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GUIDELINES
FOR BOOK PROPOSALS
(1) Author
Information. Give your name, preferred mailing address, phone/fax number(s),
and email address. Enclose a current vita which indicates your present position,
educational background, and previous publications, with emphasis on how you
are qualified to write the book that you are proposing.
(2) Title of
the Book. Indicate the tentative title of the book, with subtitle if desired,
and give possible alternative titles and/or subtitles.
(3) Description
of the Book. In 200-250 words, describe the book which you are proposing. What
is the nature and focus of the book? What is its major objective (thesis, argument,
or purpose)? Imagine that you are writing the "blurb" for the back cover of
the book, or the description which would go into our catalog. What would you
say to convince a potential reader to buy this particular book?
(4) Table of
Contents/Outline. Give a tentative table of contents of the book by chapters.
Under each chapter title give a brief outline of the chapter and a brief summary
of its contents. This summary should explain the focus and development of the
chapter and indicate how the chapter advances the argument or discussion of
the whole book.
(5) Audience/Market.
For what audience group(s), specifically, is the book intended: college students?
seminary students? doctoral students? professors? established scholars in a
specific field or sub-field? pastors or other religious professionals? general
readers? Does the book have potential for textbook adoption, either as a basic
(required) text or as a supplemental (recommended) text? If so, in what specific
courses and contexts?
(6) Prompting
Need. Why will each of the target audience group(s) you have identified have
any interest in what you wish to say to them? What need, concern, or interest
exists in these target audience group(s) that will prompt them to purchase and
read the book?
(7) Key Features/Benefits.
What are the most important features of the book (elements of its organization
or argument, summaries of literature, illustrations, appendices, etc.)? What
are the most important benefits that your intended audience group(s) will derive
from reading your book?
(8) Location/Competition.
Where and how does the book that you are proposing "fit" into the universe of
other previously published books? To what published works would you compare
the book you are proposing? What does your book offer that these competing works
do not? How will your book be superior to or different from them?
(9) Prior Publication.
Has any of the material in your book been previously published elsewhere, either
by you or by others? If so, where and in what form? Do you control all publishing
rights to this previously published material, or will permission clearance from
other publishers be required?
(l0) Manuscript
Submission. What is the estimated length of the proposed manuscript, typed or
printed doublespaced on 81/2 x 11 " paper, with 1-inch margins, using non-proportional
courier or pica (l0 cpi) type/print? What is the estimate of number of words in the manuscript? By what date do you expect to submit a
completed manuscript? Can you submit the completed manuscript in electronic
form (i.e., on disk) as well as in hard copy? What word processing program/version
and operating system are you using (e.g., WordPerfect 6.1 for Windows, Microsoft
Word 7.0 for Macintosh, etc.)? If possible, attach a sample of 15-25 pages,
perhaps of the introduction or the first chapter, which shows your writing style.
These should be pages which are typical of the book as a whole, especially critical
to your argument, potentially controversial, or that give a good overview of
the book.
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