Authors across the country have paid thousands of dollars to Page Publishing only to receive delays, excuses, and missing deliverables — while the company demands even more money to finish work already paid for.
Join the Class Action Read the EvidenceWhat Is This Site?
This site exists to protect writers — aspiring and established — from being defrauded by Page Publishing. If you are considering signing with them, read every word on this page first. If they have already taken your money, you are not alone and there are options available to you.
We are building a community of affected authors and coordinating with attorneys to pursue a class action lawsuit against Page Publishing. If you have been harmed, your participation strengthens every claim.
Documented Patterns
The tactics below have been reported by multiple authors. Recognizing the pattern is the first step to protecting yourself — and building a legal case.
Authors are asked to pay thousands of dollars before any significant work begins. Once the money is collected, the leverage shifts entirely to Page Publishing.
Timelines that were supposed to be months stretch into years. Excuses are recycled, emails bounce between departments, and nothing actually gets done.
When authors push back, they are told to "check the portal" or "contact your coordinator" — but files are never actually delivered. Your own work is used as leverage.
Instead of completing the contracted work, Page Publishing pushes additional paid services. Saying no can mean your project stalls indefinitely.
After years of delays, authors are told they must pay a renewal fee or lose the project entirely — even though the original contract was never fulfilled. Paying the fee still doesn't fix the problem.
Authors are never given the editable source files or final sale-ready ebook files they were promised, preventing them from going elsewhere or correcting errors — including errors in their own author name.
Missing Deliverables
The following deliverables have been reported as unprovided or delivered only in unusable draft form, despite full payment.
A Pattern Over Time
The sequence below reflects the experience of multiple authors.
Page Publishing presents a polished sales pitch promising professional publishing services: printed books, ebook distribution, author marketing, and more — for a fixed upfront fee.
The author signs a contract and pays thousands of dollars. Initial contact is responsive and the project seems to be moving.
Weeks turn to months. Responses become slower. Each request is met with "your coordinator will be in touch." Progress is minimal.
The author is presented with add-ons and upgrades. Declining can cause the project to stall further.
The timeline has stretched beyond a year or two. Deliverables remain incomplete or unusable. Repeated follow-ups yield only deflection.
With the work still unfinished, the author is told they must pay a renewal fee or the project will be abandoned. This is extortion — payment for work already contracted and paid for.
Even after paying the renewal fee, the original deliverables are never provided. The author is left with nothing usable and no recourse through the company.
Take Action
The more authors who come forward, the stronger the case. If Page Publishing failed to deliver on its promises to you, please fill out the form below. Your information will be shared with attorneys coordinating a class action suit.
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Common Questions