How To Read An E-Book: Embracing Your Inner Techno-Dweeb

This post, by author Cheri Lasota, originally appeared on her site on 9/8/11 and is reprinted here in its entirety with her permission.

Feeling over­whelmed by the tech­no­log­i­cal rev­o­lu­tion tak­ing place in the pub­lish­ing world right now? Wish you could make sense of the e-​​reader choices out there and how they com­pare? This is your one-​​stop shop for a crash course in choos­ing an e-​​reader as well as some tuto­ri­als on how to use them.

 

Also note that the file for­mat for each reader is listed below its descrip­tion in this post. Something most peo­ple are not aware of is how easy it is to con­vert e-​​book files after they are pur­chased, mak­ing them read­able on any device or app no mat­ter what they were orig­i­nally pur­chased for. Anyone who owns an e-​​reader or reads e-​​books really needs to down­load the free soft­ware cal­i­bre. Calibre is an e-​​book man­ag­ment plat­form that allows users to get about twice as much enjoy­ment from their e-​​reading expe­ri­ence. To see what I mean, visit their about page and check it out!

 

Kindle

I’ve owned a Kindle 2 for a cou­ple years. I love it.

My pros

  • Effortless to down­load e-​​books using its Whispersync technology.
  • I hear you can lis­ten to your own mp3 music files (if you set that up in the Experimental sec­tion of the Kindle set­tings. I’ve not tried it yet, but appar­ently it’s pretty cool.
  • I love the audio fea­ture of Kindle. I often plug my hands­free head­phones into my Kindle and lis­ten to my e-​​books on long road trips. Great for me, as I’m usu­ally to busy to read oth­er­wise these days.
  • I can read my Kindle books any­where. I can start read­ing on my Kindle device, effort­lessly pick up where I left off on my Kindle for iPhone app, then switch over to my Kindle for Mac or PC and not miss a beat. Awesome!
  • I can access the biggest book­store in the world and in sixty sec­onds down­load any book I want.

My cons

  •  A lit­tle slow on the page turn­ing but not bad.
  • No capa­bil­ity for read­ing enhanced e-​​books (audio/​video). This is a real bum­mer for me, since I’m excited about this up and com­ing tech­no­log­i­cal advance in e-​​publishing. It’s the main rea­son I am look­ing to buy a NookColor next, so I have that capability.
  • Clunky, slow access to the Internet. I don’t even use this device to access the Internet because it is so slow. I believe this slow con­nec­tiv­ity is much improved in the Kindle 3.

Helpful Links

You can down­load Kindle books to your Droid, iPod, iPad, iPhone, Blackberry, Android tablet, or desk­top com­puter (vir­tu­ally any device out there that has a screen). Here are some quick links to unlock this potential.

Here’s an excel­lent tuto­r­ial on how to make the most of your Kindle:
Here are some cool tips and tricks on Kindle 3.
Wow. I just stum­bled on this arti­cle pub­lished yes­ter­day. Ooh, this Amazon Tablet is look­ing bet­ter than a NookColor or iPad! Might have to spring for one… http:// ​live​.drjays​.com/​i​n​d​e​x​.​p​h​p​/​2​0​1​1​/​0​9​/​0​7​/​5​-​r​e​a​ s​o​n​s​-​t​h​e​-​n​e​w​-​a​m​a​z​o​n​-​k​i​n​d​l​e​-​t​a​b​l​e​t​-​i​s​ -​a​-​v​e​r​y​-​r​e​a​l​-​t​h​r​e​a​t​-​t​o​-​t​h​e​-​a​p​p​l​e​-​i​p​ ad/. And here’s some more info on what’s com­ing from Amazon: http://​www​.squidoo​.com/​a​m​a​z​o​n​t​a​b​let. Looks like the 7-​​inch tablet will start ship­ping October 2011.
[File for­mat: MOBI]

iPad/​iPhone/​iPod Touch

I find read­ing books on my iPhone (and the iPad, when I get a chance to peek at one) to be the most user-​​friendly, intu­itive and aes­thet­i­cally pleas­ing read of all my e-​​reading apps/​devices. The NookColor might be on par, but I’d need a full on com­par­i­son to decide for sure. I love the design of the inter­face of iBooks. Even on the tiny iPhone screen, it’s a plea­sure to read on. Of the few enhanced ebooks I’ve had a look at on iPad, they are spec­tac­u­larly designed and look beau­ti­ful on the device. Wow.

Helpful Links

[File for­mat: EPUB]

Nook

I’ve briefly played with NookTouch and NookColor. Both are well-​​designed and easy to read and use. I think the NookColor is over-​​priced, but I still want one because I want bet­ter access to enhanced, inter­ac­tive e-​​books. =) One of the coolest things about Nook? You can lend your Nook books to friends or fam­ily for a time period. Awesome, huh?

Helpful Links

[File for­mat: EPUB]

Kobo

Kobo is the soon-​​to-​​be dis­solved Borders Books’ answer to Barnes and Noble’s Nook E-​​reader. While Borders might be col­laps­ing, the Kobo E-​​reader will live on. If you own a Kobo or are think­ing about buy­ing one, you might be won­der­ing how safe your Kobo library col­lec­tion might be with Borders going bye-​​bye. Well, Kobo is set up dif­fer­ently than other E-​​readers. Borders Books part­nered with the inde­pen­dently owned ebook com­pany, so Kobobooks​.com will remain finan­cially sta­ble through­out Borders Books’ down­fall and beyond.

