I just heard this morning that River Oak is suspending its fiction line. They are a division of Cook Communications. The River Oak authors who passed on this information stated that River Oak is honoring the contracts they already have. They are simply not acquiring new works at this time. They sited a saturated market as one of the reasons for this change.
Whether River Oak is going to be cut all together or sold, I don't know.
So, if you're like me and have proposals with them, you can safely stop crossing your fingers and move on.
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
Home »
» You can stop crossing your fingers now
You can stop crossing your fingers now
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
3 comments
Related Posts:
Sunday Devotion: When You're a Blessing, Beware! Janet RubinGod gave you a gift. He wants to use it to bring you fulfillment and joy, and to bless others. If you’ve found your way to Novel Journey, you are probably using that writing gift. Perhaps you are a novelist or som… Read More
Author Interview ~ Jamie CarieBorn and raised in the small, historical town of Vincennes, Indiana, Jamie is the oldest of five children. As she grew close to God and developed her relationship with Him, Jamie discovered a heart welling with songs and poet… Read More
First Ever Arete Award Recipient . . . Annette Smith, A Bigger LifeAbout the Author:In 1997, Annette was working as a home health nurse. She traveled the back roads from house to house, caring for ill and injured, homebound people. Because of her unique position in the lives of relative stra… Read More
Why a new award? Glad you asked ... From Ane:Gina, Jessica and I all have extremely different tastes in books. It's rare for us to like the same book, let alone love it. While we may agree on good writing, great characterization, excellent plotting, etc., ther… Read More
Author Interview ~ Judy AlexanderJudy Alexander lives in Santa Ana, California. She’s been blessed with a very full life with her husband Gene: two sons (ages 21 and 14), a church family, interesting work opportunities as a corporate writer and photographer,… Read More
Thanks for this update, Gina. I hadn't heard this.
ReplyDeleteOversaturated? This is a concern.
ReplyDeleteWhen cba publishers surrender the market to the secular publisher (who will never feel the market is oversaturated with novels of graphic sex, violence and, sometimes, outright blasphemy) we all lose.
I think the oversaturation comes in with the "Christian Fiction" label. When our novels are just novels and can be placed on shelves at the front of the store instead of the ghetto "religious fiction" secion in the last row of the store, we won't have that concern. Thanks for your comment.
ReplyDelete