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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Work in progress Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 67
| Publish and be damned Anyone interested in self-publishing might want to take a look at this. Publish and be damned It seems to be a much better deal than most vanity publishing, and it gives the author a great deal more control over their book. I'd like to know what others think about this. |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| cheap,flashy little crook Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 2,998
| Re: Publish and be damned They seem to offer you more control, like the ISBN in your own name, which makes you the official publisher, but I don't see how this is ultimately different from any other online vanity press. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Admin and Tea-boy Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: UK: SCOTLAND:
Posts: 5,374
| Re: Publish and be damned I honestly believe that people who self-publish are slashing their own creativity. If something's worth doing then grin and bear the hard work of aiming for the traditional print markets. Otherwise you essentially consign your creative work to the recycle bin of history. 2c. ![]() |
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| Dragon Writer Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 1,934
| Re: Publish and be damned Quote:
I don't think I slashed my creativity by self-publishing. If anything I had to become a lot more creative... just not always with only the writing. I have no experience of using such companies as that quoted above, as I organised my own self published books directly with printers, binders, graphic designers, artists, copy editors and proof readers. The thing to keep in mind with self publishing is that in order to make it viable, the less people in the loop taking a slice of the profit margin, the better. Any company that purposes to help writers self publish is not doing this out of sympathy with the lot of the poor writer who is unable to break into the market - they are out to make money. However, these guys take money from only one person - you, the writer! The fact that there are so many of these companies out there tells me that there must be a lot of writers frustrated enough to be taken in by talk of profits and distribution deals that a lot of the time just do not exist. In some ways I agree with you Brian, the ideal solution is to get picked up by a major publisher, but self publishing can be profitable. My profits this month alone total over £2000 and we're only half way through the month. However, I should instantly qualify that by pointing out that: a/ This is not a typical month and b/ This is more than I made in my first year! Many writers who deserve to be published never will be, and there are certainly those who are published who should never have been allowed near a keyboard, yet will continue to fill the shelves with their drivel! I have learned by hard won experience that self publishing can be viable, but BEWARE any COMPANY that wish to help. They are after only one thing... and it's not your success! ![]() | |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| cheap,flashy little crook Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 2,998
| Re: Publish and be damned I'd suggest that Mark's experience is fairly unique, and also that self-publishing the whole way, rather than through the various onlijne or offline intermediaries available is a bit of a different matter. One point I'd like to address, at least from the viewpoint of discussing: we've mentioned that being signed by a major publisher is the ideal. Is it? There is a reasonable samll-press scene that offers an equivalent level of professionalism in terms of judging the worth of a book, and also eventual production standards, and maybe a better entry for a writer who knows he is likely to appeal to a more niche market. Some of the fantasy successes of recent times were intially released by small presses before being picked up by the majors - Jeff VanderMeer's Veniss Underground and KJ Bishop's The Etched City spring to mind. This is in a way analogous to Mark's experience, and it's worth looking at this route in more detail. To relate it to the world of music, if Geffen doesn't snag you right at the beginning, a deal with a local label can help get you the steet buzz required for the big boys to take interest. |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Admin and Tea-boy Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: UK: SCOTLAND:
Posts: 5,374
| Re: Publish and be damned Indeed, Mark - thanks for replying - I knew you would contend. ![]() But the difference is that you didn't simply self-publish, fin. That's what so many other people appear to do. You effectively started your own publishing and distribution company, and put the work in to ensure that some commercial success came of it. That's not vanity publishing in the traditional sense (if those words are allowed together!). |
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| Dragon Writer Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 1,934
| Re: Publish and be damned Quote:
