alright I've been looking through this gallery for maybe the past day or so, and although you have certainly improved since you first began posting, it doesn't really seem like you've bothered to take much of the advice given very seriously. If you truly wish to become a better folder, then you are going to need to be able to accept the suggestions and criticisms of other and apply them to your work.
so I suppose in a perhaps futile attempt to once again persuade you, I must present some suggestions and critiques of my own, quite a few of which have already been mentioned by others.
Stop using tissue foil. ESPECIALLY for final drafts of your models. It takes considerable skill and diligence which you have yet to show in order to make tissue foil look presentable. Otherwise it will always bring rather wrinkled models. and for the few times you should use tissue foil, use a MUCH more even distribution of glue when making it. Spray glue, as Sunburst had previously said, should work rather well.
No more mushing for getting your 'folds.' This is far more apparent on your tissue foil models and it has to stop. It may get the job done(sorta) but it looks awful and you want your models to look nice, don't you?
Take your time when folding. Make absolutely sure each fold is aligned perfectly before making the crease. Precision is a vital part of complex origami and also a vital part to make your models look nice. Some origami folders can spend hour after hour working on a single model. It isn't about how fast you do it. It's about the final result.
Be more Patient in designing. This is an important point. Looking at many of your models I can't help but see all the points where they could be improved or tweaked to get a better result. Spend more than 1 day designing something. For many folders, they spend weeks even months and sometimes years designing just one model until it has reached their desired result. Constantly try and look for ways in which you could improve your model and make many rough drafts to test these ideas
Learn to do more shaping on your models. I can barely count the number of times I saw legs on your animals that were literally just straight, unshaped flaps. Adequate shaping is a must and it is often a very important part of making a finished model look nice. I suggest going back to doing simpler models that emphasize more on the use of shaping and work on those until you become more accustomed to it.
I hope my sentiments have not fallen on deaf ears. Please take the things that I, as well as others before, have said to heart. We aren't trying to insult you, we're trying to help you improve.
And once again, I'm not trying to insult, but I would refrain from the ideal of publishing a book so soon. your models and your designs are far from perfect and you have quite a ways to improve before I'd really want to see a book of yours published.
But I don't mean to sound disheartening. You certainly show promise and you show more than enough ambition to vastly improve. But I feel like it'd be a better idea to keep that dream in mind until you've become a better folder and that dream of a book is a more realistic goal.
so once more, I hope you can take my words and learn from them as I feel you have the potential to become a great folder
...and I suppose I would be remiss if I didn't ask.... I can't help but notice that quite a few of your designs seem suspiciously similar to the designs of others that I have seen before. Your recent "bengal cat" for example, seems vaguely like you took Komatsu's tiger and just changed the head and body a little. May I ask how similar the designs are?