Self-Publishing News: 9.12.2016

And now for the news!

This week in the world of self-publishing:

“When I self-published my book, admittedly, it was the last resort,” writes Eva Lesko Natiello in her September 8th article for The Huffington Post‘s Entertainment section. Natiello, who self-published her book The Memory Box after a series of rejections from traditional publishers, goes on to describe the dejection and intense discouragement that followed. “Quickly,” she writes, “the consolation prize felt very much like a booby prize.” This discouragement was only amplified by the positive responses she received.  Says Natiello, “I’m probably the only author on the planet that cringes when a reader says, ‘I read your book in one night! I couldn’t put it down!’ Knowing the myriad all-nighters I pulled writing and editing it. And all the sleepless nights that are ahead of me to finish the next book.”

Natiello’s experience is hardly unique, however. Many authors turn to self-publishing as a last resort after rejection, and there’s a tendency to think that this somehow automatically equates to failure–that self-publishing is the hallmark of failed writers, even as sales soar and readers respond the way that Natiello’s do. But there’s a silver lining to the struggle, she reminds us: “It was unglamorous and worth every minute. I didn’t know it back then, but self-publishing is just a different way to do the thing I always wanted: to entertain readers. You can’t do that unless you produce something for them to read.”  And Natiello has.  To read her full story and catch up on the success of her book, you can access the full HuffPost piece here.

Some self-publishing companies are, shall we say, unique. And Erika Bester’s Fire Quill Publishing, the first fully female-owned publisher, is one of several experienced self-publishing authors who has taken steps towards activating the potential of other authors by launching a startup that defies the world of traditional publishing according to Neo Koza in this September 9th article for Eyewitness News.  Bester saw a need–“Our publishing companies focus more on non-fiction and memoirs, they are not very supportive of fantasy genres and non-adult science fiction”–and decided to set about satisfying that need.  But it’s not easy going, as Koza reports: when small publishers like Fire Quill do occasionally get their books into stores, they are often tucked away out of sight. “It’s always somewhere in the corner where nobody sees it,” says Bester.  But her struggle is an important one, as Koza records, since the field of traditional publishing leaves little room for diverse voices like Simamkele Dial’s, whose book was published through Fire Quill earlier this year. As many self-publishing authors have discovered, self-publishing is more than just a home to discouraged authors seeking shelter after rejection by the institution; the platform provides a wholly new launchpad for diversity in thought and representation. (And content.)  But enough of the summary; check out Koza’s coverage of Bester’s work at the link.

Award opportunities for self-publishing authors can be few and far between, but there are opportunities out there as this September 9th press release for Outskirts Press reveals. The full-service self-publishing company will by the time you read this have both sponsored and sent representatives to the first-ever Colorado Book Festival, held at the Denver Public Library.  “As a Colorado-based company that assists authors worldwide,” says the release, “Outskirts Press is thrilled to provide resources to aspiring authors attending this free event.”  The event is drawing some attention not just because of its novelty but because of the names attached; Colorado’s Governor, John Hickenlooper, attended the event as well as Outskirts Press’s founder and President, Brent Sampson, who took part in a panel discussion while the company’s CEO, Jeanine Sampson, met writers one-on-one in order to field questions about both the company and the process of self-publishing.  The event, which drew more than 75 local authors (!!), ran the gamut from crime to sports, poetry to photography, and fiction to history as authors mingled and shared their experiences with other attendees.  With book signings, giveaways, and children’s story times scheduled throughout the event, this first-ever Colorado Book Festival holds a lot of promise in terms of giving authors an idea of what they might come to expect in the future for their industry: Hope, optimism, and a great deal of public attention.  For the full press release, follow the link!


spa-news

As a self-publishing author, you may find it helpful to stay up-to-date on the trends and news related to the self-publishing industry. This will help you make informed decisions before, during and after the self-publishing process, which will lead to a greater self-publishing experience. To help you stay current on self-publishing topics, simply visit our blog every Monday to find out the hottest news. If you have other big news to share, please comment below.


Kelly

ABOUT KELLY SCHUKNECHT: Kelly Schuknecht is the Executive Vice President of Outskirts Press. In addition to her contributions to the Outskirts Press blog at blog.outskirtspress.com, Kelly and a group of talented marketing experts offer book marketing services, support, and products to not only published Outskirts Press authors, but to all authors and professionals who are interested in marketing their books and/or careers. Learn more about Kelly on her blog, kellyschuknecht.com

Self-Publishing News: 9.5.2016

happy labor day


And now for the news!

