Are publishers their own worst enemy?

Each morning of the week I get my electronic copy of “The Bookseller”, They are decent folk who send me via email a breakdown of many of the online articles about the world of publishing. As you can imagine this year the forecasts have been somewhat gloomy and if I might say, a little alarming. It is easy to see why book shops are panicking and not stocking new titles, whilst they compete by stocking the so called blockbusters.

As I have already written in previous Blogs, many new writers are turning to self-publishing, which is to be honest a very difficult route to take. In my mind the question I would pose would be why, when you look in the writers year and see hundreds of publishing firms? Once again I return to previous comments about how it appears that the whole of the publishing industry is hung up on celebrities, and looking at the bookseller this morning I have been given yet another reminder of this.

I have just read an article in ’Variety’ and I think it is worth having a look at it to understand some of my points. www.variety.com/article/vr11180006746.htmlit is titled ‘U.K.shows hit the books, by Leo Barraclough.’ The article is a really good example of today’s thinking as the publishers run for the cash cow, whist walking over huge amounts of talented writers. The article quotes. “Every one of the top 10 hardback non-fiction best sellers in Blighty last year was written by an entertainer.”

Its scary for us poor old writers, its bad enough that we are on mass fighting to get our own creative work into print, now we have to face and fight the entertainers as well?  The sad truth is that just about every TV series on earth has a book out, on top of that the stars are writing their autobiographies, and the book shops are filling up fast with them, but please when will this stop? What has happened to the good old days when the publishers took on a writer and supported them, and created their own breed of celebrity? What is with this obsession to use those already made? doesn’t the publishing industry have a duty to those who are writing creative works? We all know it can be done as the list is endless, JK Rowling, Dan Brown, even in more recent times we have seen the overnight status of Stephanie Meyers rise higher and higher.

If publishers are looking to TV and celebrity biographies, they are not looking at new talent, I find it concerning that this year alone we have seen the deaths of some wonderful fiction writers, but who is going to replace them? Publishers at the moment seem to be worried that books sales have fallen and profits are down, no offence chaps but look at what your churning out, its not exactly awe inspiring, its a part of the market, but there are so many genre’s of books that appear to be getting lost in the lack of the media spotlight. The rich and famous are already rich and famous, leave them be and give a little more time to looking at the wealth of talent going through hell trying to get their own works in print. I find it disturbing to think that if C.S. Lewis or even Tolkien were new writers today, the odds are high that unless they did a TV show, we would all be deprived of their work, it a thought that is some what sobering and sends a cold chill down the spine, don’t you think?

I have to confess that I somehow feel that as the publishers complain louder and louder about how rough things are, I can only help but feel they are fighting themselves as their own worst enemy’s

 

Many thanks Leo Barraclough. Variety.com for UK shows hit the books. article vr1118006746/Friday Jul 31st 2009.

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Demand But Low Supply

One of the most rewarding experiences about writing a book, has been the support I have found from people all over the world. I began my building up of my profile on Facebook and soon moved into the other social networks, to give everyone an idea of what was to come. The response to be honest has been overwhelming and just for example, I have people who I have never met in person who have joined my page and become fans. Its a heartwarming experience as you see the fan list grow and you recieve messages from people wishing you luck, and also expressing their excitement as the publishing date moves closer. The release of my book the first in the series of Heirs to the Kingdom was to be a wonderful moment, and sure enough as I saw my own work  in print the excitement was to say the least, explosive and tearful. But the honeymoon does not last, and what was a moment I will never forget, has now become a battle of pure frustration.

From the moment you publish, you become caught between the devil and the deep blue sea. On one hand you have the plight of local and independant bookshops, and the large chains, then of course you have the onlines such as Amazon. If you favour one more than other you are in trouble. I built a web site to promote my books, this Blog is actually a part of it as the name across the top of the page shows. The site went live on May 1st 2009, it was half built, but the book was out and we watched as the site began to get hit. I had after all loaded it with extra facts and been shrewd enough to let all the social network sites know it was out there. There are adverts for Amazon, and also across many of the pages, there are little messages that show a large amount of support for all the local and independent shops. I use twitter a lot as it is a great way of letting the whole world know what the book is about and also where it is available, and yes I do mention Amazon, and my publishers outlet as well as trying to encourage local shops, and I also mention the website.

