HOLLAND – Globe Pequot Press and Orange Avenue Publishing have joined Creative Byline, a web-based technology that allows writers to submit manuscripts to publishers interested in their genre.

Creative Byline�??s program streamlines the process of connecting writers to publishers, while keeping writers�?? manuscripts secure and private.

The two publishers join Dutton Children�??s Books, St. Martin�??s Press, and Tor/Forge in using the Creative Byline program.

Globe Pequot, based in Guilford, Connecticut, has published nonfiction works on health, style, fishing, nature, gardening, travel, art and reference, and much more. Founded in 1947, its imprints include skirt!, Lyons Press.

�??I�??m thrilled GPP has joined up with Creative Byline,�?� said Gary Krebs, Group Publisher for Globe Pequot Press. �?�We are always on the lookout for creative new ways to find exciting book proposals. The subscription offers that and more�??but with the immediacy of the web. We look forward to seeing what creative romances develop from this unique system, which is like an online dating service for book proposals.�?�

Through its imprint, Zest Books, San Francisco-based Orange Avenue publishes nonfiction books on issues and challenges of particular interest to teens. Founded as a book packaging company, Orange Avenue began

publishing its own projects in 2006.

�??We’re a publisher with a unique audience,�?� says Hallie Warshaw, publisher and creative director for Orange Avenue and Zest. �??Creative Byline’s use of technology helps us target exactly the writers and subject matter that

are right for us.”

All of Creative Byline�??s participating publishers receive submissions that match their criteria online through the Creative Byline website; they can change their criteria as the market changes. Creative Byline�??s expert readers

and process tools save them time in reviewing manuscripts.

Writers can identify editors interested in manuscripts like theirs and then submit digitally for $19 for full-length manuscripts, $9 for children�??s picture books (roughly the cost incurred to print, package, and ship a hard copy of their work). Writers can find editors with specific interests, submit directly to them, and get a response much more quickly than through the traditional, paper-and-snail-mail-based process.

Formed in 2007 and based in Michigan, Creative Byline uses technology to connect book writers with the editors who are looking to publish them. For more information, click on CreativeByline.Com

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