This week in the world of self-publishing:

“Professional photographer Alice Mabin is a woman not afraid to have a go in life,” writes Jennette Lees in her September 2nd article for the Cootamundra Herald, a paper which covers the Cootamundra District in New South Wales, Australia.  Says Lees, New Zealand born Mabin, 29, “always knew she wanted a career on the land,” and indeed spent “her early working life traipsing around high country stations in New Zealand mustering sheep, cattle, and deer, before packing up her life, including her dogs, in 2007 and moving to the vast, flat, drought-stricken planes of Hay, to experience farming the Australian way.”  She even took part in the 2013 Brinkworth cattle drive, the longest cattle drive in over 100 years of Australian history, walking roughly eighteen thousand head of cattle “from central Queensland to Hay,” a journey of 2000 kilometers (1240+ miles).

brinkworth cattle drive
[ a map of the Brinkworth drive ]
2000 kilometers, for comparison, is roughly the distance from Dusseldorf to Skopje, and from New York to Miami. You can imagine that walking that far might lend itself to some interesting photography, and Mabin made good on that opportunity. Writes Lees, Mabin “went along for a day to take photographs and ended up joining the crew for the entire five-month trip. She finished with beautiful, scenic images capturing a side of Australian life few have the opportunity to experience.”  After putting her images together as a book, and struggling to find a publisher, Mabin self-published The Drover and printed just a thousand copies.  To date, reports Lees, “21,000 copies of the book have been sold with another reprint on the horizon.”  To learn more about Mabin’s fascinating work and the story of her self-publishing experience, follow the link!

 

Some weeks ago–back in May, in fact–we reported on Rana Ayyub’s rough journey to self-publication, and this week we are happy to offer a wonderful follow up.  As Priya Ramani writes for Live Mint in this September 2nd article, “All the angst fades when you’re the country’s latest self-publishing sensation who has, pretty much single-handedly, managed to sell 32,000 copies of a book nobody would touch. It also feels nice to be on the verge of paying back the Rs.5 lakh bank loan you took to do this.”  Says Ramani, “It’s great when the country’s biggest English language book distributor takes you on board because they know it makes commercial sense, political affiliations be damned.” Ayyub, who published the highly controversial Gujarat Files: Anatomy Of A Cover Up earlier this year, has faced everything from being ignored to accusations of being a jihadi Muslim radical. It doesn’t hurt that Ramani herself is clearly impressed with Ayyub’s work; as Ramani puts it, “the then 26-year-old reporter who went undercover as film-maker Maithili Tyagi for eight months in 2011 to investigate the riots, custody killings and 2003 murder of Gujarat home minister Haren Pandya. The investigation, originally commissioned by news magazine Tehelka, was never published. Several years later, Ayyub has self-published it as The Gujarat Files. It takes a single-minded madness to do what she did.”  Single-minded madness aside, Ayyub has become something of a self-publishing sensation in addition to a political force for transparency, advocacy, and the ethical treatment of others.  For the full report, click here.

Emma Bryson has some strong words for the publishing community.  In her latest (September 1st) article for New Zealand’s premier Booksellers magazine, Bryson bemoans the fact that romance authors and publishers “inspire a bare minimum of mainstream media attention, aside from the odd condescending ‘human interest’ story. But the slight of romance rides further than this still, with traditionally little to no coverage in national or even local bookish circles.”  Says Bryson,  “I’m beginning to think that the somewhat toxic relationship between the wider publishing world and romance needs to be re-negotiated. Not for our sake, but for yours.”  How ‘yours’?  The genre “transcends most of those traditional mainstream publishing concerns,” she writes, and this is good for everyone: “Multinational vs indie? No problem, you can make a career out of either, or both. Traditional vs self-publishing? Both can be lucrative options for romance writers. Print vs digital? Hey, same there.”  The complicated relationship between Romance and Feminism bears further study, too, according to Bryson.  But when push comes to shove, it’s Romance’s very transgressiveness–its ability to cross lines because no one is looking–that makes it home for innovation and success. Its authors are “freed to explore those cutting-edge avenues that traditional publishers still scoff at,” write Bryson–and this is ultimately good news for everyone.  For the rest of Bryson’s article, follow the link..


spa-news

As a self-publishing author, you may find it helpful to stay up-to-date on the trends and news related to the self-publishing industry. This will help you make informed decisions before, during and after the self-publishing process, which will lead to a greater self-publishing experience. To help you stay current on self-publishing topics, simply visit our blog every Monday to find out the hottest news. If you have other big news to share, please comment below.


