Cover Story: Susan Isaacs: The Insider Interview
The bestselling author talks candidly about changes in the industry, and how she thinks publishers and authors can better work together.
By
Lynn Rosen
Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
LinkedIn
LinkedIn
Seventeen<%2Fspan>%20magazine%20and%20a%20freelance%20political%20speechwriter,%20she%20was%20home%20with%20young%20children%20and%20living%20in%20Long%20Island.%20"I%20wrote%20a%20mystery.%20It%20was%20the%20usual%20[situation%20of]%20reading%20too%20many%20mysteries%20and%20then%20saying,%20'I%20think%20I%20can%20do%20this.'"%20A%20school%20acquaintance%20of%20her%20husband's%20was%20managing%20editor%20of%20Simon%20%26%20Schuster%20and%20offered%20to%20read%20the%20book.%20He%20liked%20it,%20and%20told%20Isaacs,%20"You%20don't%20expect%20friends%20to%20write%20a%20good%20book!"<%2Fspan>%0D%0A%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookbusinessmag.com%2Farticle%2Fsusan-isaacs-the-insider-interview-25058710%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="1382" type="icon_link">
Email
Email
0 Comments
Comments
What about the ebook reading experience?
● The reading experience is not so different across platforms. It's different in convenience in ebook in terms of being able to change the font … It's also nice to be able to define a word. And when you're reading a complicated book—[Hilary Mantel's] Wolf Hall is complicated in the way Russian fiction is in that the characters have many names—you can search for a name.
0 Comments
View Comments
E
Lynn Rosen
Author's page
Related Content
Comments