tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post256396233233907269..comments2024-03-18T09:09:59.625-04:00Comments on Janet Reid, Literary Agent: Question: About that self-publishing line yesterdayJanet Reidhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00615380335938685231noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-3103221583701372532014-01-07T23:40:31.218-05:002014-01-07T23:40:31.218-05:00My experience reflects that. I've marketed the...My experience reflects that. I've marketed the first in a series of Kindle mysteries for .99 cents and the other three for 2.99 each and collectively they've sold about 12,000 copies, which is a good second income but not a full-time job, unfortunately. Still, people seem to love the character, and the unexplored market (I don't self-market or promote well at all) is quite large, so it's quite worth the time I put in for potentially several years of health royalties.L.H. Thomsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15133986995578310909noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-71937818317452482862013-12-08T03:46:22.756-05:002013-12-08T03:46:22.756-05:00I've noticed in self published books, that so ...I've noticed in self published books, that so many are serialized and they are giving away the first then hooking you on the remaining books in the series.<br /><br />I know Hugh Howley did quite well, but then had K. Nelson's agency tackle the rights. (interesting outcome) It's been optioned for film now...all you need is a silo in the midwest for filming so budget shouldn't be high.<br /><br />But I think an Agent is required if your book is really well written and you want to get it to as many people as possible. Although self-publishing is a lot more legitimate than 15 years ago, a...good... literary agent knows whats required in this day and age. Bonnie Shaljean's post was a good example.french sojournhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14262858704848580714noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-42125372570607643352013-12-07T18:08:30.625-05:002013-12-07T18:08:30.625-05:00@Bonnie...
Irony is my middle name. (My parents h...@Bonnie...<br /><br />Irony is my middle name. (My parents had a warped sense of humor.)Michael Seesehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03694187657718931214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-83590843570591848462013-12-07T15:44:01.257-05:002013-12-07T15:44:01.257-05:00[Me again] Inspired by two of the comments in your...[Me again] Inspired by two of the comments in your previous blog post* - what about Kitty's suggestion (a writing contest) based on Michael Seese's hilarious message? <br /><br />I keep missing out on these because of time commitments out in the big bad Real World. But there's a bit of a lull coming up… and the weather outside (at least here) is sooooo dreary… perfect for sitting by the fireside drinking a hot port and trying to wrestle with incongruous word combinations… <br /><br />* <br /><i>Kitty said... I think this calls for a writing contest.<br /><br />Michael Seese said... "Even if this was the best book in the world, what am I supposed to do? Send up smoke signals?"<br /><br />Pffft! Well, YOU'RE supposed to Google him, find his website, go there, and scour it for any contact info.<br /><br />I swear, you agents have gotten so lazy lately.</i>Bonnie Shaljeanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13067442140631504611noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-53067244627596236132013-12-07T13:48:26.883-05:002013-12-07T13:48:26.883-05:00Read what the hugely-successful, million-selling w...Read what the hugely-successful, million-selling writer Amanda Hocking has to say on the subject. She made a fortune from her self-published book. And guess what? The next time around she signed with a traditional publisher.<br /><br />From The Guardian*: <br /><br />Hocking's new-found stature as self-publishing vanguardista is not something she welcomes… <br /><br />What about the hours and hours that she's spent since April 2010 dealing with technical glitches on Kindle, creating her own book covers, editing her own copy, writing a blog, going on Twitter and Facebook to spread the word, responding to emails and tweets from her army of readers? Just the editing process alone has been a source of deep frustration, because although she has employed own freelance editors and invited her readers to alert her to spelling and grammatical errors, she thinks her ebooks are riddled with mistakes. <br /><br />"It drove me nuts, because I tried really hard to get things right and I just couldn't. It's exhausting, and hard to do. And it starts to wear on you emotionally. I know that sounds weird and whiny, but it's true."