Kelly

ABOUT KELLY SCHUKNECHT: Kelly Schuknecht is the Executive Vice President of Outskirts Press. In addition to her contributions to the Outskirts Press blog at blog.outskirtspress.com, Kelly and a group of talented marketing experts offer book marketing services, support, and products to not only published Outskirts Press authors, but to all authors and professionals who are interested in marketing their books and/or careers. Learn more about Kelly on her blog, kellyschuknecht.com

Self-Publishing News: 8.29.2016

And now for the news!

This week in the world of self-publishing:

“When former Farrar, Straus and Giroux editor Jesse Coleman was looking to get back into publishing after spending years building a freelance editorial business,” writes Rachel Deahl in this August 26th article for Publishers Weekly, “he found himself weighing opportunities at Big Five houses against a job at a software company.” Ultimately, it seems, he was able to create his own third way between the two and launched a publishing branch to the Los Angeles-based software company, NationBuilder.  “That a software company would be interested in a book division seems, as Coleman acknowledged, a bit odd,” writes Deahl. But neither Coleman nor NationBuilder were new to the notion of publishing–or self-publishing.  NationBuilder’s cofounder and CEO, Jim Gilliam, gave a viral speech to the Personal Democracy Forum in 2011, a speech he and his fellow cofounder Lea Endres later transformed into a manuscript that Coleman edited and they together self-published. The book’s success, according to Deahl, whetted their appetite and they noticed a distinct synergy between nontraditional publishing models and their own company’s mission. It seemed natural, then, to develop a publishing arm to their own company with the goal of creating “the kind of nonfiction books that have consumer appeal, and extend the company’s brand.” NationBuilder Books, says Deahl, launch this fall when The Internet Is My Religion is officially rereleased on September 13. Says Deahl, “NationBuilder’s titles will be available in both print and online, and Gilliam said he’s currently in negotiations with a major distributor. Veering from the traditional royalty model, Coleman is instead commissioning books as works for hire. In lieu of royalties, authors will be offered flat advances of $20,000 each.” This places NationBuilder somewhere in the grey zone just off center of the traditional publishing houses–albeit a grey zone that has its roots deep in the self-publishing movement. For the full story, follow the link!

A quick update on a story we first brought you news on back at the beginning of the month: FlipHTML5 is officially live and seeing its first users according to this press release published to Digital Journal on August 26th. The Hong-Kong based developer, FlipHTML5 Software Co. Ltd, promotes this software as “significantly useful for self publishers as it allows them to distribute their magazines everywhere in order to reach more people,” but the proof will remain in the pudding until more users have reported back their experiences with the software over time. The demos provided on the FlipHTML5 website, including one for “Dumb Starbucks,” demonstrate the interactivity and potential for the medium–albeit, for very corporate ends. (There are also demos for H&M, WeddingWire, Miss Dior, Apple, Hard Graft, Outside Magazine, Top Gear, GoToMeeting, and a number of others under the website’s “Case Studies” tab.) One could foresee this becoming a new and beautiful way to publish zines, for one. To read the rest of the press release, click here.

Here’s some good news to start your week off on a happy note: the Independent Publishing Resource Center, given notice of its upcoming ousting earlier this summer, is close to finding its next home according to Portland Business Journal staff reporter Ron Bell in this August 24th article. “The nonprofit, which has offered publishing tools, workshops and other resources to writers and self-publishers for nearly 20 years, got word of the increase in July and needs to find a new home to replace its Southeast Division Street location by April 2017,” says Bell, making it one of “handful of recent real estate transactions that have triggered the ousting of Portland artists — including the Towne Storage Building, the Troy Laundry Building and the impending sale of Imago Theatre’s home.” The rent hike of 300 percent may not be feasible for the Independent Publishing Resource Center, but its recent successes in providing support to the self-publishing industry … is. Writes Bell, the organization turned to its friends to help out with the costs associated with leaving its 20-year home and “launched a Kickstarter campaign with a goal of $20,000. As of this past Friday, the nonprofit had cleared that and then some. This morning, the total had hit $20,754, and the campaign still had another 10 days to go.” This is good news for everyone that the IPRC has helped over the years and will help in the years to come! For the rest of Bell’s coverage of the situation, read the original article here.


spa-news

As a self-publishing author, you may find it helpful to stay up-to-date on the trends and news related to the self-publishing industry. This will help you make informed decisions before, during and after the self-publishing process, which will lead to a greater self-publishing experience. To help you stay current on self-publishing topics, simply visit our blog every Monday to find out the hottest news. If you have other big news to share, please comment below.


