I’ve just won first prize in the H E Bates shorts story competition!! Although I‘ve been short listed a few times in various comps and even came second a few times, this is the first time I have ever won a short story contest, so I’m pretty much over the moon about it. The details are at http://litnorthants.wordpress.com/news/ although you can’t read my story ‘The Handprint Child’ there. The collection will be published this year and as far as I know that will be the only way to see the winning entries, but I’ll post more about that when I know.
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Beware of Email Overload
With most of us suffering from email overload these days, it’s important to think carefully about the frequency and format of your broadcast emails.
Online marketing experts advise communicating with your list frequently, so people don’t forget you. On the other hand, sending too much email is the quickest way to motivate people to click the "unsubscribe" button. I’ve unsubscribed from a number of lists because I got two or three promotional emails a week from them.
Also consider the length of your ezine. I receive several ezines that contain a lot of great information, but they are so long that I usually skip over them in my in-box, thinking I just don’t have time to read them right now. Sometimes I get back to these ezines later, but often I end up deleting them unread. If you send a weekly ezine, it’s especially important to keep it short and easily digestible. In my own ezine, I always have more story ideas than I have space for, so I use that extra content on my blog.
Beware of Email Overload
With most of us suffering from email overload these days, it’s important to think carefully about the frequency and format of your broadcast emails.
Online marketing experts advise communicating with your list frequently, so people don’t forget you. On the other hand, sending too much email is the quickest way to motivate people to click the “unsubscribe” button. I’ve unsubscribed from a number of lists because I got two or three promotional emails a week from them.
Also consider the length of your ezine. I receive several ezines that contain a lot of great information, but they are so long that I usually skip over them in my in-box, thinking I just don’t have time to read them right now. Sometimes I get back to these ezines later, but often I end up deleting them unread.
If you send a weekly ezine, it’s especially important to keep it short and easily digestible. In my own ezine, I always have more story ideas than I have space for, so I use that extra content on my blog.
Just Getting Started with my own Publishing Company "Sleepytown Press."
Hello! I am in the process of getting everything set up with Lightning Source and starting my own Publishing Company. I am going to republish my book “Sleepy Town,” as it was meant to be published. I am also in the process of accepting submissions from authors who might be interested in what I have to offer.
Check it out at www.sleepytownpress.weebly.com and give me some feedback that will be a help to me. I will appreciate it.
People like us need to leave our mark on the Publishing World.
BookCamp Toronto: June 6, 2009
Announcing BookCamp Toronto, Saturday, June 6, 2009 at the MaRS Center, 101 College Street.
BookCampToronto is a free unconference (definition at wikipedia) about:
The future of books, writing, publishing, and the book business in the digital age.
For more information, and to register, suggest sessions, please visit the wiki.
BookCamp Toronto is inspired by BookCamp London.
Erotic Fiction Contest:: This is for all the marbles, go vote!
Okay, not all the marbles, but this is for the finals. We are now in the week of semi-finals. There are 13 stories going into the print anthology, mine is one of them, YAY!
So now it’s the semi-finals. Please vote for my story, “A Safer Life” Here:
At the finals it’ll go to judge’s decisions, so it’s totally out of my hands and your hands there, but first I gotta get there!
Thanks!
Cover Design: A Tutorial + A Few Recommendations
One of the most important things your book has is its cover. The simple notion of "don’t judge a book by its cover" is simply preposterous, especially in an age where attention is fleeting and the most important thing you can do when marketing a product is to get someone to notice what you’re selling in the first place.
For this reason, when you create your book, you had better well give your cover as much attention and care as you gave the creation of your entire work in the first place. After all, if you can’t grab someone’s attention, they’re never going to get to read the brilliant words you put down on paper (well, paper in the olden days).
When deciding on cover art, one of the first things you need to ask yourself is "is this something I should be doing on my own?" If you don’t have any skills with Photoshop, Illustrator, Paint.net, Gimp, or any of the other professional image manipulation tools, then I recommend you stop now and consult a profssional graphic designer. It’s going to be money well-spent, and in many instance you can find someone to help with your artwork for "free" by giving them credit in your book (this can work especially well when working with a talented designer who really needs some legitimate projects to put into his or her portfolio).
If you do have some design skills, then now is the time to put them to work. One of the most important things to remember is that cover design is the first impression any potential reader is likely to have of your book. Even in instances where they are seeing a review, it is very likely that this review will be accompanied by a cover shot of your book – and if that cover shot doesn’t grab the reader’s attention it’s pretty unlikely they’re going to read the review (unless the review is written by someone the reader greatly admires, or you’re graced with the ultimate headline). That said, your cover needs to match the subject matter and potential audience of your book.
