Hello all,
I've accepted the responsibility of reviewing a humanities monograph for a large academic publisher. So far I actually like the manuscript with a few reservations, so I will probably recommend publication with (so far) minor revisions.
Does anybody have any general advice for a first time monograph reviewer?
More specific questions might be:
Generally speaking, how lengthy should my individual responses to the publisher's rubric be? What is a helpful word count for individual prompts?
How detailed should the review be in regards to revision? I don't want to rewrite someone else's work, but as a reader I have some reactions to ordering, explanation of theory, etc.
How far should I go in researching the current market? The subject matter covers a well-trodden path and the manuscript's thesis won't rewrite the history of the genre but does propose an interesting new sub-genre.
Anything I am not taking into consideration?
Thanks in advance, WR
I tend to write up my review in a Google doc, not paying attention (during the first pass) to the press's specific questions. I prefer to give more organic feedback (which is also what I prefer to receive), although I do go back, when I'm done, and fill out the form the press sends. I know acquisitions editors need those questions answered, and I hope between my narrative response and the form, they'll get what they need.
As for length, my feedback (that I give but also typically what I receive) is usually 2 to 4 pages, single-spaced. I think reacting to "ordering, explanation of theory, etc." is quite useful, so long as you're not dictating how the author must change their work. (As a writer, I can't always predict what my readers will take away from a book, which is why those comments are useful to me.)
As for researching the current market, I'm too lazy to do the press's work for it -- I figure if they asked me to read a manuscript, it's because I already have an intuitive sense of the market (which is usually the case), and I rely on that, rather than doing much more than a Google Scholar search for recent things I might not have heard of.
Hope that's useful!
Thank you! Very helpful!