At times, I doubt myself. Particularly because no agents would take on my book. I feel as though a traditional publisher would help me get the publicity I need to sell books and get my name out there. I just wrote about it the other day, in fact (http://saskiaeakyil.blogspot.de/2012/06/give-up-no-not-yet.html).
And then I read this blog post (thanks, Krisiny!!!) and realized that, as an unknown first-time author, having a traditional publisher and agent might not have helped me at all. I just need to keep plugging away at guest blogging and other forms of publicity, because someone might read my book because of it. And if they do, they might like it. And if they like it, they might tell a person or two about it. And if they do... that's how it really works for unknown writers. A lot of hard work and word of mouth.
Amazon was so thrilled with the post, which is by a previously traditionally published author who disses traditional publishers and praises Amazon/Createspace/KDP, that they made it a front-page story. Which will totally help Jessica Park sell books, further convincing her that self publishing is better than traditional publishing for her. One of her best points as far as I'm concerned is that certain character ages fall into a black hole of literature - there is no "category" for 13-year-olds (too old for middle grade, too young for YA), no category for 18-25 year-olds...it's ludicrous. And it is absolutely the fault of the large publishing houses who market books as they do. I actually wanted to write a book about a 13-year-old, but was reminded that there's no category for that.
I'm still not 100% convinced that self-publishing is actually better... Ms. Park did have publisher backing for years, which surely gave her a feeling of legitimacy and she surely benefited from that publisher's connections - it is incredibly hard to get self-published books reviewed. I will still try to get an agent for my next book. I will still enter it into contests. But if, in the end, I decide to self publish again, I won't feel too bad about it.
Thank you, Jessica Park, for helping self-published authors gain some legitimacy!
Showing posts with label success stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label success stories. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Another self-published to publisher-published story
Being self-published is wonderful in many ways, but there's some attraction to having a major publisher take on your book. I'm not entirely sure why this is, given that new authors still have to take a large part in the promotion of their books. I think I would still like mainstream publishers to publish my book. It's good to know that it happens - I wonder if in the future this is the way it will always happen?
http://www.fearfuladventurer.com/archives/5940
http://www.fearfuladventurer.com/archives/5940
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Hope
This article gives me hope that self-publishing can really work in the favor of authors with non-mainstream books: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/how-i-became-a-best-selling-author-.html
Link courtesy of my brother, Scott. Gracias, hermano!
Link courtesy of my brother, Scott. Gracias, hermano!
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