For the cover of my debut novel, The Trouble With Being God, I took a look at what the essence of the story was, and what I considered to be one the key scene of the book. Since the story is an exploration of the devolution of mind, and the key scene (in this instance, the climax) involves the frantic writing of a message in the narrator’s own blood (it’s a thriller/horror book), it was pretty clear to me what I had to do: take on the essence of that character and scene and represent it as the essence of the book itself.
To do this, I kept things fairly simple. The writing was done with a bucket of red paint and a piece of posterboard – with a little added touch of a rosary I picked up from a local shop. My wife took a series of pictures as I continued to write the title of the book and add additional spatters of blood.
Once this was all done I took the photos to the computer, determined which one was the ideal for the cover, and imported it to Photoshop. Several iterations of changes to contrast and color levels later, I had the core of the cover. The rest of the artwork was done through flattery.
I’ve read thousands of books over the years, and have several dozens within easy reach, some of which I admire greatly. In my opinion, if something has been done right in the past, there’s no reason to reinvent it. So for the remainder of my cover art I looked at the books that I felt most closely matched the feeling I was attempting to construe, as well as those that I felt held the most artistic merit and used them as templates for my own. That said, there are a few key items I highly recommend including in your cover art:
- A synopsis with an attention-grabbing lead
- Quotes from readers or authors (I chose readers, because I wanted to connect at a personal level)
- An author photo and bio (again, to connect at a personal level)
- Suggested Retail Price
- A link to your website
- Space for your ISBN or other barcodes
For me, all of these items were included and created using Photoshop Elements. It’s available for a very reasonable price (I paid less than $150 USD for a package of it and Adobe Premiere Elements, which I used for my book trailer) and can do most of the bits you are going to require for a mid-level project such as this.
If you’re looking to do the project for even less money, however, I recommend you check out Paint.net. Be sure that you export at at least 300 DPI (Dots-Per-Inch), and that you save everything you can in layers. These are obviously simple things to remember if you’re familiar with art creation, but if you’re not you’re going to hate yourself later for not doing so. You’re also going to have to make sure you leave room for a bleed. (Basically extend your artwork farther than where you expect the artwork to end, but don’t include anything important there, as this is where the "cuts" will happen – and you don’t want to leave a potential for white edges).
Details aside, the most important thing to remember is that you’re cover is the first impression anyone is going to have of your work. It’s worth doing right, and it isn’t that difficult to do once you know what you’re doing. But if you’re not already familiar with the parts of the process, it is also something worth considering sending to a professional. Just because you can do it, doesn’t mean you should – and just because its something usually left to a "professional" doesn’t mean you can’t do it yourself. Give it a shot, see what you can come up with, and share it with others. You’ll know when you’ve come across the right one.
After all, it’s the visual representation of your baby. You wouldn’t want a less than flattering picture in your wallet for when you want to show her off.
Free Guide to Editing On My Site
You can get a free, PDF copy of my IndieAuthor Guide to Editing on my site—no registration required, no strings attached. Enjoy!
http://www.aprillhamilton.com/iaguides.html#IAGFree
Signs of Acceptance Among Agents
Excerpted from “It’s The End Of Publishing As We Know It: Do You Feel Fine?” by Nathan Bransford, a literary agent with the San Francisco office of Curtis Brown, Ltd.:
Well, in my opinion there are two meta forces at work in book publishing at the moment. With the closing of bookstores, fewer titles being ordered by the bookstores that are left, and more people buying their books in stores where there are fewer titles available (i.e. box stores like WalMart), there is tremendous pressure on publishers to invest in the few books that can reliably sell.
At the same time, the Internet and e-books are opening up new sales avenues for authors who either catch on through word of mouth or are able to build their own buzz. As a result, you’re seeing progressively more self-published and small-press books rise up through the cacophony of titles and find their readers.
In essence, it’s the best of times and the worst of times. If you’re an enterprising author there is a world of opportunity out there. Never before have we had a book publishing world where truly anyone could publish and potentially find their readers. Before there was a fundamental obstacle: distribution. That’s going away. Anyone can publish. It’s a massive, groundbreaking shift! I suspect soon there will be even more opportunities for collectives and online communities to boost sales, build brands, and become real players in publishing. Out of chaos comes order.
Read the full post here.
Why I Decided To Form An Indie Press
I self-published my first novel, RealmShift, at the start of 2006 through Lulu.com. It was an interesting exercise. I learned a great deal about producing a quality book and I learned a lot about the nature of Recommended Retail Price, bookstore discounts, international postage and shipping costs and the stigma that stops people taking self-published work seriously. But the book sold modestly, got a lot of great reviews and generated a bit of buzz. I even had people randomly emailing me with praise and asking for more, which was very flattering. As it happened I was already working on the sequel. Once that was ready to publish I decided to take the whole process more seriously and, rather than use an author service POD company again, I wanted to go directly to source.