Note: I’ve explored a Kobo device once and don’t cur­rently have one avail­able to report more in-​​depth on. But I will say that I found the key­board incred­i­bly clunky to use.

Helpful Links

[File for­mat: EPUB]

 

E-​​Book and E-​​Reader Predictions

We’ll have to move closer and closer to a stan­dard in e-​​book formatting/​coding.

Current E-​​readers are woe­fully behind the Web on being able to dis­play even the most sim­plest of design choices–specialty fonts, wid­ows and orphans, videos, audio, etc. In the next five years, I see e-​​book design gain­ing the most growth. The fan­ci­est e-​​reader in the world doesn’t mat­ter a tiff if it can’t han­dle the sim­plest of html cod­ing. If you’ve never had to put an e-​​book on a reader, you might not real­ize that it requires a great deal of xhtml/​css cod­ing in order to get the design how you want it. Even then, a mul­ti­tude of com­pro­mises must be made and workarounds to major for­mat­ting issues must be sought out.

Current users of these var­i­ous e-​​readers often com­plain about the poor design in the e-​​books they are down­load­ing. Having gone through the design phase myself on iPad and Kindle, here’s what I’ve discovered:

  • Every e-​​reader has cod­ing bugs
  • Each e-​​reader has par­tic­u­lar for­mat­ting quirks, and each requires it’s own ver­sion of a book file to com­pen­sate for these quirks.
  • Traditional, small, and indie pub­lish­ers alike must over­come steep learn­ing curves, as most of us didn’t go to school for this sort of thing.
All in all, I’m pas­sion­ate about e-​​books and I see a vast poten­tial in their cur­rent and future use for busi­ness, edu­ca­tional, and plea­sure read­ing. Right now, I’m going to keep learn­ing how to bet­ter my read­ers’ expe­ri­ence in terms of the read­abil­ity, design, and inter­ac­tiv­ity of my novel. This is fun!

 

 

BTB #263: Google Book Settlement: Good Riddance or Lost Opportunity?

This podcast and associated transcript originally appeared on the Copyright Clearance Center‘s Beyond the Bookcast site on 12/4/11 and are provided here in their entirety with that site’s permission.

In March, Judge Denny Chin rejected the proposed settlement between Google and book publishers and authors over Google’s book scanning and book search programs. At the recent “Copyright & Technology” conference, a panel of legal experts considered the unanswered questions that decision left behind.

Presenting their views were James Grimmelmann of New York Law School; Edward Rosenthal, whose firms represents the Authors Guild in their suit against the HathiTrust; attorney Mary Rasenberger, who from 2002-2008 served in the Copyright Office and the Office of Strategic Initiatives of the Library of Congress, and as director for the National Digital Preservation Program; and Frederic Haber, general counsel, Copyright Clearance Center. CCC’s Chris Kenneally moderated.

 

 

About Writing (Introduction)

Today we’re happy to promote this post from the Publetariat member blog of Michael LaRocca to the front page.

Here’s everything I know about improving your writing, publishing it electronically and in print, and promoting it after the sale.

Two questions you should ask:
1. What will it cost me?
2. What does this Michael LaRocca guy know about it?

Answer #1 — It won’t cost you a thing. The single most important bit of advice I can give you, and I say it often, is don’t pay for publication.

My successes have come from investing time. Some of it was well spent, but most of it was wasted. It costs me nothing to share what I’ve learned. It costs you nothing to read it except some of your time.

Answer #2 — “Michael LaRocca has been researching the publishing field for over 10 years.”

This quote from Authors Wordsmith was a kind way of saying I’ve received hundreds of rejections. Also, my “research” required 20 years.

But in my “breakout” year (2000), I finished writing four books and scheduled them all for publication in 2001. I also began editing for one of my publishers, a job I’ve been enjoying ever since.

After my first book was published, both my publishers closed. Two weeks and three publishers later, I was back on track.

See how much faster it was the second time around? That’s because I learned a lot.

Also, I found more editing jobs. That’s what I do when I’m not writing, doing legal transcription, or doing English consulting work in Thailand (my new home). But the thing is, if I’d become an editor before learning how to write, I’d have stunk.

I’ll tell you what’s missing from this monologue. What to write about, where I get my ideas from, stuff like that. Maybe I don’t answer this question because I think you should do it your way, not mine. Or maybe because I don’t know how I do it. Or maybe both. Once you’ve done your writing, this essay should help you with the other stuff involved in being a writer. Writing involves wearing at least four different hats. Writer, editor, publication seeker, post-sale self-promoter.

Here’s what I can tell you about my writing.

Sometimes an idea just comes to me out of nowhere and refuses to leave me alone until I write about it. So, I do.

And, whenever I read a book that really fires me up, I think, “I wish I could write like that.” So, I just keep trying. I’ll never write THE best, but I’ll always write MY best. And get better every time. That’s the “secret” of the writing “business,” same as any other business. Always deliver the goods.

I read voraciously, a habit I recommend to any author who doesn’t already have it. You’ll subconsciously pick up on what does and doesn’t work. Characterization, dialogue, pacing, plot, story, setting, description, etc. But more importantly, someone who doesn’t enjoy reading will never write something that someone else will enjoy reading.

I don’t write “for the market.” I know I can’t, so I just write for me and then try to find readers who like what I like. I’m not trying to whip up the next bestseller and get rich. Not that I’d complain. But I have to write what’s in my heart, then find a market later. It makes marketing a challenge at times, but I wouldn’t have it any other way.

When you write, be a dreamer. Go nuts. Know that you’re writing pure gold. That fire is why we write.

