Nonfiction
writers have long realized that they have a responsibility to their readers, to
their own credibility and to history to check all the facts they repeat in
their books. The challenge increases today due to the fast growth in our
knowledge base and the quick changes in our technology. An interesting recent
example will encourage us to add one more item to our checklist before we go to
press.
At Para Publishing, we produce several publishing-industry
books, reports, mailing lists and other databases. More important, we
maintain them. This maintenance is becoming increasingly
timeconsuming. We recently returned to press with the The Self-Publishing
Manual. Just prior to sending the revised pages off for typesetting, we spot
checked some of the addresses. Alarmed, we asked the editor Karen Stedman to
contact each supplier listed in the 62-page Resource Section. She discovered an
astounding 85% of the addresses had changed in just 13 months!
Most
changes were area codes. We all know that after a few months, the telephone
companies replace the change recording with That number is no
longer in service. Most people assume the company is out of business. It
takes some detective work to find the new code and test it. Next to area codes,
email addresses change often too. We found that many more companies have web
sites to list. We even found some companies had new street addresses and some
had gone out of business. The lesson? Do not copy resources out of other books
and directories and assume they are current. You must call to check every one.
If you do not verify addresses, you will receive calls (to your
toll-free number) asking for new addresses. Now we all like to hear from our
readers but we do not need "non-revenue calls".
Mailing to them for
verification will not work. Over 50% will not get around to replying. Use the
telephone but you will save time and money letting someone else do it. People
love to talk to authors so fact checking often turns into some long
conversations. The caller may also ask for additional information about
products, services and anticipated area code changes. That will make your new
book or revision even better.
This sudden realization about fact
checking could be called the bad news but the good news
is that the small press is winning out over the big publishers once again. It
takes a large (New York) publisher 18 months to turn a manuscript into a book.
In a year-and-a-half, the references are hopelessly out of date. Secondly,
larger publishers rarely issue a revision of a book. They may reprint but they
usually avoid the cost of new typesetting. Smaller publishers keep their books
alive for years by revising each printing. We invest the time and money in
revising because we want our readers to have the latest information and because
we want the best for our offspring (a book in this case.) In your final editing
and proofing, just before going to press, call every person and company listed
in the text. If the project is delayed more than 30 days between calling and
going to press, call again.
Dan Poynter does not want you to
die with a book still inside you. You have the ingredients and he has your
recipe. Dan has written more than 100 books since 1969 including Writing
Nonfiction and The Self- Publishing Manual. For more help on book writing, see
http://ParaPub.com