<br /><br />In the end, Hocking became so burned out by the stress of solo publishing that she turned for help to the same traditional book world that previously rejected her and which she was seen as attacking. <br /><br />* www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jan/12/amanda-hocking-self-publishing<br /><br /><br />And on her own blog, in an entry headed "Some Things That Need to Be Said", Amanda wrote:<br /><br />This is literally years of work you're seeing. And hours and hours of work each day. The amount of time and energy I put into marketing is exhausting. I am continuously overwhelmed by the amount of work I have to do that isn't writing a book. I hardly have time to write anymore, which sucks and terrifies me.<br /><br />There is so much stress in doing it all yourself. The editing is never good enough. And finding an editor isn't as easy everyone thinks. People thinking an editor is just having someone read through it a few times, checking for basic grammar and spelling, and while that is part of it, it's also much larger than that. It's helping tighten up sentences, watching repeated phrases, helping with flow, etc. And it is really, really hard (or at least, it has been for me) to find an editor that can do all that. My books have all been edited - several times, by dozens of people with varying backgrounds - and people still find errors.<br /><br />Here's another thing I don't understand: The way people keep throwing my name around and saying publishers are "terrified" of me and that I really showed them.<br /><br />First of all, no publisher is afraid of me. That's just silly. I'm one girl who wrote a couple books that are selling well. That doesn't scare them - they just want to be a part of it, the same way they want to be a part of any best seller.<br /><br />Saying traditional publishing is dead right now is like declaring yourself the winner in the sixth inning of a baseball game when you have 2 runs and the other team has 8, just because you scored all your runs this inning and they haven't scored any since the first. <br /><br />And just so we're clear - ebooks make up at best 20% of the market. Print books make up the other 80%. Traditional publishers still control the largest part of the market, and they will - for a long time, maybe forever. Bonnie Shaljeanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13067442140631504611noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-84472691426742716792013-12-07T13:29:36.887-05:002013-12-07T13:29:36.887-05:00I eventually self-published my first book because ...I eventually self-published my first book because I had an agent a few years ago who was just starting out and it turns out he did a lot better with non-fiction than fiction.<br /><br />We parted company in a friendly manner, but he'd already submitted unsuccessfully to a lot of major houses, and I couldn't see another agent wanting a book that was "used."<br /><br />That's enough of a hurdle by itself, but the book is also a middle grade novel clocking in at 146 kilowords. Not an easy sell anyway.<br /><br />So I really had nothing to lose by self-publishing. I had the software and skills to do a reasonably professional job, and it didn't cost me a nickel.<br /><br />As I see it, if you've got a self-published book with the characteristics that agents would want (a lot of sales and decent market presence topping the list), agents and publishers will come looking for you.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-55709847685298404672013-12-07T11:18:22.296-05:002013-12-07T11:18:22.296-05:00Thank you for this post. Overall, it is very helpf...Thank you for this post. Overall, it is very helpful in clarifying the issue of so-called self-publishing. Would it not be more accurate to say self-printing? Item number 3 really hit me. If you have sold 20,000 copies of a self-p book, who is left to buy it? How would you identify who was left?<br /><br />Let's say a writer did self-p a book, got poor results, and gave up on it. Then the writer turns out a second polished, ready-to-go manuscript. In the query letter, should the writer mention the self-pubbed book?Lancehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17335923263777449916noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-63174731549503895362013-12-07T09:25:34.035-05:002013-12-07T09:25:34.035-05:00I recently saw something in GalleyCat that mention...I recently saw something in GalleyCat that mentioned the growth in self publishing. <br /><br />"The amount of self-published book titles available in the marketplace went up 59% between 2011 and 2012, according to Bowker’s latest self-pubishing report."<br /><br />Something like 390,000 titles. Wow. Anyway, I've not considered self pub'ing for several reasons. Mainly, it would seem almost an insurmountable task to bring attention to any one individual book against the gazillion others out there. It's been done - but maybe those individuals have been really lucky in writing the right book at the right time, or really smart, or had the perseverance to keep on for who knows how long, even against an ever increasing number of new titles.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com