I feel that the coverage given to all parties is fair, as an Author I want bookshops to thrive and I have been an avid supporter of local shops all over the place for years, I have a huge collection of books from which a very large percentage are from local shops, I also have a good few from the larger book chains and I also buy online. I feel I have spread the wealth to everyone, in a bid to be fair and supportive to all. But you know what?  Its impossible to be seen as fair by any. Its frustrating and to be quite honest, dam well annoying. I mentioned Amazon on twitter and the indie bookshops cancelled their follow, why is it such a crime to show equal respect to all?

I have had over 125 thousand hits on the web site in the first two months, thats more than I ever dreamed of.  These are all people who have taken the time to log in and look at the book becuse they are interested in buying it. Previous Blogs on this site have stated my experiences with local bookshops and the general book industry, but today I was told that unless I back my book with huge figures for advertising then there is really no hope of me ever getting my book on a shelf of a chain or a local bookshop. It just boggles my mind and leaves me lost for words. I have a web site that is being hit by a world full of people who want the book. 70% of them at the moment are UK based, and yet even though there is a demand to read my work, I still cannot get it on a shelf. I have to ask. Does this make sense to anyone out there, because if it does would you please explain it to me?

I have worked 24/7 for two months flat since the book was released and have been relatively successful, I mean in all honesty I know the Bowman of Loxley will not make the best sellers list.  Still there is a demand that would make a substancial difference to recouping the expense of all the printing costs and also the amount of IT software I have purchased to promote the book. Yet the shelves remain empty of the violet spine of my work, and the one company that has supported me, who to be honest I have used least in the past is that of Amazon, who lets be frank, has taken it’s fair share of diggs over the years.  I hold up my hands because I cannot fault them, they did stock the book and they have sold copies. The locals who I have supported as you already know, have been far less than helpful, it does make me wonder how many really wonderful books are out there not being sold as their authors are self published or new. All the joy of having so many people who have read and adored my book has been tainted by the knowledge that all over this planet are those who want to read it, but never will as the bookshop does not stock it.

I read the publishing press that is screaming for more book sales and I am lost for words and frustrated beyond belief. If you have a solution or a suggestion then please you tell me, because for now I feel after two long hard years of work, I have ended up dead in the water through no fault of my own. There is a demand for The Bowman of Loxley, the social networks are talking about it, but those people are being denied a chance to purchase. I have emailed and written in vain to the large chains, their silence is unbearable, at  least the locals just say no your a risk, I don’t like it, but it’s honest.

I have no choice but to continue and fight for those who want to read what I write and no doubt here on this site which has more views than I have sales, hopefully I will be able to tell you all of what it is like being a new writer in this strange world…. please call back and find out.

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We can only Read if we have the shops.

I was saddened today to read about the closure of another local bookshop. Lost in Fiction was a relitively new book shop opening its doors last September to the people of Glasgow, yet it will now have to close very soon, They posted that they were finding it hard to meet their costs, and a result they are forced to close. I grew up in a town that had a few bookshops and for me they were wonderful places of adventure and fantasy, I love the smell of all those new books on the shelves and the row after row of spines in every colour of the rainbow, painting a scene like a bar code of utter delight. It is heartbreaking  that today my home town has no bookshop, and I cannot help but feel that because of it, many of the people where I live are missing out.

As a writer it is sadder that I will never see my book on the selves of a bookshop in my own town, and because of the high costs of now running a shop I am sure we will lose what I consider to be the treasures of our highstreets. I am at this moment trying very hard to get my book ‘The Bowman of Loxley’ onto the shelves of bookshops locally and nationally, and to be honest it is a hugely difficult task, it is not helped by the fact that in the publishing press there are those who hype up each change in a publishers situation and I do think that some of the hype is damaging our wonderful bookshop tradition. Many of the shops I have spoken to are under huge pressure brought on already by the economics of the world, It is something as an ex shop owner I understand, although with myself it was a Garden shop. Being on the high street and the markets I have seen the change in the way that people are spending their money, and there is no doubt that people have a lot less than five years ago, but the thing that has been highlighted more than anything to me is the rise in rents and rates of local premesis.