An author I greatly admire, Kurt Vonnegut, sweated out each individual sentence. He wrote it, rewrote it, and didn’t leave it alone until it was perfect. Then he wrote the next sentence the same way, etc., and when he reached the end of the book, it was done.

But I doubt most of us write like that. I don’t. I let it fly as fast as my fingers can move across the paper or keyboard, rushing to capture my ideas before they get away. Later, I change and shuffle and slice.

James Michener writes his last sentence first, then has his goal before him as he writes his way to it.

Then there’s me. No outline whatsoever. I create characters and conflict, spending weeks and months on that task, until the first chapter leaves me wondering “How will this end?” Then my characters take over, and I’m as surprised as the reader when I finish my story.

Some authors set aside a certain number of hours every day for writing, or a certain number of words. In short, a writing schedule.

Then there’s me. No writing for three or six months, then a flurry of activity where I forget to eat, sleep, bathe, change the cat’s litter… I’m a walking stereotype. To assuage the guilt, I tell myself that my unconscious is hard at work. As Hemingway would say, long periods of thinking and short periods of writing.

I’ve shown you the extremes in writing styles. I think most authors fall in the middle somewhere. But my point is, find out what works for you. You can read about how other writers do it, and if that works for you, great. But in the end, find your own way. That’s what writers do.

Just don’t do it halfway.

If you’re doing what I do, writing a story that entertains and moves you, you’ll find readers who share your tastes. For some of us that means a niche market and for others it means regular appearances on the bestseller list.

Writing is a calling, but publishing is a business. Remember that AFTER you’ve written your manuscript. Not during.

I’ve told you how I write. For me.

Editing

The next step is self-editing. Fixing the mistakes I made in my rush to write it before my Muse took a holiday. Several rewrites. Running through it repeatedly with a fine-toothed comb and eliminating clichés like “fine-toothed comb.”

Then what?

There are stories that get rejected because the potential publisher hates them, or feels they won’t sell (as if he knows), but more are shot down for other reasons. Stilted dialogue. Boring descriptions. Weak characters. Underdeveloped story. Unbelievable or inconsistent plot. Sloppy writing.

That’s what you have to fix.

I started by using free online creative writing workshops. What I needed most was input from strangers. After all, once you’re published, your readers will be strangers. Every publisher or agent you submit to will be a stranger. What will they think? I always get too close to my writing to answer that. So do you.

Whenever I got some advice, I considered it. Some I just threw out as wrong, or because I couldn’t make the changes without abandoning part of what made the story special to me. Some I embraced. But the point is, I decided. It’s my writing. My name on the spine, not yours, and I want people reading it centuries after I die. Aim high.

After a time, I didn’t feel the need for the workshops anymore. I’m fortunate enough to have a wife whose advice I will always treasure, and after a while that was all I needed. But early on, it would’ve been unfair to ask her to read my drivel. (I did anyway, but she married me in spite of it.)

Your goal when you self-edit is to get your book as close to “ready to read” as you possibly can. Do not be lazy and do not rush. You want your editor to find what you overlooked, not what you didn’t know about, and you want it to be easy for him/her. EASY! Easy to edit, easy to read. It’s a novel, not a blog.

Your story is your story. You write it from your heart, and when it looks like something you’d enjoy reading, you set out to find a publisher who shares your tastes. What you don’t want is for that first reader to lose sight of what makes your story special because you’ve bogged it down with silly mistakes.

Authors don’t pay to be published. They are paid for publication. Always. It’s just that simple. Publishers are paid by readers, not authors. That’s why they help you find those readers.

Your publisher should also give you some free editing. But there’s a limit to how much editing you can get without paying for it. Do you need more than that? I don’t know because I’ve never read your writing. But if you evaluate it honestly, I think you’ll know the answer.

As an editor, I’ve worked with some authors who simply couldn’t self-edit. Non-native English speakers, diagnosed dyslexics, blind authors, guys who slept through English class, whatever. To them, paying for editing was an option. This isn’t paying for publication. This is paying for a service, training. Just like paying to take a Creative Writing class at the local community college.

By the way, I don’t believe creativity can be taught. Writing, certainly. I took a Creative Writing class in high school, free, and treasure what I can remember of the experience. (It’s been a while.) But I already had the creativity, or else it would’ve been a waste of the teacher’s time and mine. (Later I taught Creative Writing in China. We call this irony.)

If you hire an editor worthy of the name, you should learn from that editor how to self-edit in the future. In my case it took two tries, because my first “editor” was a rip-off artist charging over ten times market value for incomplete advice.

That editor, incidentally, is named Edit Ink, and they’re listed on many “scam warning” sites. They take kickbacks from every fake agent who sends them a client. Avoid such places at all costs, and I will stress the word “costs.” Ouch!

If you choose to hire an editor, check price and reputation. For a ballpark figure, I charge a penny a word. Consider that you might never make enough selling your books to get back what you pay that editor. Do you care? That’s your decision.

Your first, most important step on the road to publication is to make your writing the best it can be.

Publication

My goal is to be published in both mediums, ebook and print. There are some readers who prefer ebooks, and some who prefer print books. The latter group is larger, but those publishers are harder to sell your writing to. I want to be published in both mediums, because I want all the readers I can get.

Before you epublish, check the contract to be sure you can publish the EDITED work in print later. I’m aware of only one e-publisher whose contract specified “no,” but my information on this is very much out of date.