Kelly

ABOUT KELLY SCHUKNECHT: Kelly Schuknecht is the Executive Vice President of Outskirts Press. In addition to her contributions to the Outskirts Press blog at blog.outskirtspress.com, Kelly and a group of talented marketing experts offer book marketing services, support, and products to not only published Outskirts Press authors, but to all authors and professionals who are interested in marketing their books and/or careers. Learn more about Kelly on her blog, kellyschuknecht.com

Self-Publishing News: 8.8.2016

And now for the news!

This week in the world of self-publishing:

The title really says it all, in this case: says Alison Flood in The Guardian on August 5th, “A father who tried self-publishing the bedtime story he made up for his daughters has landed a surprise order of 2,000 copies from Virgin Atlantic to help children sleep on night flights.”  The book in question, Stephen Holmes’ The Great Hot Air Balloon Adventure (illustrated by Kev Payne), was inspired by a bedtime story Holmes had been telling his daughters for years–and he never had the intent to publish or sell until Madison, age seven, requested it. The story of how his book connected with Virgin Atlantic is an interesting one: having ordered an intial print run of 1000 copies and having sold roughly half that number, Holmes decided to send a copy to an airline executive via LinkedIn as a spur-of-the-moment inspiration–and the airline enjoyed it so much they decided to order an additional print run of 2000 in order to distribute copies on their night flights. The book, according to Flood, “tells of best friends Tom and Jessica–the names chosen by his daughters – who are taken on a night balloon ride by a ‘very well spoken’ rabbit. They drink hot chocolate and bounce on clouds, before meeting a friendly owl and flying home to bed.”  The icing on the cake?  Flood gives a brief run-down at the end of her article on the progress self-publishing has made in recent years.

“It’s the best choice for self publishers to publish their magazines easily and quickly without any delay,” writes Veronica Linn in this August 5th piece for WhaTech.  FlipHTML5, once voted the “best magazine newsstand app maker by users around the world,” gives publishers “the chance to create realistic CSS3, jQuery and HTML E-magazines from PDF versions instantly which they are distribute through online or offline outlets.” This is good news for self-publishing authors, who often need to capitalize upon timeliness in order to turn a profit.  Says Linn, “All one has to do is to upload the input material, insert personal logo and multimedia content and change themes and backgrounds to achieve the look they want.”  It’s worth noting that Linn, who as an employee of FlipHTML5, is not exactly unbiased in the service of self-publishing–but in many ways her piece hits all of the right notes.  To read the full release, click here!

“More than half of all science fiction magazines failed to publish fiction from black authors in 2015,” writes Andrew Liptak for The Verge on August 4th: “Speculative fiction magazine Fireside Fiction has commissioned and released a report detailing an unwelcome revelation: speculative fiction magazines and online fiction sites are failing to publish stories by black writers.”  Liptak reports on the report, calling it “damning” and that “of the 2,039 short stories published last year across 63 magazines, only 38 were published by black authors.”  These stats are fairly self-evident, indeed, but what do they have to do with self-publishing?  It all has to do with the part short stories have to play in boosting the science fiction genre.  Says Liptak, “Short fiction also allows authors to experiment with form, style, and narratives which can have great impact on the field as a whole. Barriers for specific groups of people hurts the field as a whole by blocking new voices and styles from reaching a wider audience.”  Liptak excerpts an interview with author N.K. Jemisin (author of The Fifth Season and Obelisk Gate), who “noted that some authors that might have otherwise published through traditional markets have found other outlets for their work.”  Says Jemisin (through Liptak), “There’s a gigantic market of self-published and small press published black fiction that kind of eschews the whole traditional published market simply because back in the nineties when all of this really kind of kicked off … the traditional publishing industry basically treated black writers as if they were anomalies.”  So in other words, self-publishing is promoting diversity in a highly structured and often exclusionary genre.  That’s good work, self-publishers!  To read the full Verge article, follow the link.


spa-news

As a self-publishing author, you may find it helpful to stay up-to-date on the trends and news related to the self-publishing industry. This will help you make informed decisions before, during and after the self-publishing process, which will lead to a greater self-publishing experience. To help you stay current on self-publishing topics, simply visit our blog every Monday to find out the hottest news. If you have other big news to share, please comment below.


