ChatterBank20 mins ago
Where do I start?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The more usual way of getting published is to get yourself a literary agent. You will need to convince them that your worth having on their books! Some payment will probably be involved.
'The Writers And Artsists Yearbook' is your obvious first port of call - available from bookshops and libraries.
Quote from the UK Patent Office:
There is no official register for copyright. It is an unregistered right (unlike patents, registered designs or trade marks). So, there is no official action to take, (no application to make, forms to fill in or fees to pay).
Copyright comes into effect immediately, as soon as something that can be protected is created and "fixed" in some way, eg on paper, on film, via sound recording, as an electronic record on the internet, etc.
It is a good idea for you to mark your copyright work with the copyright symbol � followed by your name and the date, to warn others against copying it, but it is not legally necessary in the UK.
Going to an agent in the first instance would be best. Some will accept unsolicited manuscripts or sample pages, others you will need to write an intial query letter explaining what you've got. The Writers & Artists Yearbook has a full list of agents and what sort of work/authors they represent.
There are guidelines on how to present manuscripts for submission, and they differ from agent to agent and from publisher to publisher. Again, W&AYB is a useful source of information on this, as well as individual publishers' websites.
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Arts-and-Literature/Question216288.html and http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Arts-and-Literature/Question214910.html were a couple of previous questions along the same lines which have a bit more info on them.
Good luck with the book!