bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profile

Topic : Do authors get paid for quotes and attributions used on book covers? I think I know the answer to this, and my guess is "No", but I don't have a definitive reason what that guess - selfpublishingguru.com

10.02% popularity

I think I know the answer to this, and my guess is "No", but I don't have a definitive reason what that guess is.
When you see on the cover of a book, not from a newspaper or reviewer, but from another author, something like:

"Gene Wolfe is so good he leaves me speechless."
- Ursula Leguin

Did she get paid for this, did she write this somewhere in a public forum, or was it just a verbal quote taken down.
This is a question about novels in general, but applies to SF & Fantasy as well.


Load Full (2)

Login to follow topic

More posts by @Lengel543

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity

As Mike Scott says above, publishers and editors solicit favorable quotes from popular authors of work broadly similar to the book at hand. But that's not where all those quotes on book covers come from. Some are simply quotes from things authors have said in other public venues, like in the course of a review.

For instance, there's a quote from Stephen King lauding the science fiction writer Robert Charles Wilson; I've put it on the cover of several of Wilson's books. It's actually from an installment of King's column in ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY, where he was listing some of his favorite things in various categories; Wilson is his favorite SF writer, and he explained why. We never asked King's permission to quote from him, and he's never objected--our one-line quotation doesn't misrepresent King's opinion and presumably he's happy to stand by it.


Load Full (0)

10% popularity

Publishers send advance reading copies of books to other authors asking for their quotes. They're generally happy to provide favourable quotes, having benefitted from this practice themselves. No money changes hands.


Load Full (0)

Back to top