
'Where do you see yourself not getting tenure in seven years?'
Kickstart their day with a hilarious mug that highlights the publish-or-perish panicker's daily grind. Great for morning coffee or tea as they power through deadlines.
'Where do you see yourself not getting tenure in seven years?'
"After years of cartoon rejections, Bill stooped to trying a little shameless product placement."
Sherlock Holmes selling Sherlock Holmes.
"It's a heck of a tale...and well told, but we don't publish resumes."
'As a famous writer, could you do something to help jumpstart my career?'
"What your memoir really needs is an addiction."
'Amount of white out used while writing, Moby Dick, an issue of The National Enquirer, and 101 Uses for a Dead Cat.'
It's an autobiography of a guy who spent his whole life trying to get his first @#^& book published. Editor.
"If you saw a book with the title 'An American Speaks Out,' would you buy it?"
'You can't reject my manuscript without due process!'
"Personally, I loved your novel. Unfortunately, our e-book editor says it just doesn't work on the little screen!"
"There's the pressure from my public, naturally, as well as the pressure from my publisher, my agent, and all that. But the real pressure comes from that devil inside that makes me different from other men, that makes me a writer. But, of course, you know all about pressure, grinding out those papers at Sarah Lawrence."
Professor McWit, Didn't Publish, So Perished.
"We'd like to publish it, do nothing to promote it, and watch it disappear from the shelves in less than a month."
The novel was printed and in the stores ... any minute now, the world would beat down his door.
"Your book stinks—we want to publish it."
'This doesn't work as a heart-felt plea for world peace, but with some astute editing, it might be great on a greeting card.'
Hog magazine with litters to the editor dept.
"As a cost-cutting measure, for our fall list we have decided to bypass traditional bookstore sales and subsequent remaindering, and instead go directly to the shredder."
Rubbish, Poppycock, Balderdash
"We need a better distribution system."
Publishing Clauses Of The '90s.
"Any truth to the rumor that your book is ghost-written?"
"It doesn't work as a novel. But we're willing to publish it as a desk calendar."
"That's just my agent - pay him no heed."
'We lost your case, but the PR was a success. Three publishers are bidding on your story, and 30 PTAs are petitioning to have the book banned.'
'Don't jump. It's a book publisher!'
Publisher: 'Do we need more books?'
'Brilliant writing, Mr. Fenswick, but I'm afraid we'll have to pass on your 'How to Commit the Perfect Crime'!'
"Dumb it down or sex it up."
'Your book has a wonderful, timely quality. We're putting it on our list for a 2009 release.'
Book Shop: DYI section
'it's either mass hysteria, or a very effective advertising campaign.'
His first book was huge, but publishing is such a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately business.
'McWit, your poetic license expired years ago.'
Comfort meets wit with our pillows themed around the publish-or-perish hustle. A humorous addition to any study or workspace.
Decorate with our witty prints that capture the chaotic charm of the publishing race. Great for brightening any academic's space.
Find humorous and relatable t-shirts that perfectly suit the publish-or-perish mindset. A fun way to wear their dedication and sense of humor.