Most new business can not afford the mind blowing costs of a shop, and those who have supported us as customers for years are feeling the pinch as they struggle against what is an overwhelming series of costs. Local government has done very little for small business except hit it harder and harder, the hype in the media about current finacial pressures of our governments is adding to the pressure, and to be quite frank, as a writer trying to self promote a book, its an overwhelming task as bookshops are now cutting back and going for what are seen to be money earners. I am a new writer and not seen yet as worthy of stocking as I do not have the reputaion of the JK’s and Dan Browns. I feel it will take me far longer than I ever thought to get my book in every fiction section across the country, if ever?

I cannot blame the local shops for not stocking a new writer with no reputation, they now are under such pressure that every inch of their shelves has to count in a big attempt to face those overwhelming costs, but what I can say here and now is this. If like myself you love reading, then consider the delights you have had all your lives going into these wonderful little places and eyeing the shelves with joy. The next time you want a book, then do your best to visit yours, because if you don’t you may find the closed sign up permanetly and the window empty the next time you visit. You may pay a little more for the book than your local supermarket, but a good bookshop is worth it. They are an important part of our heritage as a big reading nation, over the years long before the supermarkets became interested in cornering the market, it was the local bookshop that filled you with joy, made you weep on occasion and carried your imagination into lost worlds and new realms of adventure. Just think of the delight you have had in your life, and reward those who gave it you when you were younger. Each time a bookshop closes, your town will lose a small part of its identity, so please take it from someone who has shared that wonder, and give them your support.

Never forget that your local supermarket may be cheap, but you will never find that little literary treasure in there, I know of so many amazing and life changing books that could only ever be found in that small specialist bookshop with comfy corners and staff who cared about the written word and about providing you with those pearls of wonder. A really great book from a local shop will cost a few extra pounds, but just think back for a moment and remember those cherished moments we have all shared curled up somewhere at home or on holiday lost in the pages of a magical story. It really is food for thought…

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Living with the characters.

I have been asked several times recently about the characters that I have written in the book. I have had some very lovely comments about how real they feel, and how most people have been able to identify with them. The obvious question is also asked many times. “Are they real living people that they have all been based on?”

I find it quite a difficult question to answer, a straight forward “No” does not really answer the question truthfully, but no one character is based on any one person. So in a bid to explain my method here I am writing a new instalment of the Blog.

I cannot speak for other writers, as the few that I know work in ways I do not understand, I can only give my own view on the subject as my own method does not appear to make a lot of sense to other writers either. In the first instance I knew the basic outline of the story so I had a list of important ingredients that would be essential to the story. I listed the ages and sex and obvious moods and characteristics, I knew their working environments so then I had an idea of dress. In many cases I felt the level of education of each character, and also the subjects they may have encountered would be important. This story was to be set in the future after the end of what we call the modern world. It made sense that apart from a quick brushing over, much of modern life today would be forgotten or not taught, after all the way of life of the characters in most cases within the confines of Book One, would be in a survival from the land situation. From my own point of view, it would be pointless teaching in any detail the fundamentals of Cars,planes and so forth. In that kind of environment it would be a quick lesson of, that’s a horse and that’s a cart, you can ride the horse, but if you want to move stuff, hitch the cart on, lesson over.

With each parameter defined I then applied what I call the subtle detail, and its here that some of my fellow writers thought I was mad to create so much extra work. I formatted a basic sheet on the computer that I could print off with relevant personal details. I listed date of birth, name, height, build, eye and hair colour, and hair length, I then added a few extras like style of clothing and accents, I put on the jewellery and maybe the weapons they would carry, and added other random stuff and a small biography of their attitudes and like and dislikes. I suppose it became similar to how I would write a composite of someone I already know quite well.

