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Essentials

 Submission Guidelines


***NOTE: The submission procedure for all ADULT NONFICTION books has changed. Please see information below.***

Kirkus Reviews receives between 200 and 400 titles per day, a volume that makes quick decisions necessary on the part of the editors. The following guidelines should clarify the steps you should take to get your titles into the right hands at the right time.

Kirkus Reviews does not review books that have already been published. (Go to www.kirkusdiscoveries.com for those review opportunities.) Kirkus does, however, consider any previously unpublished, but already contracted, titles that are submitted in galley form at least 3-4 months before publication date.

As soon as a book is reviewed—almost always, this will be 2-3 months before its publication date—the publisher is notified of the issue date and instructions by which a copy of the review can be obtained. In turn, we require two copies of the finished book when available.

WHAT WE REVIEW:

There are a few hard and fast rules. By and large, we review all new adult hardcover or original trade-paperback fiction, general-audience nonfiction and children's and young-adult books. Beyond that, editors make individual judgments based on factors having to do with merit or potential interest.

Kirkus Reviews does NOT review books in the categories listed below. (Kirkus Discoveries, however, does. Go to www.kirkusdiscoveries.com for more information.)
  • already published books
  • reprints
  • mass-market titles
  • self-published titles
  • print-on-demand titles
  • e-books
  • poetry
  • most anthologies
  • any collection of journal entries, diaries, poetry, etc.
  • textbooks
  • specialized technical or professional works
  • any work intended for an academic audience
  • reference books
  • compendiums of information (e.g., travel guides)
  • instruction manuals
  • guidebooks of any kind
  • philosophy
  • literary criticism
  • photography
  • arts & crafts
  • self-help
  • screenplays or other types of dramatic scripts
  • parenting
  • home improvement
  • business & personal finance
  • health & fitness
  • cooking & entertaining
  • dating & relationships
  • religion & spirituality (other than general history or memoir)
  • manga
  • comic books
  • computer & technology handbooks
  • books of regional interest

WHEN SUBMITTING YOUR GALLEY (TWO COPIES) FOR REVIEW:

It is important that you include certain standard information—price, publication date (the more exact, the better), ISBN, page count, etc.—as well as a brief description of the book and some particulars about the author.

Please note that we require 2 copies of every submission. If we do not receive 2 copies of each submission in the same package, the book will be passed over automatically.

All adult fiction titles to:

Elaine Szewczyk
Kirkus Reviews
770 Broadway, 7th Floor
New York, NY 10003

**The submission guidelines for ADULT NONFICTION have changed. For each submission, please send 2 copies to the address below (DO NOT send to New York address). The procedure is the same for all finished books.

Eric Liebetrau
Kirkus Reviews
479 Old Carolina Court
Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464

**The submissions procedure for CHILDREN'S AND YOUNG ADULT MATERIALS has changed slightly. Please send 2 copies of all advance and finished book submissions to:

Vicky Smith
Kirkus Reviews
99 Mitchell Rd.
South Portland, ME 04106




 Online Exclusive
The Arabian Nights: A New Edition
March 01, 2010 - The most famous tales in The Arabian Nights have flown far beyond the confines of the night-shrouded bedroom in which Scheherazade spins stories to the vengeful king who will kill her come morning (unless she makes sure he just has to know what happens next). "There is no such thing as a canonical text of the Nights with a fixed number of stories," writes Middle East scholar Robert Irwin in his introduction to Volume 2 of Penguin Classics' new three-volume edition. So should we care that Cambridge University scholars Malcolm and Ursula Lyons, for the first time since Sir Richard Burton in the 1880s, have based this English translation on the 1839-42 Arabic edition that contains more stories than any other, usually in fuller versions? We should


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