I would not say that all of the scripts turned out by such organisations are bad, because there are some great writers out there who are simply frustrated enough to pay the extortionate rates they charge to get into print. However, the vanity publishing business has always been there to pander to the egos of the writers. From what I've seen of them, they rarely offer the sort of support truly needed to get a book selling well. The sad thing is that they have now switched their labelling to 'self publishing', thus giving the real entrepeneurs amongst us a bad name. As for 'slashing my creativity...' !!! | |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| Admin and Tea-boy Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: UK: SCOTLAND:
Posts: 5,374
| Re: Publish and be damned Well, if you weren't vanity publishing then you weren't slashing your creativty. ![]() As you have well proven - by the fact that after years of hard work, you finally got yourself into a publishing position. There's no vanity in hard work. |
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| | #9 (permalink) | |
| Dragon Writer Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 1,934
| Re: Publish and be damned Quote:
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| | #10 (permalink) | ||||
| Work in progress Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 67
| Re: Publish and be damned This turned into a more interesting debate than I expected! I don't want to shoot my mouth off about issues I have no personal experience of, but there have been a couple of points raised that I'm confused about. Let me get this straight... I think there are two separate issues here that have got tangled together. The first is money. The second is creative ability/recognition of literary merit (a prestige issue? Not all 'traditional' published work is good, as Mark points out; Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
I think it all depends on what you expect to get out of being published. 1) Anyone who goes into writing expecting to make significant amounts of money is, realistically, going to get a nasty surprise - no matter which method of publishing they choose. 2) The creativity going into any given novel is going to be the same whether the author sends the finished manuscript to a vanity publisher or to a traditional publisher. Back to money. Quote:
The difference between pabd and most vanity publishers is that the author is not buying an entire print run and then handed full responsibilty for selling the books themselves. Pabd require you to buy a limited number of copies, and if you wish to buy more to sell yourself, you can buy them at a discount to do so, but pabd also sell the book directly to the public, taking their money, not the author's. Did that make any sense? So what are you looking for - literary success or commercial success? Or can you have both? "Literary success of any enduring kind is made by refusing to do what publishers want, by refusing to write what the public want, by refusing to accept any popular standards, by refusing to write anything to order." -- LAFCADIO HEARN | ||||
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Dragon Writer Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 1,934
| Re: Publish and be damned Kraken, some simple maths. Let's assume you wrote a modest novel of 250 pages. At Pabd prices, even at the lowest price per book (taking over 500 copies to sell) this would cost you £4.85 per book. By Pabd's own admission, bookshops will take at least 40% of the cover price. This means that for you to break even on that sale, the cover price would have to be £8.08/copy. If you take into account the cost of getting those books to the bookshop - if you're lucky they will take about 6 copies. You then post them at the cheapest rate in the UK it will cost you another £4.45 (weight up to 1.5Kg parcel post). This means that your cover price now has to be £8.82 to break even. The less books you post, the more expensive/book, so I'm being generous. I would suggest that you would probably want to make at least a few pence a book, so let's say you set the price at £8.99. How many 250 page paperback books do you see for this price? Would you buy one? I probably wouldn't. I should further point out that whilst independant bookshops may be satisfied with 40%, the major chains are not. Even dealing with Waterstones and WH Smith on a 'local author' basis I was having to give up to 48% discount and now that I'm dealing on a larger scale, it's 55%. This kind of blows those figures out of the water. Don't get me wrong - Pabd offer a great service for someone who wants a couple of dozen books printed to give to friends and family as Christmas presents, but don't even think about it if you want to make any money. This is VANITY publishing whichever way you look at it. I doubt that Pabd would bother to print any copies to sell on their own unless they thought it worth their while and from what I can see, the author would gain nothing from those sales anyway. Once again the author loses.![]() Last edited by Mark Urpen; 18th September 2004 at 09:32 AM. Reason: Missed premise. |
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Admin and Tea-boy Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: UK: SCOTLAND:
Posts: 5,374