Kelly

ABOUT KELLY SCHUKNECHT: Kelly Schuknecht is the Executive Vice President of Outskirts Press. In addition to her contributions to the Outskirts Press blog at blog.outskirtspress.com, Kelly and a group of talented marketing experts offer book marketing services, support, and products to not only published Outskirts Press authors, but to all authors and professionals who are interested in marketing their books and/or careers. Learn more about Kelly on her blog, kellyschuknecht.com

.

 

Self-Publishing News: 8.1.2016

Look what we woke up to today!

anniversary

Eight years, really?  Boy, doesn’t time fly?  We are going to commemorate this milestone with a whole new look for the Self Publishing Advisor blog.  It’s now cleaner and faster/easier to navigate. We hope you like it.

And now for the news!

This week in the world of self-publishing:

In this July 28th press release as reposted on Broadway World, Outskirts Press makes known its latest crop of bestsellers, several of which you may already have heard–including, of course, actress Mirtha Michelle Castro Marmol’s Letters, To the Men I Have Loved.  Published just over two years ago in June of 2014, Letters continues to demonstrate its remarkable staying power while it holds on to spot number six.  (Her latest book, Elusive Loves, was published late last year.)  And in tenth place, Chidozie Osuwa’s What She Feels continues to make good on its international acclaim.  (Is it a coincidence, one might ask, that both of these regulars on the Top 10 list are books of poetry?  I don’t think so.  Whoever tells you poetry is dead–and there are plenty of people who do say this–clearly hasn’t looked at sales figures over the last year.)  The list includes several other books of interest (exactly eight, to be precise), several of them centering on the theme of faith, and several others of the memoir and nonfiction genres.  To read up on all ten books, check out the original press release here.

“The dismissal of self-published books in a grand sweeping statement is irresponsible of a modern newspaper editor,” writes Samita Sarkar in this July 28th Huffington Post article.  Her piece, while also a fine defense of self-publishing in general, serves as a highly specific takedown of one particular person: Globe and Mail Books Editor Mark Medley, who made it his mission to downplay the hard work of Canadian self-published author Douglas Gardham earlier in the month.  “It is fine not to consider most self-published books,” Sarkar continues, “but this shouldn’t be because they’re self-published, and if it is, at least have the good sense not to admit this to your audience.”  Sarkar goes on to explain the difference between self-publishing and vanity presses, giving eloquent pause to anyone who might have the audacity to judge or–worst of all–pity an author who chooses to publish and market without the backing of a traditional publishing company.  “By registering an imprint and truly self-publishing their work, self-published authors can compete with traditionally published authors for the attention of readers,” writes Sarkar: “The unethical vanity press ‘middle man’ should have no place in this industry.”  But she saves her final word for the unfolding story of Douglas Gardham, whose hard work is already being discovered–and will no doubt continue to be so.  For the rest of Sarkar’s essay, follow the link!

This is a week for lists, as John Maher’s July 28th post to Publishers Weekly online proves.  Not to be shown up by Outskirts Press, Publishers Weekly is also in the habit of releasing its lists regularly, and this week’s is a doozy.  Says Maher, “The tables were turned against the traditional publishers on the iBooks Bestseller list this past week, as five of the top ten titles on the list were self-published.”  The five titles in question include “top-slotted” Just Friends by Billy Taylor in first position and Helen Hardt’s self-published Obsession down at #4, with several volumes of Kendall Ryan’s self-published Hitched also making the list.  When you consider that Taylor and Hardt both beat blockbuster successes The Girl on the Train and J.K. Rowling’s screenplay for the newest addition to the Harry Potter canon–well, that speaks volumes about how far self-publishing has come in making its mark on book sales.  You can find Maher’s full list here.


spa-news

As a self-publishing author, you may find it helpful to stay up-to-date on the trends and news related to the self-publishing industry.This will help you make informed decisions before, during and after the self-publishing process, which will lead to a greater self-publishing experience. To help you stay current on self-publishing topics, simply visit our blog every Monday to find out the hottest news. If you have other big news to share, please comment below.

KellyABOUT KELLY SCHUKNECHT: Kelly Schuknecht is the Executive Vice President of Outskirts Press. In addition to her contributions to the Outskirts Press blog at blog.outskirtspress.com, Kelly and a group of talented marketing experts offer book marketing services, support, and products to not only published Outskirts Press authors, but to all authors and professionals who are interested in marketing their books and/or careers. Learn more about Kelly on her blog, kellyschuknecht.com.