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Why Publish With Nimble Books?
Nimble Books LLC is an innovative publisher of timely material on topics ranging from Harry Potter and Dan Brown to politics, business, science, and medicine. We use electronic publishing technology to reach markets that are moving too fast for the large publishing conglomerates to address. Because our marketing strategy is tightly focused on the Internet, we look for titles that respond well to keyword searching in on-line markets, or on-line promotion via blogging.
Some of our recent projects include:
GLOBALISTAN: HOW THE GLOBALIZED WORLD IS DISSOLVING INTO LIQUID WAR by Asia Times correspondent Pepe Escobar.
MISQUOTES IN MISQUOTING JESUS by Dillon Burroughs
UNAUTHORIZED HARRY POTTER BOOK SEVEN NEWS
THE SOLOMON KEY AND BEYOND
We publish twelve titles per year and we are selective. We are looking for books that are substantially ahead of the curve in that they address emerging trends that are readily connected with large, literate on-line communities.
We offer booksellers a short discount and fulfill orders via the Ingram distribution catalog using print-on-demand from Lightning Source. Your book will be available in most on-line booksellers including Amazon.com; the Amazon.com stores in the UK, France, Germany, and Japan; Barnesandnoble.com; Powell’s; and dozens of on-line resellers. Customers can special order the book in bookstores via Ingram, the market-leading distributor in the U.S.
By offering a short discount and focusing on-line, we are taking a more lucrative slice of a smaller pie as compared to a traditional offset publisher which ships returnable books to bricks-and-mortar booksellers at a 55% discount. The downside for you is that we do not pay advances; the upside is that we pay a publishers compensation fee that works out like a higher-than-usual royalty of 15% or more of list price per book.
We are true partners throughout the publication, distribution, and marketing of the book. It’s not a case of give us the manuscript and we’ll give you the check – it’s now that the manuscript is ready, let’s go make some money together!
Here is an example of how the numbers work for a 200-page book selling for $19.94.
Retail price: $19.94
Short discount -25%
Wholesale price 14.96
Printing cost: $3.50
Gross publisher compensation: $11.46
Net author compensation is 30% of gross publisher comp, or $3.44
Thus, your per-copy compensation is equivalent to a traditional royalty of 17.23%, which is well above most market rates. There is also a more subtle advantage in that we never discount our wholesale price of $14.96. Many publishers calculate royalties on the basis of final retail price, not list retail price, so if a book is remaindered and sold to booksellers with a suggested remaindered price of $4.99, you are only getting royalties on the $4.99, not on the $19.94.
Our experience is that about 80% of our online sales come through Amazon.com, which means that you can use your expected Amazon sales rank as a rough indicator of your revenue opportunity. It’s important to note that Amazon’s algorithms diminish the visibility of short-discount books in some of Amazon’s inside-the-store marketing programs, such as “Buy X, Get Y,” and “Also Bought …” This means that your book’s sales will depend primarily on how many readers come to Amazon looking for your specific book or a book that is very close to your specific topic.
The key thing to know about Amazon sales ranks is that the relationship between sales rank and unit sales on Amazon is an inverse logarithmic function, so a book that is ranked #1 sells about 30 times more than a book that is ranked #1000. The following table presents an estimate of the correlation between 30-day average Amazon sales rank (as measured by Titlez.com) and the net monthly author compensation for a $19.94/200 page book. Needless to say, this table is strictly an illustration and should in no way be considered binding.
30 day avg sales rank of … should result in projected net author compensation per month of about …
1000 => $1968
10,000 => $379
30,000 => $173
100,000 => $73
This model is based on Nimble Books sales data plus four different academic studies from 2001 to 2005 whose estimates of the relationship between Amazon unit sales and sales ranks all found r, or degrees of correlation, of .8 or higher; for details and citations, see this article on the Nimble Books website. The primary financial risks in this model are that any increase in printing costs or increase in the short discount rate would adversely affect both publisher and author net compensation. It’
What We Will Need From You
We prefer that manuscripts be provided in Microsoft Word format.