Also, you might want to make sure your targeted print publisher will accept something that’s been previously published electronically. That’s a nasty little change that’s taken place over the past few years. Will I have to choose between the “big publishers” and epublication? I shouldn’t be forced to, but it’s possible. Check on this with someone more knowledgeable than I am.

If you know your book just plain won’t ever make it into traditional print, print-on-demand (POD) is an option. Some of my books fall into this category. The best epublishers will simultaneously publish your work electronically and in POD format, at no cost to you.

A lot of authors swear by self-publication, but the prospect just plain scares me. All that promo, all that self-editing, maybe driving around the countryside with a back seat full of books. I’m a writer, not a salesman. Maybe you’re different.

(And did I mention that I live in Thailand? And don’t have a car?)

I self-published once, in the pre-POD days. Mom handled the sales. I had fun and broke even. With POD, at least it’s easier (and probably cheaper) to self-publish than it was in 1989, because you’ll never get stuck with a large unsold inventory.

POD setup fees can range anywhere from US$100 to well over $1000. Don’t pay the higher price! Price shop. Also, remember that POD places publish any author who pays, giving them a real credibility problem with some reviewers and readers, and that they do no editing or marketing.

Closing Thoughts

Here’s something you’ve heard before. When your manuscript is rejected — and it will be — remember that you aren’t being rejected. Your manuscript is.

Did you ever hang up the phone on a telemarketer, delete spam, or close the door in the face of a salesman? Of course, and yet that salesman just moves on to the next potential customer. He knows you’re rejecting his product, not him.

Okay, in my case I’m rejecting both, but I’d never do that to an author. Neither will a publisher or an agent. All authors tell other authors not to take rejection personally, and yet we all do. Consider it a target to shoot for, then. Just keep submitting, and just keep writing.

The best way to cope with waiting times is to “submit and forget,” writing or editing other stuff while the time passes.

And finally, feel free to send an e-mail to me anytime. michaeledits@michaeledits.com. I’ll gladly share what I know with you, and it won’t cost you a cent.

I would wish you luck in your publishing endeavors, but I know there’s no luck involved. It’s all skill and diligence.

Congratulations on completing the course! No ceremonies, no degrees, and no diplomas. But on the bright side, no student loan to repay.

 

 

4 Ways to Move Beyond Discouragement in Your Author Career

This post, by Matthew Ashdown, originally appeared as a guest post on Writer’s Fun Zone on 12/2/11.

Welcome to Artist Entrepreneur Fridays, where we focus having a successful author career from the business and strategic perspectives. This week I have another guest post from Matthew Ashdown, Book Promotion Specialist with FriesenPress. FriesenPress is a fee-for-service self-publisher. Matthew offers 4 useful tools that we can use to overcome being discouraged during our author career. Read on!

 ^*^

Many self-published authors will move full steam ahead on their marketing path in the first three months after their book is released, with their passion and enthusiasm stoking the fires of their engine. But after this initial period they inevitably start to find themselves slowing down, not selling as much, and it is here that many become discouraged. This is common once we have exhausted our inner circle’s support, and the honeymoon period is over. But how we meet discouraging events is critical in our willingness to go on.

Three years ago, I had a publishing contract with a major publishing company. I was set for book tours for the next couple of years, while my business partner and I were set to speak in front of a large audience of 10,000 people alongside one of our icons. It all came crashing down, though, just before we were set to go to print, and our contract was retracted by the publisher. Our dream seemed to slip away from our grasp. The next two years were a great challenge, but in time I was able to realize that while it lasted, that opportunity was probably one of the greatest gifts in my life. This gift helped me remember what really makes me happy and while it also brought me to writing, which truly means something to me.

In this post, I want to share how you can move beyond the discouragement that comes along the path to success.

These are things that kept me going when the future seemed bleak and little was happening.

“Develop success from failures. Discouragement and failure are two of the surest stepping stones to success.” –Dale Carnegie

1) Just because you have a low number of retweets or comments does not mean that people are not reading your blog.

 

Read the rest of the post on Writer’s Fun Zone.

But Why Would You… Insult Writers Like This?

This post, by Dean Wesley Smith, originally appeared on his site on 11/29/11.

 

A few weeks back, while out of town, I got a form letter from a traditional publisher in my SASE. Normal for writers, right? I get form letters all the time and they honestly don’t bother me.

Except I mailed the novel to that editor exactly TWO YEARS ago.

 

Who the hell do these editors think we are out here anyway?  Wow, talk about insulting to all writers. I was stunned. Did the idiot editor really think I still cared or was tracking my little submission to her after TWO YEARS?

Flash to editors: Treat this like a business, like writers are in business and your partners. I can see no reason why you would ever insult a writer like that by assuming we still cared while you screwed around for two years. You really are not the centers of the universe.

Two Years Ago… In Another Age of Publishing

Let me tell you the fun story of how this submission to this stupid editor came about in the first place. You might have guessed…from another challenge.

Starting on November 1st, 2009, a friend of mine and I decided to do a challenge and see how many novels we could get in the mail to publishers. (Remember, this was before the world actually changed for most of us. Traditional publishing was still the only real choice just two short years ago, even though Konrath and others were starting to shout about the coming new world.)

I put a new book in the mail every Monday morning to five different editors for three full months.

Thirteen different novels in thirteen weeks. (Then I had to stop and actually write another novel under contract.)

Now, before you scream, hold on and let me explain.

