Updated On: 06 June, 2010 03:19 PM IST | | Janaki Viswanathan
It isn't difficult to get yourself published today. Sunday MiD DAY speaks to publishers and authors to crack the manuscript-to-book code

It isn't difficult to get yourself published today. Sunday MiD DAY speaks to publishers and authors to crack the manuscript-to-book code
A walk around the 'Indian writing' shelf at any city bookstore is an exercise in hope. Piles of short, quick reads, most by authors you've never heard of, crowd these shelves. How did they get there, who are they? Everyone seems to have a story to tell, and someone, somewhere is ready to read that story.u00a0
![]() |
| The Chicken Soup Write Your Own Story workshop in Mumbai, saw a turnout of about 40 people. PIC/ RANE ASHISH |
4-step guide to getting started
1] You have to find a forum where you can express yourself regularly. It could be a blog that you update frequently, a column on a website, or even a magazine. You need to start somewhere, even if you start small.
2] Recounting a life-changing experience for a forthcoming Chicken Soup book is a great stepping stone to writing. Last month, editor Raksha Bharadia held workshops for aspiring writers across the country, which saw a turnout of 50 participants per city. "At least 80 per cent of their stories could be included in the next Chicken Soup," she says. The series has a simple requirement: you have to be a debutant writer.u00a0
3] If you want to start straight with a novel, we suggest you approach a house like Rupa Publishing (info@rupabooks.com). They accept three chapters from your book, which must amount to not more than 1,500 words. Email it to them or courier them a hard copy. Managing editor Kapish Mehra promises that his team gets back to authors within four weeks to let them know whether they can expect it to go somewhere. That's not too much torture, is it?u00a0u00a0
4] However, you probably stand more of a chance to get published with a publisher like Srishti (srishtipublishers@gmail.com), whose published novels crowd most Indian fiction sections at bookstores. But in this case, you'll have to be ready to wait for three months.