We will ask you to review chapters as they are copy-edited and formatted for production.
We may also ask you for the name of experts in your field who may be willing to review the manuscript for technical accuracy.
As the publication date approaches, we will help you set up a blog or website specifically devoted to your book. We expect you, as the domain expert for your topic, to take the lead on getting the word out about it to knowledgeable reviewers.
As a way of stimulating reader interaction and gathering positive reviews, we offer readers free PDF updates for each book. We ask authors to offer at least one chapter update per year.
How We Pay
We get paid by our distributor, Lightning Source, 120 days after the end of each month in which your books are shipped. Accordingly, we pay you each month on a five-month delay from when your books sell. Thus, if we sell ten of your books in January 2006, we will pay your royalty in June 2006. In July 2006, you will receive February’s royalties, and so on. We prefer to pay via electronic means such as Paypal but will issue paper cheques if necessary.
About Nimble Books
Our trusty Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary defines “nimble” as follows:
1: quick and light in motion: AGILE *nimble fingers*
2 a: marked by quick, alert, clever conception, comprehension, or resourcefulness *a nimble mind* b: RESPONSIVE, SENSITIVE *a nimble listener*
And traces the etymology to the 14th Century:
Middle English nimel, from Old English numol holding much, from niman to take; akin to Old High German neman to take, Greek nemein to distribute, manage, nomos pasture, nomos usage, custom, law
The etymology is reminiscent of the old Biblical adage, “to whom much is given, much is expected” (Luke 12:48). Nimble Books seeks to honor that Christian principle by combining the spirit of nimbleness with the Biblical concept of abundance: we deliver what you need to know when you need to know it.
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Misquotes in Misquoting Jesus: Why You Can Still Believe is essentially a literature review of the controversy. I recently completed two much smaller literature review on narrower topics (on OODA and PNM theories), so I can imagine the troubles Burroughs went through.
The bulk of the book is composed to the basic criticisms of Ehrman's fallacious Misquoting Jesus. Burroughs aptly separates true things Ehrman says from false things, and it careful to not ambiguous points as well. It is perhaps this last task that is the most important, because a dish of deception with a dash of truth is poison. For instance, the non-controversy false Trinitarian formula in the New Testament is disposed of, because no Bibles before the Modern era had that incorrect verse. (This, it was irrelevant to the evolution of Christian doctrine.) Likewise, the question of Christ's anger before a healing is well described.
Burroughs is a critical scholar, and Misquotes in Misquoting Jesus is an excellent example of such a work. Near the end of the book the author describes how anti-Christian texts can be responded too, and displays an excellent grasp of unintended consequences of hasty actions. Christianity is an essentially political religion, going back to Jesus and Paul, and Burroughs' work is a fine contribution to that tradition.
The weakest section of Misquotes in Misquoting Jesus is chapter 9, "Women's Issues in Misquoting Jesus." The controversy over sex and gender roles in Christianity is sidesteps, in spite of its fascinating implications for Christian victory. Perhaps the author is avoiding the issue out of fear of controversy. If so, too bad.
Several of Burrough's comments would make for fine discussion topics. A serious consideration of King James Only arguments was informative. (While the KJV-Only Movement is almost certainly wrong, every proponent I have heard argued with reason and conviction.) Likewise, many of Burrough's strategic comments can placed along the spectrum of meaningful conflict, if one wished to use modern Christian apologetics as an example of ideological struggle.
Misquotes in Misquoting Jesus is a fine summary of Christian responses to Misquoting Jesus. I am grateful to the publisher for supplying me with a copy. It runs roughly 65 pages, and is available for $12.94 from Amazon.com. The book's publisher, W. Frederick Zimmerman of Nimble Books LLC, is also a blogger. Another review of the book is available from Evangelical Textual Criticism.
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