I didn’t write thirteen books. I just wrote the first fifty-or-so pages of each book, did a five-to-ten page synopsis of the entire novel, did a cover letter, and mailed the package with a #10 SASE. Easy to do in one week, actually. Like writing a short story per week, only with a ton more plotting. (grin)

It was great fun and I came up with some books I still want to write. Oh, and yeah, I sold two of the books and almost sold a third, but the sales force of the company couldn’t figure out how to market it. Go figure. Stunning what mailing books to editors can do for you.

Just stunning.

And can you imagine me doing that through an agent? (snort…choking with laughter at my own joke…sorry)

Here is what I did on the mailing side.

— Eight of the books were under three different and brand new pen names, but in every cover letter I told the editor who I was and gave my credentials.

— Two of the books were to specific editors for certain projects and those I sold, both as ghost novels, since the editors liked the writing and the idea.

— Three of the novels were under this DWS name which did no good at all. (grin)

— I mailed nine of the books to five editors for each book. Most of the time I told Kris I had finished a certain type of novel package and she just gave me five editors she thought might be right.

—I didn’t send any novel submission to any editor I actually knew.

— I never sent any of the novels to more than the first five editors. In other words, I never kept the books in the mail as I tell other writers to do. (I plan on writing a few of the novels now as indie published books.)

— On one book (beside the two special-project books) I only sent one package out because, to be honest, I didn’t want to write the book. (Got bored with it before I finished the submission package and mailed it to an editor only because of the challenge.)

— So the total number of novel submission packages I mailed in thirteen weeks was fifty-three. All different editors. No repeats.

Here are the basics of the responses I got.

 

Read the rest of the post, which covers the responses received and includes a set of guidelines for writer submissions, on Dean Wesley Smith’s site.

Why Every New Author Should Think Like an Indie Author

This post, by G.P. Ching, originally appeared as a guest post on Blame It On The Muse on 12/2/11.

Our guest today is G.P. Ching a short fiction writer turned novelist and co-founder of DarkSide Publishing, an indie author cooperative. Her young adult series, The Soulkeepers, has garnered rave reviews and hit multiple bestseller lists.  She lives in Illinois with her husband and two children. Visit her at www.gpching.com or www.DarkSidePublishing.com.

If you are a new or pre-published author, you might want to sit down for this. What I’m about to say may come as a shock, but you need to hear it and you need to believe it.

The best writers don’t sell the most books.

Notice that I didn’t qualify that statement with traditional or indie. No matter how you’ve been published, the barriers to sell are the same.

Price – Readers are sensitive to price, especially in regard to ebooks.

Awareness – Readers who don’t know about your book won’t buy your book.

Convenience -Readers need to know an easy way to find and obtain your book quickly.

Trust-Readers are hesitant to try a new author because they don’t yet trust they’ll like the writing.

Successful authors know how to eliminate their readers’ barriers to buy.

Indie authors are intimately aware of these barriers. In order to sell any number of books they need to create a relevant social networking presence, price their book competitively, form relationships for marketing purposes, and find advertising venues that are effective for reaching their target market. Because of the world we live in, traditionally published authors can no longer rely on their publishing houses to do those things for them. And in some cases, being traditionally published ties the author’s hands when it comes to adjusting price, artwork, and/or strategy.

What does this mean for you and the manuscript you are cradling like a newborn baby in your arms? Here are five ways to get in touch with your market now, no matter how you plan to publish.

 

Read the rest of the post on Blame It On The Muse.

The NaNoWriMo Epilogue: Miiles To Go Before You Sleep

This post, by Chuck Wendig, originally appeared on his Terribleminds site on 11/30/11.

(Related: “25 Things You Should Know About Your Completed Novel.”)

Maybe you finished — er, excuse me, “won” — your NaNoWriMo novel.

That’s good. You should be beaming. Chest puffed out. Fists on cocked hips. Cheeks ruddy from neighbors and parents pinching them. Your pride is well-earned. Bask in it its triumphant musk.

 

On the other hand, maybe you didn’t finish — er, excuse me, “you lost” — NaNoWriMo this year.

That’s good, too. I see you there, blustery and stammering — “Buh-buh-buh but how is it good that I didn’t finish what I started? What’s happening? Why is my face numb? Who took my shirt off?”

My message to both of you is the same.

You’re not done.

I know. You want to be done. If you finished, you want to slam it down, freeze-frame high-five yourself, and then go have an egg cream. If you didn’t finish, you want to delete the file, close the drawer, and pretend that none of this shame spiral ever happened. To both of you: bzzt. Wrongo, word-nerds.

You’re not done.

Writing a book is a war. What you just did was experience only one of the many battles in fighting that war: muddy in the trenches, crawling through the ejected blood of your cohorts, the stink of burning ink slithering up your nose like so many grave-worms. Maybe you won this battle. Maybe you lost. But the war goes on, friend-o. The typewriter keeps chattering. The story keeps struggling to be born. The screams of forgotten characters echo (echo echo) across the battlefield.

 

Read the rest of the post on Terribleminds.

The Ebook Value Chain Is Still Sorting Itself Out, And So Are The Splits

This post, by Mike Shatzkin, originally appeared on his The Shatzkin Files blog on the Idealogical Company site on 11/27/11.

The division of the consumer’s dollar across the publishing value chain has a history of change. When I came into the business 50 years ago, discounts from publishers to retailers often topped out at 44% and even wholesalers seldom got more than 48% off the retail price on hardcover books. Today discounts into the mid-50s for big retailers and for wholesalers are common.

The top royalty for authors was, as it is now, 15% of the retail price, but there were fewer exceptions allowing the royalty to be cut, contractually or in practice. Today “high discount” clauses, calling for a royalty of something less that 15% of retail (and sometimes a lot less than 15% of retail) will often apply to more than half of the sales the publisher makes. (It is also true that in those days the agent’s standard cut was 10%. The 50% increase they’ve achieved to 15% is the single biggest change in share in the past 50 years.)