It was a long task, but the end result was a neatly typed sheet, slid into the obligatory plastic sleeve and filed in the family groups to sit neatly on the desk at the side of my PC. Once again maybe I am a little bit of a perfectionist, I have no idea, I just know it worked for me. It was actually the best bit of kit I could use, as once I began I could refer to it and have a consistent guide at all times. The best example of how it worked, I think would be if, Robbie and Rune were walking with lets say Maggs. (For those of you who have no idea who these people are, Shame on you, read the book.) I knew instantly that Robbie was the tallest and would look right down at Maggs the shortest by some considerable inches, yet his eyes would just move down to talk to Rune who was over his shoulder height but not as tall as him. complex I know but it works for me and allowed the descriptive writing to feel more real, well it did to me.

Once the writing began I had a perfect image guide so at least the writing was consistent, something I felt was important. I had an idea of the characters as people, and from that I could guess what in the real world, such and such a friend of mine may have done in that situation, and so I began to throw together a mix of people I had known, people I still knew, and also being the author, and without realising, large chunks of who I am as a person blended together into each of my main characters. It felt very organic and as the writing progressed the characters for me took on a life of their own and began to evolve into those we all meet in the first book.

I now have reached a point where the individual characters have taken on a life of their own, and as strange as it might sound, (Please don’t call the doctor yet) I can imagine each character as a person and see them in my mind as I write. Its like my subconscious has drawn the pictures for me as more and more detail has been added, so when I look at the screen and wander off into whatever hypnotic state I go to as I concentrate, there in my mind are the pictures running almost like film and playing me the scenario of the book. I have got it so down to a tee, that I can now just write what I see.

I bet you wish you had never asked now. Hey look on the bright side I am never lonely, I have a book full of characters all talking at once. (Gives giggle) I think the important thing about this, is it is an aid that has helped me, and I think it has worked because when I do talk to those who have read the book, it is one of the first things they have mentioned, apart from Harry of course, and that is still a stranger thing still.

Harry for those of you have not read the book yet can only be described as Harryish. He is a character I added to create a little humor and to break the tension at times so that I could then strike without warning and surprise the reader who had let down their guard as they giggled or smiled at Harry. He was never meant to survive book one, but very quickly I realised as I let a few people read the first drafts, that Harry had become an element of focus for most of those reading. I have to confess, that even I am amazed at how well loved he has become, I honestly never saw it coming. I will not spoil it for those who have yet to meet good old Uncle Harry, but it is a surprising reaction for even myself to comprehend, and in a way I am delighted that the efforts I put in in the early days have created a very recognisable character.   

Today I continue to write the series and my characters have increased and they are all still growing as real people would, I can only hope that you will all feel so involved with them, that you would wish to follow their development and walk besides them for a while longer. I will leave you all to ponder my sanity, and think about my methods with a very simple but for myself a wonderful compliment written by my youngest brother in a revue he put on my Facebook page without my knowledge. I will add I seldom see him, which made this a greater compliment, he wrote. “You didn’t read what was happening, you lived what was happening.”

I think he used better words than I to describe it, so I thank him for the very wonderful compliment, all writers want what is read to feel very much alive, for him it did and that is enough for me.

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Print on demand. My experience.

As a new self published author, I have obviously learned much in my short time, and one of the things that I have encountered a few misunderstandings with is the term “POD” or as we all know, or you will shortly, “Print on demand.”

I actually think that as someone who is passionate about recyling and trying not waste anything, that POD is perfect for the job of book production. I am not alone in this view, as it is actually a very cost effective tool for the production of books to the market. If I am honest, I think it would be right to say that there are many discarded books in this world that have come as a result of over production from very optomistic publishers attempts to create a large selling book. A mountain of paper must have been used in the past to create books, which lets say, did not quite live up to the mark and for one reason or another did not sell and ended up stored in a wharehouse.

Business is at its core a supply and demand thing, so it makes perfect sense to provide a book printing service that is catered to that very point. You order the books of your choice, they are printed and posted straight out to you. Its good sense right? Considering the current finacial climate it makes even greater sense, as it actually is a way of cutting down on the cost and maximising the profit.

