
Red Deer Press of Calgary — established in 1975
and one of Canada's leading publishing houses — is pleased to
announce our science–fiction imprint, Robert J. Sawyer
Books.
This line of literate, cutting–edge,
philosophically rich science–fiction titles will be personally
selected by the man the Ottawa Citizen calls "the dean of
Canadian Science Fiction" and the Rocky Mountain News calls
"just about the best science–fiction writer out there," Hugo and
Nebula Award–winning bestselling author Robert Sawyer. Writers
whose submissions Robert selects will work directly with him on
their manuscripts, and Robert will write an introduction for
each book.
Robert J. Sawyer Books is strictly a
science–fiction imprint: it does not publish fantasy, horror,
magic realism, or anything else. It is a line of adult books: we
are not interested in children's or young–adult fiction. Because
some of our funding comes from Canadian federal and provincial
government agencies, we must publish mostly, although not
exclusively, titles by Canadian authors.
We do just two or three books a year (mostly
novels, but we are open to single–author short–story collections
by established novelists). Most of our books will be published
as trade (large-format) paperbacks with a short run of a
hardcover edition. We are looking for commercially viable
titles, and we will be distributing our books across North
America. Our owner and distributor is Fitzhenry and Whiteside. Our maximum
length is 100,000 words—no exceptions.
Science–fiction publishing in the U.S. has been
in a slump for over a decade, and lots of good books that might
have found homes with the major New York SF imprints (Ace,
Aspect, Baen, DAW, Del Rey, Eos, Roc, Spectra, and Tor) in more
prosperous days have been going unpublished. If your book might
have made it in New York in greener times, give us a try.
Note that we'll only be publishing original
self–contained, stand–alone books: don't send us the first
volume of your prospective trilogy, because we'll never have
enough slots to publish the subsequent books, and no other
publisher is going to pick up a series started by somebody else.
Also note that we're not interested in reprints.
Some authors we like: James Alan Gardner, Nancy
Kress, Jack McDevitt, Mike Resnick, Connie Willis, Robert
Charles Wilson, and, of course, Robert J. Sawyer. If your work
is like theirs, with the same deft mixture of science and
fiction, we're interested in seeing a query from you. (If you
don't know the work of these authors, or if the list of SF
imprints given above didn't mean anything to you, then we're
probably not going to be a good match for each other; try your
luck somewhere else.)
If your book is built on a foundation of
accurate, cleverly extrapolated science, and believable, subtle,
sophisticated characterization, it might be for us. We want real
people in our stories, not cardboard heroes and villains. We
firmly believe that SF is the literature of ideas—and we love
the sense of wonder that good science fiction invokes.
Most of all, your book must be about something.
If your first impulse in describing your novel is to make a
thematic statement, we're interested; if, on the other hand,
your first impulse is to give a plot synopsis, we're probably
not the right place for you.
We are open to stylistic experimentation and
adult content, so long as they help, rather than hinder, the
story. Plain, straightforward prose is fine with us; so is
beautiful, lyrical writing. Humor and satire are welcome.
Our advances are decent by the standards of
small presses, but we can't compete up front with the big New
York houses (although our royalty rates match theirs, of
course). We cannot commission novels; you must have a completed,
or nearly completed, manuscript, ready to go into editing. We
welcome agented submissions, and are happy to deal with agents
during contract negotiations.
To give you a taste of what we're looking for,
these are our first two books:
Marcos Donnelly's Letters from the Flesh
intertwines the startling observations of an extraterrestrial
witnessing the rise of Christianity in First–Century Judea with
the modern plight of a teacher attacked for championing
evolution in his classroom.
Getting Near the End by Andrew Weiner is an
apocalyptic tale of a rock singer whose melancholy songs seem to
accurately foretell the impending downfall of humanity. The
novel draws heavily on Weiner's experience as a rock journalist,
and is told in the same sardonic voice found in his many stories
for Asimov's Science Fiction and The Magazine of Fantasy &
Science Fiction.
No unsolicited manuscripts: you must query us
first by paper mail (not e–mail or fax). Send query letters and
brief synopses (no more than a couple of pages are necessary,
although if you've already written a longer synopsis, that's
fine) to:
Robert J. Sawyer, Editor
Robert J. Sawyer Books
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
195 Allstate Parkway
Markham, ON L3R 4T8
Enclose a self–addressed stamped envelope (with
Canadian postage) for our reply; those submitting queries from
outside Canada, use an International Reply Coupon, available at
any post office. If we like what you've got to say in your
query, we'll solicit your full manuscript. Expect to hear from
us on queries in under a month.
Download submission guidelines 24 KB

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