Lower royalties subsidize higher discounts and higher discounts have subsidized price cuts to the consumer. Discounting off the publishers’ suggested price by the retailer was rare until the Crown Books chain, which had a meteoric tenure as a major retailer from the mid-1980s until the mid-1990s, made it a core component of their offering. The Barnes & Noble and Borders chains, which rose to prominence during the Crown decade, used the tactic, although less aggressively than Crown.

All of these numbers: the discount determining what the retailer will pay; the royalty calculated either as a percentage of the stated retail price (usually printed on the book) or of the net paid by the retailer on a high-discount sale; and the ultimate consumer price (whether what the publisher printed or lower if the retailer wants it lower) are based on the price the publisher sets and prints on the book in the first place. The informal internal formulas for setting the price have changed over the years too and, although it is a bit hard to really compare, it would appear that the markup over manufacturing cost has also risen steadily over the past 50 years.

So we had reached a point, somewhat before we had the Internet and Amazon.com, where, on big books at least, the publisher would charge a price higher than they expected the consumer to be charged, give the retailer a discount larger than many retailers would keep as margin, and state a percentage as the per-copy royalty in the main body of the contract that didn’t apply to most of the sales. One could say there was a “virtual” world in trade book publishing’s value chain before the term was applied to our new digital reality.

 

Read the rest of the post on The Shatzkin Files.

10 Mistakes SFF Writers Make With Research

This post, by Bryan Thomas Schmidt, originally appeared on his site on 11/30/11.

Research, hate it or love it, is something every speculative fiction writer must deal with at one time or another. Most deal with it often. Research is an easy thing to neglect for many reasons. Above all, it’s usually less fun than writing and creating and it’s time consuming. Still, research is necessary. Here are ten mistakes writers make with research. Consider the costs of making them yourself.

 

1) Skipping the research. I don’t need no stinking research. Mistake number one. You may be able to fudge some things, especially in science fiction stories set in worlds far distant from our own, for example, but in your historical fantasy, your contemporary urban fantasy or your medieval epic fantasy, you’d better know the facts. If you don’t, readers will and they’ll be unhappy you didn’t care enough to make sure you did. In any world building or story crafting where facts and details readers could know or research are required, research it yourself. Know what you’re talking about. That’s usually impossible without research.

2) Relying on novels by other genre writers. How do you know Terry Goodkind or Patrick Rothfuss got it right? Where did they get their facts? People make up inaccurate facts all the time and write them into their novels. (I am not saying Goodkind and Rothfuss did. I have no such examples. Just using them as examples.) There’s nothing worse for fantasy fans than reading another stereotypical novel set in a stereotypical fantasy world that gets it wrong. Don’t trust anyone but yourself to do the research and do it well, unless you can afford to pay a research assistant, in which case, be sure and hire a trustworthy one.

3) Using only one source. How do you verify facts? Check them against multiple sources. Don’t assume the source you are using has it all right. Check their facts against other sources. The internet is a great resource as are libraries. You can find multiple resources on almost any topic you’d want to research. So make use of that and be sure you’ve got it right.

4) Researching only when and what they have to. To a degree, you only need research for a science in your science fiction, so to speak. But that doesn’t mean you should stop there. How do you know your world makes sense geographically? How do you know the dietary patterns and plants you place in various locations are correct for the climate or environment? Who cares? Informed readers, that’s who, and all it takes is one to blow the whistle and cause other readers to doubt you. Once they doubt you, they have trouble trusting the stories you tell and if they can’t suspend disbelief, your science fiction and fantasy can’t succeed very well. So research details whenever you can. Even if you’re not sure they’re important. This doesn’t mean you need to research every word, of course, but play detective and ask yourself what you can research to make your story better and more skeptic-proof and true to life and then get busy.

 

Read the rest of the post, which includes 6 more mistakes, on Bryan Thomas Schmidt’s site.

Author Blogging 101: Where Are the Readers?

There’s nothing more typical, and more dispiriting, than a new author blog that has just started, and on which the writer is diligently posting articles, and wondering why no one seems to be noticing.

Hey, we’ve all been there, and most blogs start exactly that way, particularly if this is the first blog you’ve ever worked on.

It’s almost as if the process of doing all the technical work, setting up your blog, getting the theme right, the plugins all working, all the plumbing going right, is a distraction from this one fact: Where are the readers?

 

We All Start With a Readership of 1

Every blog starts with the counter at 1: you are the only visitor. Let’s face it, your whole blogging journey is going to be growth from here, there’s no other choice.

One of the first things I learned about blogging was to not rely on friends or family to become blog readers. In fact, assume that they will rarely read your articles.

So how does a blog go from a readership of 1, with no support from people close to you, to something alive, vital, and thriving? Where do all those people come from? How the heck do they find your blog in the first place, considering the sheer size of the internet?

That’s where traffic comes in, and why you need to understand what it is, where it comes from and what you can do about it. And we’re going to go over each of those issues.

But first, let’s take a high-level look at blog traffic to get our bearings.

Three Kinds of Traffic

There are really only three distinct ways people come to your blog or website, and it pays to know what they are. Here’s how I look at it:

  1. Organic traffic—This is what I call people who arrive at your blog by clicking a link somewhere that wasn’t paid for. In other words, it coincided somehow with their own interest or curiosity.

