publishing. Because there’s nothing authors know better than the often-fickle world of publishing – the rewrites, the pressure to sell, the ying-yang of the artistic vs. the commercial experience.

But when writers do write about publishing, how much do they get right? Where’s the line between information and entertainment? Can a writer without publishing experience trust what they read in a novel about the industry? We spoke with four authors who’ve written recent books set in publishing to get their answers.

WHAT BOOKS ABOUT PUBLISHING GET RIGHT

1 Publishing remains very white

Newsflash: The publishing houses’ supportive Juneteenth tweets do not change the makeup of the industry. It is still not diverse. The most recent Lee & Low Diversity in Publishing study found that 76% of those working in the industry (from the executive level to interns, covering all departments) are white. Just 5% are Black, 9% are disabled, and 19% identify as something

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