So why is it when I walk into a bookshop, and begin to make my sales pitch to the shop owner on my own POD produced book, that as soon as the words are spoken, they frown and give me a look that would suggest they have tasted something foul? It makes no sense at all, here I am a new author with a great book (Not my words, but those who have read it) using modern technology to produce it in a way that is good for business and good for the Earth, and they then begin to treat me like I am infected with some sort of virus, I have witnessed my own book (You know the labour of love and devotion) actually dropped on the till as if the devil himself was about to flow out from under the cover and attack them. I think at this point I should raise my hands and state cleary for the record, I have no wish to offend, or create a stampede but, What the hell is wrong with you people?

New writer or not, I trawl the web as I attempt to self promote my book, which does involve reading huge amounts of stuff, a lot are articles from the writers and publishers world. I seem to read a lot of whining and bitching about how unfair the trade is and how it is hard for indepandent bookshops to survive. No offence but drop the snobbery. I love bookshops, like every author on earth, we love them with a passion, the smell, the feel, the personal service, its manner from heaven to all of us, But HEY, get with the plot. POD is not only the chosen process of many self publishing firms, its also now becoming the focus of quite a few larger publishing firms, Read your Bookseller. I would also like to add that it is also the future. Paper backs are being squeezed by the threat of digital books, and lets face it, if you owned a large publishing firm, wouldn’t you want to deliver the best book at the best price and actually make a profit from it. I realise I am new to this game, but hey I am not stupid, I have run my own plants business for years, and if I could have grown plants on demand I think I would be a hell of lot richer now.

Print on demand will become the future of the book trade, there are very few exceptions that would allow mass forward printing (Greetings Mr Brown) I would like to add that such was my concern I did contact my publisher as I was told by one bookshop, “Dont like em, they are difficult to return.” He informed “Its not a problem, every book we produce is returnable.” Phew I wiped the sweat from my brow, then I thought to myself, hang on, don’t return them, sell em. Its not positive thinking is it? I cringe at the picture of the shop assistant who half heartedly attempts to sell my book, whilst filled with the dread of knowing it might not go back if they dont.

So my message to you all is simple, get modern and get environmental, and get with it. Let us gather in groups in the corners of our local bookshops and worship at the altar of POD. its the future and as a huge reading nation we should embrace it, actually you won’t have much of a choice, as like everything in this world the big companies will dictate the future, and a book produced cost effectively with a good chance at clear profit will always lead. technology improves weekly and POD books are getting better and better, if you doubt this buy mine and have a good look at it, its simple beautiful, and not a bad read either.

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A New World.

As a child I was always facinated with those books and films that spelled disaster and the end for all of us. There was something about just a few survivors banding together and starting all over again in a new world. I remember reading the Day of the triffids for the first time and revelling in it, today it is still one of my all time favorite books. There are many films today that again repeat the stories of 30 years ago, but they do not seem to hold that wonderful sense of realisum that John Wyndham created, somehow the Day of the triffids felt like it could actually happen, a big tribute I think to the authors writing skills.

I knew in my book I wanted to create a new world, but it had to contain remnants from the past of what is today, but in my book I refer to as “The old ways of modern man.” It was something I spent a great deal of time debating with myself. I knew that the world had to return to a green world filled with plant life, and so as my thoughts progressed through the long list of options that I had short listed, I turned to the one thing that I knew was a possibility, I turned to plant life. I have seen in my life growing up besides a disused railway, how quickly nature takes hold and claws back the land left by man. The railway I played besides as a child had been closed, and actually gave me more enjoyment as it had become a thick lush corridor of green life in as little as ten years. The time frame I was going to work with was twenty six years, as I wrote the end of man as we know him in the year of 2012, and then picked up the story in the year of 2038, a good sixteen years of extra plant growth later. I had at least worked out the recovery of the country, now I just needed to wipe out most of the population.

One of the things about living today, that is highlighted so often in the press, and especially over the last ten years, is the fear of invisible illness. Several times now we have all sat at home watching the TV as things grind to a halt with illness spreading round the country. I watched the smoke rise into the air, and I might add lost a lot of business during the BSE epidemic as the country closed and the fates that provided my income closed with it. I remember well the rows of cold trucks parked up behind the local hospitals when the NHS crashed during the winter flu epidemic and the morgues were filled to capacity. It was not long before I looked to a virus based in the simplest of diseases to wipe us all out, of course the flu is the one illness that we all suffer with as there really is no cure. It is a basic thing we all know and suffer from, and I turned it into the Red Death, a variation that had severe consequences. Its odd now as I wrote the red death several years ago, and yet today as I write we all live in fear of Bird Flu or as recent days have shown, Swine Flu.