    You an divide this organic traffic into:

    1. People who click your own links, like the signature file you use in your email, or the link you use as a member of a discussion forum, or when people click your link in a social media profile.
    2. People who click other people’s links, for instance if you contribute a guest post to another blog with a link back to your own blog, or the link in an article that’s been republished from an article site. This also includes marketing you do like entering blog carnivals, and all the times other writers link to your articles.
  2.  

  3. SEO traffic—I think of this as traffic that you attract from search engines by writing your blog posts in such a way that they aim at specific keywords that appear in people’s queries when they are looking for information in your field.

    You can build SEO traffic through a variety of means, including

    1. Blogger tools like themes that help you optimize your posts, add-ins like Scribe (affiliate) that analyze your posts for SEO efficiency or other specific tools.
    2. Blog design, in which a designer can code features into your blog that will benefit you when it comes to search engines
    3. Hired SEO experts, not an option used by many indie authors that I know of. However, experienced SEO consultants can have a major impact on your blog’s search engine rankings.

     

  4. Paid traffic—This is all the traffic that results from payments of one kind or another. For instance, you might use:
    1. Pay per click, where you bid on specific keywords and then pay a small fee each time someone clicks the link that’s displayed on content-appropriate pages.
    2. Advertising, like running a banner ad on someone else’s blog, or running a Facebook ad campaign.
    3. Sponsorships in which you materially sponsor or co-sponsor a contest, an award or some other event that brings people to your site.

Each of these three kinds of traffic can be used to bring new readers to your blog. In fact, there are specific strategies you can use for each of them.

The great thing about working on traffic is that even small steps will have an effect. When you learn some of these strategies and apply them over time, the effects snowball.

That’s when a combination of the links coming from your own efforts combine with the effect you have within your niche. Other people start linking to you because of the contribution you make with your articles and blog posts.

Content marketing, the natural tool of the blogger, always starts with great, useful content. That’s what people will link to.

As we continue to look at author blogging, we’ll also continue to explore each of these avenues by which readers find and reach your blog. And I’ll share with you the strategies I’ve used on my blog and the results they’ve produced so you can see firsthand how this all works.

 

 

This is a reprint from Joel Friedlander‘s The Book Designer.

37 Tips For Writing A Book’s Foreword

1. Read the book. Understand the message.

2. Reading the Table of Contents and one chapter alone is not enough.

3.Take detailed notes throughout the book.

4. Write to the book’s audience.

5. Write in a familiar voice.

6. Be very careful not to talk down to the readers.

7. You should probably write between 750 and 1,500 words.

8. The foreword’s main role is to help give the book’s author credibility.

9. With increased credibility, comes more sales.

10. Explain how you know the author of the book.

11. If you don’t know the author personally, devote more space to the book’s message.

12. You are trying to make an emotional connection with the reader.

13. You want the reader to like you and your story.

14. Your job is to help get the reader to believe and trust what you have to say about the book’s author and the book itself.

15. Keep the tone simple and personal, but keep your writing tight.

16. Include short anecdotes and real world examples that illustrate the theme of the book.

17. Anecdotes are an important way to help the reader like you and your story.

18. Discuss why this book is significant or timely.

19. Show why the book’s author is a credible person to have written this book.

20. Tell readers why this book is worth reading.

21. Show how the reader will benefit by reading it.

22. Refer to specific things in the book.

23. Explain why you chose those things to discuss.

24. Connect the book to experiences that a reader might face in everyday life.

25. Mention the good points about the book and what the readers will get out of reading it.

26. Be sure to give a very brief synopsis of the book.

27. Talk to the reader as if you were talking to a friend.

28. Keep it engaging and tell an interesting story.

29. Make sure your foreword has a beginning, middle, and end.

30. Tell readers why you are qualified to write the foreword.

31. Don’t be afraid to name-drop.

32. If readers can recognize any of the names, you will gain credibility and likeability.

33. Put your name, title, and location at the end.

34. Make sure you mention if you have a fancy title or prestigious award.

35. These things help establish your own credibility and celebrity.

36. Remember that you are not just writing this foreword to help the author sell more books, but also to help your own career.

37. Authoring a book’s foreword is a great way to remind the public who you are and what you have accomplished.

This article was written by Joseph C. Kunz, Jr. and originally posted on KunzOnPublishing.com.

How To Make Sure Your Book Is The Best It Can Be

As authors I believe it is our responsibility to make our books the best they can be. As independent (indie) authors it’s even more important to produce an excellent book because of the widespread criticism about the lack of quality. I’ve just sent my second novel Prophecy to my beta readers and in this video [5:55 mins], I explain my process of drafting and edits.

 

In the video, I explain:

  • How I have just sent Prophecy to my beta readers and how some people don’t consider the full extent of editing, rewriting and beta readers in the timing of their publishing schedule
     
  • The first draft to me is when you can read end to end with no missing bits or [must research this] [put fight scene here] etc. You should be able to read it end to end as a story. I  print this version out and read it in entirety.
  • I do a big structural edit at this stage. I rewrite scenes, restructure and delete sections (Here I explain why deleting 20,000 words is sometimes necessary). I added in bits I missed as well as foreshadowing and other layers to make it a better read. After this big second draft, I print it out again.
  • In this 3rd draft, I line edit, change repetitive language, fix typos etc to create a clean draft for beta readers.
     
