Waldorf Publishing: A Watchdog Advisory

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From The Alliance of Independent Authors:

When a publisher or assisted self-publishing services enters a financial crisis, character can be put to the test. In this week’s Watchdog Advisory, John Doppler looks at Waldorf Publishing.

When faced with financial crisis, some rise to the challenge. They put contingency plans into action, return rights to authors, pay owed royalties from accounts that were wisely kept separate from the company’s operating funds. They face their challenges head on, they frankly and honestly confront their mistakes, and sometimes, they recover: a triumphant phoenix rising from the ashes to start anew.

Others do not acquit themselves as nobly.

Meet Waldorf Publishing, a company that appears intent on self-immolation. Waldorf and its owner, Barbara Terry, have raised alarms before. The Texas-based vanity press and its various spinoffs have been in the spotlight for their apparent ignorance of copyright, poor quality, and allegations of questionable accounting. And in typical fashion for bad operators, Ms. Terry responded to at least one of those reports by threatening a lawsuit. (I will not be posting links to those threats, as they appear on a page doxxing and harassing a consumer advocate.)

More recently, a storage unit of Waldorf authors’ books was offered up for sale by a liquidator who purchased them at auction. The storage unit went up for auction when the renter defaulted on payments. (If you are a Waldorf client who has purchased books from the company, but those books never materialized, the liquidator can be reached at cmbOutlet@yahoo.com.)

Waldorf Publishing has recently been trying to extract additional concessions from its authors. ALLi’s Watchdog Desk has received complaints from authors who attempted to confirm or avail themselves of the termination clause in their contracts, only to have Waldorf Publishing try to extract more money and additional legal concessions.

One of the more egregious examples of the latter is an amateurish, legally dubious clause asserting that “any willful slander against Waldorf Publishing” (presumably meaning any complaint about shabby treatment) will be punished by Waldorf Publishing seizing all rights to the author’s books.

It seems obvious that this tacked-on clause never passed under an attorney’s nose, as, among other things, it confuses slander and libel. Regardless of its likely unenforceability, the sheer audacity of this ploy to bully authors into silence is shocking.

. . . .

Based on its belligerence alone, Waldorf Publishing would have earned our Caution rating. In combination with its litigious threats, its alleged failure to pay its bills, and its attempts to squeeze money from authors as they head for the door, Waldorf Publishing lands in our most severe rating category, the Watchdog Advisory.

Link to the rest at The Alliance of Independent Authors (February 2021) and thanks to SJ for the tip.

PG warned about Waldorf Publishing in January, 2021, excerpting from a much longer Writer Beware post, including the following caution:

Since vanity publishers never identify themselves as such, one way to check an unknown publisher is to search for the publisher’s name on Amazon’s books section. If you find any books listed, check on the sales rank of those books. It will be a very, very large number, reflecting sales to the author’s mother.

Ask the manager (of a physical bookstore) whether he/she has ever purchased any books from the vanity press. If the manager says something like, “Who?” you’ll also have valuable information.

As a general proposition, always check out any entity you may consider doing business with online before you even contact them, let alone sign a contract. With a publisher you haven’t heard of, hit the publisher’s website and contact several of the authors of the publisher’s books to see what they feel about their experiences.

Spend thirty minutes on Writer Beware to see if your potential publisher or anyone mentioned in the potential publisher’s website is mentioned there.

Finally, don’t pay any publisher money to publish your book. If you want to publish your book, Amazon is happy to do it at no charge.