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Simon & Schuster editorial news

Scott Pearson

Writer
Captain
The publishing industry newsletter Publishers Lunch had this news today:

Ed Schlesinger has been promoted to senior editor at Gallery Books/Pocket Books. Also at Gallery, Kate Dresser and Emilia Pisani have both been promoted to assistant editor.

Congrats to everyone!
 
Glad to hear it. Ed's been my editor on at least six books now, including the third Khan book. He's paid his dues and then some!
 
Very cool. I'm glad to see that they're actually promoting people instead of firing them!:bolian:
 
Very cool. I'm glad to see that they're actually promoting people instead of firing them!:bolian:

It's certainly a good sign for the industry. Add in Marco's new job, and I think things are looking up.
 
Very cool. I'm glad to see that they're actually promoting people instead of firing them!:bolian:

It's certainly a good sign for the industry. Add in Marco's new job, and I think things are looking up.


It's encouraging, all right. I know of another editor who was offered a job this week as well, although I'm not at liberty to divulge the details.

And, yes, it has to be a good sign that publishers are hiring and promoting people, not laying them off!
 
How do the positions regarding Star Trek work? I remember Marco Palmieri had DS9 and Voyager while Margaret Clark had TNG and the non-fiction line.
 
How it works depends on who the editor or editors are at any given time. A few years ago, we had Marco and Margaret splitting various series, Ed Schlesinger doing some things like New Frontier, Keith DeCandido editing the eBooks on a freelance basis, etc. Then with the economic crisis and the layoffs, it shrank down to one person doing everything. It changes with the circumstances.

The one consistent thing about how it works is that nobody employed at Pocket/Gallery (i.e. staff instead of freelancer) is exclusively editing Trek fiction. ST is one of the titles that falls under the responsibility of the editor or editors handling the publisher's overall media tie-in program.
 
ST is one of the titles that falls under the responsibility of the editor or editors handling the publisher's overall media tie-in program.

Exactly. Ed edited the third Khan book, but he also edited my CSI books and three different movie novelizations. He's not just a STAR TREK editor.
 
I'm a bit clueless and curious. What does editting a book involve?

Okay, it varies from book to book, but in general:

1) The editor acquires the book for the publisher by striking a deal with the author or agent. This involves reading submissions, negotiating the contract, and convincing the publisher to let you buy the book in the first place. ("Pretty please?")

2) The actual editing. This involves working with the author on as many drafts as necessary to whip the book into shape. I typically read the ms. through, take extensive notes, and send the author a comprehensive letter suggesting areas for revisions. ("I'm not sure why we need the villain's ex-wife. Can we cut her out of the book?") This tends to be big-picture stuff and should be distinguished from copyediting which is more about spelling and grammar and such. (That comes later.)

3) The editor serves as the book's in-house advocate and cheerleader. You work with the marketing department, the art department, the publicity department, etcetera to promote the book. If anyone has a question about the book or the author, they come to you. ("So, Greg, what's this new Matheson book about? How many copies do you think we'll get out? Is he available for interviews?")

4) You act as a troubleshooter for whatever complications may arise, tracking down lost checks and author copies, making sure the author has a copy of the cover art in time for that convention, and so on.

That's how it's supposed to work at least. In real life, you can end up with more than one editor at various stages in the process. For example: John Ordover acquired the third Khan book and worked closely with me on the original twelve-page outline, but, after John left Pocket, Ed took over the project and did the rest of the editing. That's a not uncommon state of affairs.

And, of course, where tie-in books are concerned, you're also interfacing with the licensor, who need to see and approve everything.
 
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