Removing a large majority of the population in an uncontrolled pandemic would create havoc and chaos, it was easy to see how the country would be gripped in panic and lets face it with overwhelming deaths the country would soon fall apart as survival kicked in. We all know of the power inside to live at all costs, it does not take much to realise there are those who would turn on everyone in their bid to survive, we have seen it before and we will again. With the breakdown of law and government, there would be those who took things into their own hands and whipped up a frenzy in the name of survival, fire and looting and destruction always follow. Without an organised effort of prevention, which with this scale of death there wouldn’t be any, towns and cities would burn, and soon the world around that was made by man, would ultimately be destroyed by man, crumble and decay would do the rest, and in would step nature to clean it all back to green and bury the last remnants of mankind below.

I gave it three years, and threw in a few tricks of my own, as later books will show, but for now you have the idea, modern man falls down and the few that remain, which would still be numbered in a few hundred thousand would begin again and start to breed a new race of survivors. This is where it got interesting for me as a writer, as I was able to sit and think about what I would do if I was the figure of Old Jake Loxley. I had already worked out that my enemy would be the brutal bands of the Cutters, and I gave them the task of stealing the crops and metals from the surviving settlements. hence the term Cutter. Life in this case would have to return to a resemblance of the past, there is still enough knowledge in the world to see we could survive using skills of the past, just walk round any village fate in the summer, the craft stalls are full of it. As my world recovered old skills came back to the fore as the older members of the community revived the skills we thought were lost. Isolated country villages became the centres of knowledge for survival, even if those in the know were not as able and fit to do the work as they once were, enter the fleeing city folk, able and strong but lacking in skills, and here we see the perfect recipe to recovery, those with the knowledge and those who have the energy and stamina for the harder way of life to come, it all made perfect sense. Once I had twenty six years of recovery, I had my new world and I lined up the paper and switched on the computer and began my first line. Loxley is a town set deep in the wild moor…….. and book one began.

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Publishing my first book.

Being a novice in the field of publishing is not an easy place to be. To be honest the hours I spent working on the book itself was a doddle compared to actually stepping on to the road of disappointment and frustration the publishing industry first set me on. Wherever you look it is always the same, and the list of how to get published books are endless, I spent a fair few quid on them and what they all basically told me was. “You ain’t got a hope mate, but thanks for buying the book, I am now a hell of a lot richer than you will ever be.”

Maybe I should have written an upgrade of the Year book, as that seemed to be everywhere I looked, the only problem there being, that my work is a work of fiction, and yes you guessed it 99.9% of every page stated clearly “No Fiction.” It felt like a minefield, and too be honest publishing I think is the most unapproachable field in any industry, talk about user unfriendly it makes the mind boggle.

It took a while but I soon began to see that the publishing industry is very much a massive collection of exclusive clubs and gangs, if you are not in the circle then you really are very much on the outside. It was hard and at times very daunting, but finally I summoned up the courage and began to send off my work. (Enter minefeild number two)

All the books I had spent a good deal of money on, had given me the ‘so called’  information on providing a synopsis and covering letter with whatever the publisher had stated, be it three chapters or the whole book, so with much enthusiasm I posted my manuscripts off and sat silently waiting with fingers crossed for a response.  The rejection letters followed and my spirits fell as they came back in droves, and remarkably they looked as if they had never been touched. What can I say I am synical at times and was not altogether sure that the companies who had refused my manuscripts had even read them. I decided on the following attempts to rub a glue stick down the edge of right hand side of the manuscripts enclosed, this did hold the paper together very nicely and only came apart if the page was lifted and turned as if it was being read. My suspicions were confirmed as yet more were returned, this time it was clear that they had not even been read, although I had some very nice letters of how this was a nice piece of work, but not suitable to our current range of books.

