These scammers don’t look like the old‑school “pay us $5,000 to publish your book” schemes. They’re more sophisticated now. They impersonate:
- Editors
- Literary agents
- Publishing houses
- Journalists from major outlets
- “Acquisitions teams”
- Reviewers or book scouts
They use real names of real professionals—but attach them to fake domains, throwaway email addresses, or clone websites designed to fool authors who are just trying to get their work out there.
They know exactly what writers dream of, and they weaponize it.
What Happened to Me Recently
I’ll share this because it’s a perfect example of how convincing these scams can look.
Not long ago, someone contacted me claiming to be an editor. She spoke confidently, used industry language, and acted like she had discovered my work and wanted to help elevate it. She even claimed she had a connection to a literary agent in New York and could “introduce” me.
Then she escalated it: she said she had a contact at The New York Times who was supposedly interested in my story.
Sounds flattering, right? Except none of it was real.
The email domain was wrong. The “agent” didn’t exist. The “editor” wasn’t who she claimed to be. And the supposed New York Times connection was pure fiction.
This is exactly how scammers operate — they build a fantasy around your career and hope you’ll follow them far enough to hand over money, personal information, or access.
I didn’t fall for it, but I could see how easily someone else might.
Red Flags Every Writer Should Know
If someone contacts you claiming to be a professional, check for these signs:
- Weird email domains (.site, .xyz, .co.site, Gmail, Outlook, etc.)
- Pressure to act quickly
- Promises that sound too good to be true
- No official website or mismatched URLs
- Asking for money upfront
- Claiming they “found” your book and want to represent you immediately
- Refusing to use official communication channels
Real professionals don’t cold‑email authors with grand promises. Real agents don’t charge reading fees. Real editors don’t send you to “their friend” who magically works at a major newspaper.
Protect Yourself
Here’s what you can do to stay safe:
- Verify the domain — real companies use real websites.
- Check the staff list on the official publisher or agency site.
- Search the person’s name + "scam."
- Ask other authors—the writing community is great at spotting fakes.
- Trust your instincts — if something feels off, it probably is.
And most importantly: Never engage with the scammer. If you need to verify, contact the real company directly through their official site.
Why I’m Sharing This
Writers are vulnerable because we care deeply about our work. We want opportunities. We want to grow. And scammers know that.
If my experience can help even one writer avoid being manipulated, then it’s worth talking about.
Stay sharp. Stay skeptical. And remember: the real professionals don’t need to trick you to work with you.