The Author Guide will help you prepare your manuscript and ensure a smooth publication process.
Please submit applicable forms and worksheets to your editor with your manuscript.
Send this agreement to any other contributors to your book.
Use this spreadsheet to track all illustrations and log all copyrighted material in your book including necessary credit lines.
Use this form to identify the amount of genAI involvement in your work.
Send this agreement when requesting permission to use photos or art.
Send this agreement to any interviewees.
Send this agreement when quoting from or reproducing copyrighted materials.
Use this optional template to draft your manuscript. Includes formatting styles to help keep your text organized and speed up the production process once your manuscript is transmitted.
Please submit your manuscript as a single MS Word or RTF (rich text format) file. Do NOT use any desktop publishing system or other program (e.g., InDesign, MS Pages, MS Publisher, MS Excel, etc.) unless under specific instructions from your editor.
Number the pages consecutively in basic Arabic numbers (1,2,3) when you have completed your final draft. On your manuscript’s title page, go to the Insert menu, select Insert Page Numbers, and choose “Top of Page” as its position. Pages will automatically be numbered consecutively.
Please submit your manuscript as a single MS Word or RTF (rich text format) file. Do NOT use any desktop publishing system or other program (e.g., InDesign, MS Pages, MS Publisher, MS Excel, etc.) unless under specific instructions from your editor.
Number the pages consecutively in basic Arabic numbers (1,2,3) when you have completed your final draft. On your manuscript’s title page, go to the Insert menu, select Insert Page Numbers, and choose “Top of Page” as its position. Pages will automatically be numbered consecutively.
When quoting from or reproducing copyrighted materials, you must obtain permission from copyright holders if your use exceeds the boundaries of “fair use.”
Generally (but with exceptions), a sentence or two from a chapter-length prose text would be fair use, as would an extract up to 300 words from a book-length prose text.
Standard publishing agreements, including ours, specify that authors must (1) acquire all necessary permissions, (2) provide copies of granted permissions, and (3) pay fees required by the copyright holder. Therefore, we recommend that you borrow only those copyrighted materials most valuable to your work.
Detailed information regarding permissions requirements can be found in the Author Guidelines. Permissions forms can be downloaded here and here.
Recognize the stylistic drawbacks of intensively citing sources and naming their authors in your text. The writing style we prefer invites moderation in the use of source notes. Writers should limit notes to direct quotations and specific empirical findings. Opinions and accepted beliefs do not need references.
If you need additional guidance for citations, see the Author Guide or ask your acquisitions editor.
ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman prefers Chicago notes and bibliography style and Chicago author-date style. Note that the primary differences between the two styles are in the order of the elements. Please do NOT use a mixture of the two documentation styles. APA and MLA styles may also be used if consistent throughout.
Images will be printed in black and white. Please ensure that captions and any descriptive text regarding the figure do not include color descriptors.
All figures and tables should be numbered and titled and should have a reference within the text unless otherwise specified by your acquisitions editor or the managing editor.
Text boxes should have numbers, titles, and specific references in the text if they are directly related to the text. Ancillary text boxes may have titles but do not need numbers or text references.
Do not embed photos, images, or artwork directly into your manuscript file.
Use the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS), 18th edition, as your primary style guide.
Use Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (MW), 11th edition, as your primary dictionary.
(MW overrules CMS on spelling and hyphenation where they are in conflict.)
Use Garner’s Modern American Usage (Garner) as your primary reference for questions of usage not addressed in CMS. (CMS overrules Garner where they are in conflict.)
Use the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS), 17th edition, as your primary style guide.
Use Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (MW), 11th edition, as your primary dictionary.
(MW overrules CMS on spelling and hyphenation where they are in conflict.)
Use Garner’s Modern American Usage (Garner) as your primary reference for questions of usage not addressed in CMS. (CMS overrules Garner where they are in conflict.)
We are dedicated to acquiring and creating content that reflects the unique experiences and backgrounds of librarianship. We want readers, library staff, and patrons to feel empowered by the written word and reflected in the books and content that we publish. As you develop your manuscript, consider how diversity and inclusion touch your topic.
While AI can be a useful and powerful tool to assist with research and content creation, the authenticity of your author voice is irreplaceable. Readers are looking to you as the subject expert, and it’s important that your text is reliable, offers your perspective, and is well researched. AI tools may be helpful for organizing your thoughts into an outline, brainstorming ideas, tweaking your research questions, and checking for grammar and style, but they should not be used to write complete sentences, paragraphs, or chapters of your work.