I don’t really mind being at a disadvantage, just as long as I am aware of it. Now I understood that I was actually being fobbed off by a company too busy to take the time to look at my work, which was fine by me, I just made a mental note of “I hope you go bankrupt” and moved onwards trying to combat the depression as I had people constantly nagging at me to produce the book, none of them seemed to quite understand that I was actually facing an impossible task.

I think I suffer at times from being a little slow on the uptake, After a year of rejections and feeling more than a little glum I understood that I was not about to get published quickly. I talked to other writer friends and felt some releif to find I was not alone, in fact I am surprised at how many writers are actually out there trying desperately to get their own works into print. What exactly are the publishing companies doing these days, because I know of, and have read some fantastic stuff, all of which has been completely rejected at least twenty times. Oh Yes how could I forget, none of us have written a celebrity biog or a how to do your house up and make buckets of money book,.Silly really we chose to write a serious book instead the endless reams of supermarket garbage we get shoved under our noses for next to no money. That really is the answer in a nut shell, consumer driven mindless fodder to be bought cheap, chewed up and spat into the nearest second hand book shop or charity shop, that is what the majority of the Industry has come down to.

With mounting pressure from those who actually wanted to buy my book, and a rapidly growing group of eager people on facebook, I decided to look at self publishing. I will state now if anyone so much as even says the word “Vanity” I will scream. I did look at hundreds of sites across the web from “we can do it for a couple of quid,” to the “just mortgage your house and you should be able to afford us ” companies. (Enter minefeild number three.)

The hardest thing about self publishing is actually all the hidden extras. I found a lot of companies looked at first sight like they were offering a good deal, It is true that you can get a book out for a small cost, but be wary, you have no idea how easy it is to fall into a big hole of hidden expenses that blast the cost of your book into the thousands. It is called Vanity at times which actually makes my blood boil. Answer me this, why is it so vain to want to publish something that you have laboured over for years? what exactly is the difference between myself and a conventionally published author? I had two years of having the door closed in my face by the publishing industry, yet I had people who had read the drafts copies of my book who were screaming at me to get it into print. In my mind I actually had a viable product, is it my fault the conventional publishers chose to ignore it? I suppose it is easy to sling stones, I have encountered a few who have looked down their nosies as I mentioned self publishing. I have taken a great deal of time to look into what is out there and it is staggering the amount of work available through the self publishing firms, maybe the conventional industry should start reading its mail before casting aspersions.

It has taken me well over two years to finally get my own piece of work into print. I have to admit I needed to learn a lot to do it, and having now successfully published my first book, I can see I have still more to learn, but that is fine by me, I don’t mind falling on my face as long as it provides a positive, and a chance to learn. I would say to everyone out there with work that is being rejected, dont take it to heart, just look into doing it yourself, but walk carefully. I see no difference in which ever route you take, opening that box and seeing a book with your name on it and being thrilled and excited, is a feeling you will have no matter which route you take. It is a little vain I admit, but show me another living soul who would not overjoyed to see their own labour of love bound in a sleeve whith their name on it.

The biggest drawback if you are going down the self publishing route, is the lack of attention you will get in the mainstream media, Here I am writing this in hope someone will see it. You have to be thick skinned and determined to get the word out, it is a relentless task of fighting your way in, one which I am currently in the middle of now.  At the end of the day does it really matter? Behind me on the book case is my work, I may not sell millions of copies, I might not even cover the costs of production, but hell there are plenty of conventionally published books for mine to sit besides. At the end of the day I will do my best and with a little luck, you never know. Time will tell, the thing is I did it, and I learned a lot.

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HTTK RJM BLOG

HELLO WORLD

Welcome to my small slice of the WordPress world. It is my hope that across these pages cast out onto the web, you will feel inclinded to visit once in a while and see how the world of HTTK, and of course myself are getting on.

I am new to the writing world, yet have spent a good while wandering around the publishing world as I try to understand everything. My first book is out although I would asume most people are not aware of it yet, and it is my new challenge in life to promote it and get enough attention to at least cover the costs. I am sure there are pit falls I have not seen coming, but that should hopefully provide me with good material to make the site informative as I go, and hey, you never know you may want to be a more frequent vsitor.

I hope you enjoy Looking around, and when you are done, why not check out the website on www.heirstothekingdom.com

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