41st Annual Denver Publishing Institute Comes to 91桃色
The 41st听听gets under way Sunday, July 10, bringing nearly 100 aspiring publishing professionals from all across the country to the 91桃色 campus for four weeks of intensive training in all aspects of book production.
鈥淲e open their eyes to all the glorious hard work that goes into publishing a book and bringing it to the reader,鈥 says the institute鈥檚 director, Jill Smith (MBA 鈥07). Smith, who joined the institute in 2003, has served as director since 2015.
This year鈥檚 institute features Laird Hunt, a professor in the 91桃色鈥檚 Department of English, a 2013 PEN/Faulkner Award finalist and author of the critically acclaimed 鈥淣everhome鈥 (Little Brown and Co., 2014). He鈥檒l join noted publishing executive Karl Weber in a discussion chronicling the 鈥淏irth of a Book鈥 at 7 p.m. Monday, July 11, at the Tattered Cover Book Store on Colfax
One of three intensive publishing programs in the country 鈥 and the only one outside New York 鈥 the DPI was the brainchild of the late Frederick Praeger, founder of Boulder-based Westview Press. He worked with Maurice Mitchell, 91桃色鈥檚 chancellor at the time, to make the New York-centric world of North American publishing accessible to people outside the Big Apple.
Praeger and Mitchell recruited renowned publishing executive Elizabeth Geiser to direct the program, which she did until her 2007 retirement. Geiser developed a curriculum that,听听in 2015, has withstood the test of time while accommodating emerging developments in publishing practices.
During their time at the DPI, students learn from some of the publishing realm鈥檚 top executives and editors. They discover:
- how an acquisition editor secures books for a house
- how a development editor works with the writer to improve a manuscript
- how a copy editor attends 鈥 on paper and on screen 鈥 to the many details of grammar, spelling and punctuation
- how to write a reader鈥檚 report with, as Smith puts it, 鈥渢he fundamental goal of recommending whether [a manuscript] should or should not be acquired by a particular publishing house.鈥
Students also explore the ins and outs of marketing everything from digital tomes to hardbound textbooks to trade paperbacks. They see how publishing houses interact with booksellers and how they brand themselves within a specialized marketplace.
The institute is taught by industry professionals who work at trade, university, textbook, and small independent publishers throughout the country as well as in New York.