| Re: Publish and be damned Certainly I quite agree that it depends entirely upon the author's objectives as to which publishing route they take. I know of people who self-published simply because they wanted to share their story in an acceptable format with family and friends. Kudos to them - they achieved their goal. But if someone wishes to vanity publish as a viable alteranative to traditional print, I personally believe that the person is selling themselves short. Just because a struggle is hard doesn't mean to say it is necessary - but, indeed, there is a survival of the fittest and I'm sure a lot of great stories never see light of day because the writers were not able to push their stories into the wider world. Can vanity publishing offer literary success? Well, looking around, I don't see the vast over-whelming majority of self-published authors having any kind of literary recognition in the slightest. In fact, from the reviews I have read of self-published works, one of the overwhelming criticisms is the lack of editorial input - silly errors, flaws in contruction, bad technical writing. These are issues that a signed author can expect to have polished up in their dealings with a publishing house, so as to create a more professional work. The quote by Hearn - well, he was writing in the 19th century, and I've noticed that vanity publishing often quotes from 19th century writers - without pointing out that self-publishing was a standard of publishing in the 19th century - but it most certainly is not the standard in the 21st century. I very much agree with the criticisms of commercial success - I do not at all believe that anyone can expect to become rich simply from being published.There are far far far easier ways to make money. But, ultimately, most decent writers are trying to share an idea, an outlook, a particular way of looking at things, all told through the medium of story-telling. It's an addiction, means of expression that demands to be freed. But is vanity publishing really going to free it properly? Again, I guess it all depends upon a writer's original intentions in the first place. 2c. |
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| | #13 (permalink) | |
| Work in progress Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 67
| Re: Publish and be damned Thanks to both of you - I appreciate the discussion You both made some good points - just one thought left: Quote:
David. Eddings. Survival of the easiest to read, possibly... Apologies to any Eddings fans - I have read most of his books (admits <deeply embarrassed> I even used to owe a few), but honestly - his popularity says dire things about the fantasy market. | |
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| Dragon Writer Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 1,934
| Re: Publish and be damned I will admit to having been an Eddings fan for a long time and that he was a major influence in my own writing style. However, I would qualify that by saying that although I enjoyed his first two series, I have been less than impressed by the stuff he has written since, to the point where I have stopped buying his work. I don't have a problem with easy reading fantasy - in fact I very much enjoy it. My own stories are deliberately written to be easy to read. To each his own, I suppose. I enjoy reading works by the monsters/masters of complex fantasy like Hobb, Jordan et al, but often when I want to relax and not think too hard about what I'm reading, then I return to the easier reads. Something to keep in mind as well, is that whilst some writers produce work very much for niche markets, there are those (myself included) who want to write work that will appeal to the widest possible audience. I write stories that are fun. They are not written to make a moral point. They are not written in an attempt to demonstrate any theoretical sociological possibilities, or indeed to satisfy those who like to have worlds created in vast, intricate and often pointless detail. The stories I write are about characters who have interesting adventures. Sometimes these stories include magical elements and sometimes they don't. However, one thing I have constantly striven for is to deliver enough pace to keep a reluctant reader interested, whilst having enough depth and complexity to satisfy those readers who 'like their fantasy'. This is not an easy balance. I thought the early books by Eddings did a pretty good job, as did McCaffrey in her earlier works. The age range of the readers often gives a good indication of the readability of a book - I have had wonderful letters and feedback from children as young as seven, and adults as old as ninety one! That a story can bring pleasure to such a wide audience tells me that it was worth telling. I suspect that Eddings commands similar statistics. Eddings may have lost his way, but he had the right idea at the beginning. I feel he still very much deserves to have a place in the fantasy hall of fame. ![]() |
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| | #15 (permalink) |
| Admin and Tea-boy Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: UK: SCOTLAND:
Posts: 5,374
| Re: Publish and be damned Readers all have different needs - are served by different markets. What we read and enjoy as 16 year olds is probably very different than as 32 year olds. It's different literary markets. But if Eddings had vanity published, would anyone have ever heard of him? Would you have been able to enjoy his stories when you were younger? The survival of the fittest is something of a conceit on my part - it is simply the observation that it seems to be those most driven who get through - and that's for a range of industries. But vanity publishing offers a quick and easy way of achieving at least part of that goal - but without necessarily allowing for the continuing hard work to get the writing out to a wider audience. Just my personal 2c, though. |
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