I've been a textbook editor for five years. My books have been big and small, Math books and Sociology books, a few textbooks about construction materials, and one book with a scene from
Swingers on the cover.
Every day, I act as the point person for our production team, our sales team, our manufacturing team, and authors either gruntled or disgruntled. I grease the cogs and make sure everyone has the information they need. I make sure that person A's instructions will be clear to person B. I harass when books are running late, and I praise when authors submit materials early.
The end result is a textbook that fits the needs of students, professors, and teaching assistants. A good textbook helps a class to stay organized. We provide technology supplements to help students learn. I chose this career because I love education, and I wanted my work to, in some small way, enrich the world.
My editorial career began with a niche quarterly magazine in South Bend, Indiana, through a publishing seminar in Denver, Colorado, and is now comfortably settled in an East Coast cubicle as part of a leading publishing corporation.
That is, until I learned I would be traveling to India as part of an exchange program. Four months as an editor in a new custom publishing program being developed in Delhi. Think
The World is Flat meets
Strunk and White's Elements of Style.
The details are being finalized now, and I should have a plane ticket booked next week. In the meantime, I decided to start a blog. There are a few reasons for this: first, to keep in touch with friends and family back home. Let's be honest, a 9 1/2 hour time difference is not conducive to personal contact. I'm cheating a little bit. Second, to organize my thoughts on the experience. You'll see a lot of posts here about new publishing models, unfamiliar business practices, piracy, print-on-demand, and the role printed books still play around the world.
Lastly, and most importantly, I started this blog because I don't want to go it alone. I invite you to read through, read the comments, and by all means - contribute. There are a lot of smart people out there who have been in similar situations. I know I have a lot to learn.