Therefore, we recommend limiting the use of AI-generated or AI-assisted content in your submissions. We also require that you be transparent about the use of such content in your work. AI tools cannot be accepted or credited as an author, and you are ultimately responsible for the content that you submit, including any AI-generated content.
While legal issues relating to AI-generated images remain largely unresolved, we are unable to recommend using generative-AI tools in the creation or manipulation of images. In certain cases, we may allow generative-AI images; those cases must be confirmed and approved by your editor or the managing editor prior to publication.
Generative AI is still a developing technology, and you should be aware of the potential of bias in AI-generated content and the possibility of erroneous information being outputted. Make sure to review any text created using AI tools for accuracy and relevance, and please note that the use of AI-generated content without proper citation can be considered plagiarism.
For information on how to cite or acknowledge the use of AI tools, please see the author guide.
You may make your single chapter from an edited collection openly available with voluntary deposit in your institutional repository. You may upload your original manuscript chapter (preprint), unedited by us, immediately after publication to your open access repository/not-for-profit subject-based server, using the following statement:
This is a preprint of a chapter accepted for publication by ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman. This extract has been taken from the author’s original manuscript and has not been edited. The definitive version of this piece may be found in [Author/Editor(s), Book Title, publisher/imprint (ALA Editions or ALA Neal-Schuman), year], and can be purchased from alastore.ala.org. The author agrees not to update the preprint or replace it with the published version of the chapter.
Congratulations! Submitting your manuscript, figures and tables, author questionnaire, and necessary forms is the next step toward a published book.
Our handy Checklist will help you compile a final manuscript and any related materials.
The Author Questionnaire provides us with all necessary contact information and will help us in marketing your book. Download and submit this with your final manuscript.
Use this form to identify the amount of genAI involvement in your work. If you have any contributed pieces, please send this form to your contributors for them to complete as well.
Your manuscript and supporting materials should be submitted in electronic format to your editor. Please consult with your editor about how best to transmit.
Royalties are paid twice a year in April and October. You’ll receive a payment and statement in April for sales from September – February and in October for sales from March – August. You must reach a minimum balance of $75.00 before your royalties will be paid. You will still receive a statement showing your sales and accrued royalties even if you’re not receiving a payment.
Please note: If you are publishing an ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman book in collaboration with an ALA division or office, the compensation arrangements will be specific to that collaboration and may or may not include a royalty.
Royalties are paid by either check or direct deposit.
Before your royalty payment can be processed, we need a complete W9 with your current address and if you’d like to use direct deposit, a complete ACH Authorization form. If you haven’t already completed those, you can download the documents here:
Yes, you will still receive a statement showing your lifetime sales and $0.00 in accrued royalties even if you’re not receiving a payment.
To receive your royalty payments via direct deposit, complete this form and return it via secure fax line to 312-280-5275 or via mail to:
American Library Association
225 N. Michigan Ave.
Attn: Royalties
Suite 1300
Chicago, IL 60601
To forego your royalty payments, complete this form, and return by mail or email: [email protected]. Any waived royalties will stay in the general fund, helping ALA to further its mission: To provide leadership for the development, promotion, and improvement of library and information services and the profession of librarianship in order to enhance learning and to ensure access to information for all.
Yes, ALA will provide a 1099 for all royalties paid in the previous calendar year within the timeframe required by US law. Currently, the IRS requires 1099s to be mailed by January 31st.
Please send an email to [email protected]. Let us know as soon as possible if you change any of your contact information, and we will update our system so you can continue to receive accurate and timely correspondence from ALA.
To transfer a deceased author’s payment to another person or organization, you must provide proof that you are the executor of the deceased’s estate. This could include documents such as a will or a letter from an attorney. Please email [email protected].
Purchases of ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman products fund advocacy, awareness, and accreditation programs for library and information professionals worldwide.
ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman
American Library Association
225 N. Michigan Ave.
Suite 1300
Chicago, IL 60601
Complimentary review copies are available for journals, newsletters, or other media. All review copy requests are subject to consideration and ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman requests two tear sheets of any published review. Please submit your request via the Review Copy Request webform.
To request permission to use ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman content in a publication or to request translation rights, please email Mary Jo Bolduc. For information about other ALA publications, please read our Rights and Permissions Guidelines.
Complimentary desk copies are available for instructors who adopt an ALA Editions | ALA Neal-Schuman title for course use. Please submit your request via the LIS Desk Copy Request webform.