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Maine Tripping

[Here’s a tidbit from Jennifer Garske about her trip to Maine] Sometimes you find your job really does bleed into every part of your life—in the best way possible, I mean. Recently, I was lucky enough to take a vacation to Maine. I went with my mother-in-law and sister-in-law to celebrate a birthday. As we […]Read more "Maine Tripping"
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On Milton Meltzer

[I asked Jean Reynolds to guest blog about working with Milton Meltzer, who passed away on September 19 after a long, successful career.] We publishers always know the age of our authors. It is not that we’re nosy, but we must use the author’s birth date when we apply to the Library of Congress for […]Read more "On Milton Meltzer"
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The Invisible Word Count

[Kellie Hultgren gives us her perspective on creating layouts in the TFCB list.] If a picture really is worth the proverbial thousand words, then I’m thrilled to be in charge of between sixty and a hundred thousand words per TFCB title—not including captions! Images are almost as important to a TFCB book as the words: […]Read more "The Invisible Word Count"
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Photos, Artwork, or Both?

By Carol HinzEditorial Director, Millbrook Press Each of Lerner’s imprints has its own identity and defining characteristics. One part of Millbrook’s identity is that its books may be illustrated with photos, original artwork, or a combination of the two. Having these options is great, but it also means that we have an important decision to […]Read more "Photos, Artwork, or Both?"
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The Aesthetics of Editing

By Sara Hoffmann, Managing Editor One of my favorite things about editing is the aesthetics of it. Sure, researching different subjects is interesting, and looking things up in the Chicago Manual of Style is (oddly) fun for me. But what I really love is choosing words so that a sentence has a certain flow and shaping […]Read more "The Aesthetics of Editing"
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Shaping a Series

[Senior production editor Martha Kranes, whose birthday it is today, agreed to guest blog about her insights into the visual side of series development.] One of the fun things about working for a publisher that produces nonfiction series is discovering the ways in which the design team, with input from editorial and marketing, expresses the […]Read more "Shaping a Series"