Using reference books for free handbook
I am considering to write a handbook on a certain subject. I will use concepts and methods used in other books to write this.
So, nearly 80% content will come from other books which are bestsellers in this field. I will just tweak the content to explain concepts in more understandable form.
I will make paperback and ebook available for free.
So my question is should I ask permission from publications I am referencing this book from.
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/27894. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
2 answers
Standard disclaimer, I am not a lawyer. Having said that, I think there is a difference between reworking an idea that is pretty well known in the subject area (that is, if you pick up five books on astrology and four of them will at least mention the idea) versus reworking something that one particular author discussed that might be their innovation. If it is a generally known concept that you are explaining better, you are probably fine. If you are explaining that one author's special theory, I think you have to be a lot more careful. Give credit where credit is due, something like "as so-and-so explained in the-book-name..." With references, you won't run as much of a risk of unintentionally plagiarizing and may be sending some additional sales their way.
Also, I'm hoping that you are not only re-working material from elsewhere, but including your own innovations and insight -- value added.
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/28000. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
0 comment threads
There is no copyright on ideas. You can retell the ideas from other books freely, as long as you are actually creating new words to describe those ideas from scratch.
If you are taking chunks of text from other books and editing them for clarity, on the other hand, you would need permission, and you almost certainly won't be granted it.
0 comment threads