I investigated cutting out the middleman and dealing directly with Lightning Source International (LSI), the POD printer used by many author service companies. I discovered that LSI don’t deal directly with authors – they deal only with publishers. Now, the semantics of indie author/publisher aside, this actually gave me an idea. Why not become a boutique version of something like Lulu or iUniverse? Why not become a publisher? I saw an opportunity here to take the indie publishing process a step further. So I slowly put together a plan.
I would create a POD publishing company that would be essentially exactly the same as the big POD author service companies mentioned above but with the following caveats:
Genre Specific – my work is dark fantasy, sometimes classified as horror or urban fantasy. I decided to form a publisher that would specialise only in science fiction, fantasy and horror, with a preference for the darker, more adult works in those genres.
Quality Control – I wouldn’t just let anyone publish anything. While the work would need to be done largely by the author, especially all the marketing and promotion post release, I would firstly only take well written, well edited, quality stories and I would do the typesetting, formatting, layout and cover design myself (in deep consultation with the author) to ensure that the books we produced were both good writing and professionally put together. Small
Catalogue – the publisher would only have a small number of authors on board, keeping to the specifications above.
Cost Neutral – the publisher itself would not be designed to make a profit. The publisher will recover costs from the authors from their sales and subsequent sales profits then all go back to the authors – it’s up to them to market the work, so they should get the proceeds. I’ll have to make my profits from the sale of my own books.
Anthologies – some money can come back to the press by way of anthologies. I would pay for the stories included, buying first print and online rights for one year, and hopefully cover costs with anthology sales and maybe put a bit of money back into the publishing company this way. Any profits made here could be used to market the press as a whole and generate interest in all the work published. This is also an opportunity to give emerging writers another market for their work.
There are two fundamental points to this approach: As this publisher is not out to turn a profit, I could offer my books and those of anyone else I take on at a retail price very close to the cost price from the POD printer; With quality control and a limited catalogue, we could work towards shattering the indie publishing stigma – a stigma that is slowly dissolving, but that can certainly do with an injection of quality work!
Any books put out through this publisher would also have a stable of other work to stand up with. All the books would carry the logo and all would be featured on the publisher’s website. The catalogue of work as a whole could be marketed and any sales from one author would expose the other authors to those readers. This idea is basically taking the technology that we have available today, that is used so successfully and profitably by the author service POD companies, and distilling it back down to something smaller and more targeted.
Being genre specific and having a degree of quality control means that the publisher can be grown as a brand within the indie publishing world and within the greater publishing world as a whole. And so Blade Red Press was born. I started pulling in favours and getting things organised. My “day job” is as a martial arts instructor. One of my students at the time was a graphic designer. He put me onto a friend of his that designed the Blade Red Press logo for me at mate’s rates.
With the help of another friend and his IT skills I put together the Blade Red Press website. I registered the company name and set up a publisher account with LSI and I was ready to go. I started with my own books, re-issuing RealmShift along with the new book, MageSign. With everything I’d learned about cover design, promotion and so on I was able put together two excellent quality books. I had some reviews done in advance and was able to include the review comments on the cover and inside the books. I got another author friend of mine to give me a blurb. The work was all uploaded to LSI and Blade Red Press had its first two titles.
Everything is new and still growing at the moment. We’ve put out one more title, an alternate history of ancient Baghdad, called Maggots Of Heresy, by Michael Fridman. The website still needs some development. But it’s all up and running. I’ll be opening a submission window soon for short stories for our first anthology and also for novel submissions for our next title release. I intend to use the press to release one or two anthologies and one or two novels per year. It will stay small and offer a quality product at a decent price.
POD is always going to face its hardest challenge with pricing. But when I first released RealmShift through Lulu it was US$23.95 at amazon.com. Now, through Blade Red Press, it’s US$15.95, as is the sequel, MageSign. Both books are close to 400 pages. So we’re heading in the right direction.
However, a word of warning. If you choose to do something like this, it will take up a lot of your time! Using the author service companies takes a lot of time and effort as well, producing a quality book and then marketing it. But adding in the extra work of managing your own small company online is something that needs to be seriously considered before you dive in. I’m enjoying the challenge but don’t be fooled into thinking it’s easy. There’s nothing easy about the world of indie publishing, but it certainly is worth it if you’re prepared to take on that challenge.
Alan is an indie author and publisher with two dark fantasy novels in print – RealmShift and MageSign. You can learn all about him at his website.
Writing Contest Open to All
Writing contests are often great ways to get started for writers. The Society of Southwestern Authors (SSA) runs its Annual Writing Contest from January 01 through May 31 – this year, entries may be postmarked no later than June 1, 2009 as the 31st falls on a Sunday.
