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Leah Huete de Maines's avatar

Finishing Line Press is not an MLM. FLP has never asked authors to recruit other writers. FLP does not ask writers to pay anything for publishing or promoting their books. FLP is upfront with those they accept by telling them they are expected to let people know they have a book forthcoming. They don’t ask authors to pay for advertising. They just ask authors to let people know (via social media and word of mouth) that the book is forthcoming. As a small press, they don’t have a large advertising budget. However, FLP does run paid ads on social media for every book they publish. I know this because I am the one who pays for the ads.

FLP rejects far more books than they accept. At one point the acceptance rate was 8%; however, that might not be the rate now.

The endorsements are for the books published. However, I do have some endorsements for my work at FLP:

"Having a book accepted is a stressful time. Leah Maines made the procedure easy and painless. Her instructions were easy to follow and she answered my questions fully. It was a pleasure working with her and her crew at Finishing Line Press." ~James Fowler

Leah Maines is the intrepid publisher of Finishing Line Press, perhaps the premier independent chapbook poetry house in the United States at this time. Innovative, but solidly grounded in her vision and organization, she has created a fine press and allowed it to flourish under her wise guidance. I have written a number of jacket comments for books she has selected, and it has been my privilege to endorse her writers. ~Molly Peacock

And there are many more like this on my LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leahmaines

I started FLP in 2000 as a way to promote and publish poetry. As a mixed-race LatinX woman, my focus has been to publish underrepresented voices of the day: women, LBGTQ+ people, and people of color. When I first started publishing books, the majority of those being published were old white men. I wanted to do my part to change that. I hope I have been successful.

My goal has never been to scam anyone or take advantage of anyone. My goal was to publish poetry. I’ve always been very upfront about the need to do self promotion. In fact, I wrote the section: The Business of Poetry: The Art of Self-Promotion in the book The Craft & Business Of Writing: Essential Tools For Writing Success (Writers Digest Books) way back in 2008. The editors of Writers Digest Books approached me to write this section because of the success FLP has had in selling poetry books. At no time have I ever asked any of our authors to pay for advertising or pay for their book’s production costs. There is absolutely no cost to the author. I’ve just been honest for the need to let people know they have a book forthcoming.

Please forgive me if there are typos or poor grammar above. I had a stroke in 2012, and I’m not 100% any longer. However, I felt the need to comment. (No, I no longer do any editing for FLP. We have other, more skilled, editors for that. I just read the manuscripts. I’m still capable of determining work of merit.)

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Timothy Green's avatar

Disagree with your assessment here. This isn't actually how MLMs work—for it to be that, you'd have to be responsible for finding more authors, not just selling books. And FLP does select authors based on merit. Authors are always responsible for sales with a small press; they just built what's standard into a system that functions in a sustainable way and are up-front about it. They minimize their own risk and incentivize the authors for doing the work that they'd be asked to do at any press anyway, and that allows them to exist without relying on the contest model.

I do think they over-price their books, and the sustainability they've built into their model incentivizes them to publish too many authors, so there are downsides. But if you want a distributed book and don't want to spend your life burning cash on contests, they're a good thing. That's what I tell people when they ask. If you are a young person hoping to have a pipe-dream career and become a tenured Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, it's better to wait. But if you're more interested in just having the actual book in your hands and for sale, but don't want to do the work of self-publishing, it's a good deal.

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