  • Beta readers will read the book as if they bought it and give me feedback and comments. Importantly they will also mention anything that jolts them out of the ‘fictive dream’. My 7 beta readers are a mix of professional writers but also my family whose criticism is sometimes hard to take. We need thick skins in this business! They have 2.5 weeks to read and provide feedback.
  • Then I will make changes based on feedback. It won’t be everything mentioned but if there are commonalities I will fix these issues. It won’t be a complete rewrite but it will be a tidy up at this point which will create the final draft.
     
  • I will then submit to a copy-editor/proof-reader who check the grammar & typos in the final version so it is as professional as possible.
     
  • These things take time but it is critical that you put the best version of your book up for sale. I personally hate the accusations of bad quality that is laid on self-publishers these days. There’s no excuse for it!

What is your editing and rewriting process like? Do you do all these steps? If you’re an experienced writer, what changes as you write more books?

 

 

This is a reprint from Joanna Penn‘s The Creative Penn.

Build Your Author Platform Through Guest Posts

Doing guest posts on other blogs is a great opportunity to build your author platform and gain exposure to potential book buyers that you may not reach in any other way. Getting backlinks from relevant websites is an added benefit of guest posting that will enhance the search engine optimization of your own site.

 Guest posts are win-win for everyone. Readers get useful or entertaining content, bloggers get additional content for their sites, and guest posters build their reputation, get links to their websites, and have the opportunity to sell books.

Your guest posts can take the form of how-to articles, essays, interviews, or case studies, and you can even create audio or video clips. Fiction authors can discuss the writing process or topics related to their novel.

Look for blogs that are a good match for your book’s target audience, then make comments on some of their posts before proposing a guest post. Check with each blogger to see what their requirements are for the length of the post, the topic, and whether they accept previously published content. Some bloggers post their guidelines on their site.

Be sure to write a good "resource box" containing a one or two sentence bio, a call to action, and a link back to your website. The call to action should include an incentive for people to visit your site, such as a free report or sample chapters. It’s a good idea to include a link to your book’s page on Amazon as well.

One terrific way to do guest posts on other blogs is to organize a virtual book tour where you will visit a series of blogs, radio shows and other venues during a certain time frame. Learn how to organize your own successful virtual book tour in my new book, Virtual Book Tour Magic.

 

 

This is a reprint from Dana Lynn Smith‘s The Savvy Book Marketer.

How To Write Great Content When You Don't Feel Like It

This post, by Onibalusi, originally appeared on his YoungPrePro blog.

If you’ve been reading blogs online for sometimes now you will know that people always have varied opinions. When I started blogging I battled with creating great content for my readers on a consistent basis and whenever I try to research to find a solution to my problem I came across at least two entirely different opinions. The first one stating that I shouldn’t force myself to write, and the other one stating that I should force myself to write.

 

It can be really confusing over time for you to know which advice to follow but after almost 2 years of blogging I have come to see that both aren’t exactly the best advice. The reason is that making yourself to write only when you feel like it isn’t really effective because you might not even feel like writing for a whole month, and forcing yourself to write is also very dangerous because it can crush your creativity.

Since the above are the two common advice out there to help those who find it difficult to write great content, how do you ensure you keep on creating great content for your readers even when you don’t feel like it? This article will be giving you a few tips to help you write great content even if you’re not in the mood.

You should know that the tips in this article aren’t just something I’m rehashing by reading another person’s article, but something that has consistently worked for me.

Know What Makes You Tick

The first step you have to take towards ensuring you’re always coming up with great content is to know what makes you tick. The reality is that as human beings we’re all different, and that is why there’s no one-size-fits-all advice for making you a better writer.

It’s all about knowing what inspires you. It’s all about knowing what motivates you and it’s all about knowing what puts you in the mood to write. You might not easily know what puts you in the mood to write, especially if you’re someone who hasn’t been observing yourself but you should try to understand what puts you in the mood and makes you your creative self.

Read the rest of the post on YoungPrePro.

Rejecting Rejection

This post, by James Scott Bell, originally appeared on Right-Writing.

The writer Barnaby Conrad tells the story of a matador, all decked out in his "suit of lights," talking to a group of reporters outside the arena.

One reporter asks, "How did you happen to become a bullfighter?"

The matador replied, "I took up bullfighting because of the uncertainty of being a writer."

Truth be told, many of us would rather face the horns of an angry bull than another rejection letter. At least we can run away from the bull!

But for a writer, rejection goes with the territory. There is no way we can avoid it. There are ways, however, to keep it from becoming a poison, something that makes us want to curl up and quit. Here are a few things to keep in mind about rejection:

1. Rejection is not personal

Rejection of your manuscript is not a rejection of you as a person, or as a writer. It is only a rejection of a piece of writing you have turned out.

That makes a difference. You can always grow as a writer. Always. You can learn from your setbacks. If you stick to it, you will get better. So the rejection of a piece of writing is not saying anything about your potential.

A rejection says one of two things. Either a piece isn’t right for the publisher at that time, or it is not up to their standards. The first is something you can’t change; the second you can. You do it by learning to write better.

If, for some strange reason, someone were to tell you that you personally don’t have what it takes, you can be sure that someone is off his or her nut. How can anyone predict your future? Writing is a learned craft. People can learn how to write. No one has the capacity to tell you that you are the exception to the rule.

An obscure editor once told a future Nobel Prize winner: "I’m sorry, Mr. Kipling, but you just don’t know how to use the English language." Rudyard Kipling we remember. The editor no one can recall.

Writer Ron Goulart said, "Never assume that a rejection of your stuff is also a rejection of you as a person. Unless it’s accompanied by a punch in the nose."

2. Rejection happens to the best

 

Read the rest of the post on Right-Writing.