Content must be previously unpublished and length varies per category. Four categories are available: Memoir/Personal Essay, Short Story, Poetry, and Short Stories Appropriate for Children Ages 6-12.
Full rules and requirements as well as entry forms are available for download on SSA’s website: http://ssa-az.org/contest.html.
Each category awards a First, Second, Third, and Honorable Mention monetary prize. All winning entries will be published in SSA’s yearly publication, The Storyteller.
What’s different about this contest? Well, it’s only $10 USD per piece entry fee and you will receive comments from the judges. You may also request a more in-depth "appraisal" – aka critique – for $25 per piece.
You do not have to be a member of The Society of Southwestern Authors to enter, nor does your work have to be about or set in the Southwest. You don’t even have to live in the United States. You DO, however, have to use snail mail. NO EMAIL SUBMISSIONS are accepted. Check it out, think about it, give it a go. You might just win!
Penguin Says Self-Publishing No Longer A Dirty Word
Excerpted from a NY Times Books article entitled “Self-Publishers Flourish as Writers Pay the Tab”:
“Louise Burke, publisher of Pocket Books, said publishers now trawl for new material by looking at reader comments about self-published books sold online. Self-publishing, she said, is “no longer a dirty word.” ”
This bit comes near the end of the article, most of which is about the fact that while mainstream presses are struggling, biz is booming among self-pub providers. The negatively-slanted title is misleading, because the author of the article acknowledges it’s possible to publish on a shoestring when you go POD or e. I think either the author or the paper just went with the most provocative-sounding title possible.
Read the whole article here.
Amazon Marketing Strategies – Tags and Lists
Once my novels became available on Amazon.com I ramped up the viral marketing on those Amazon pages in the hope of getting them to show up more often in book searches and hopefully sell more copies. If you want people to know your books are out there, you have to work hard to get them noticed. Probably the two most powerful tools on Amazon for making a book stand out are Tags and Listmania lists.
Tags As you probably know, tagging is the practice of adding keywords to a book that then get caught by searches, like metatags on web pages. Book tags on Amazon can be pretty much anything, but the more often a tag is added to a book, the more likely that book is to show near the top of a keyword search. The real rub is that the tags added by Joe Public get more weight than the tags added by the author or publisher. After all, if tagging is supposed to reflect community impressions, there’s no point in letting the writer or publisher try to sway that opinion.
It’s a good idea to start off by adding all the tags you can think of to your own work, then ask family, friends, your blog readers and so on to go in and add their tags. They can repeat the tags you’ve made, raising the chances of your book being shown in a search for those words, or add new tags of their own. By hitting the ‘T’ key twice on your Amazon page, a quick tag box will appear making it easy for people to add their tags to your book. It only takes a few seconds. An example of the tags section of an Amazon page (after double tapping the ‘T’ key)
Try to encourage people to build up the numbers of existing tags rather than just adding loads more. The more times a book is hit with a particular tag, the more relevant it will appear to Amazon searches.
Listmania This is something for those people with a bit more time to devote to you, which is a big ask. Listmania is like a refined search on Amazon where someone has already gone to the trouble of doing a search and listing the top results. Naturally, they’ve searched with their own bias (and in their own minds) and their tastes shine through any given list, but it’s altogether possible that their tastes and yours will be similar.
Hence, if you search Listmania for “urban fantasy” today you get:
1. Urban and new-age fantasy for chicks
2. Upcoming Urban Fantasy 2008 – Part I
3. Hot Urban Fantasy with Vampires, Shapeshifters, Paranormal & More
4. Urban Fantasy Romance Series
5. Private Investigators and Crime Solvers in Urban Fantasy …and so on.
This is a method that puts similar books with each other and helps to raise any given book’s profile by comparing it to others that people may know. For example, there were a couple of Listmania lists for the original edition of RealmShift that included books like Neil Gaiman’s American Gods. Aside from being very high praise, it gives people the idea that if they enjoyed American Gods, they’ll probably enjoy RealmShift too. It can put your books on a similar standing to something people already know.
If you get your readers to make Listmania lists using this method then your book will crop up in all kinds of searches and be indistinguishable from the other books on that list. If the lists are carefully constructed to appeal to fans of your genre or subject matter, then random sales can occur to people that would never have known your book existed otherwise.
Listmania, like Tags, are far more effective when they’re made by readers rather than by writers or publishers. So try to convince some friends and/or fans to put aside a few minutes and knock up a Listmania or two for your books. They should include your work on a list with a variety of other similar (well known) books. You can learn about Listmania and make a new list by clicking here. These are two very simple tools on Amazon that anyone can use and that can greatly increase the profile of your books.
Alan is an indie author and publisher with two dark fantasy novels in print – RealmShift and MageSign. You can learn all about him at his website.