Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2015

ONE WRITER'S TOILS - Meg Mims



FIRST, an apology.

I have a reminder on my calendar to prepare a blog post every month for Western Fictioneers. And this month, I procrastinated. Yes. Page proofs for my historical mystery thunked on my desk, along with a ton of other pending matters. No excuses. I should have prepped this post, with an appropriate western theme, long ago. But such is the life of the writer. I'll do the next best thing - chat about all the blood, sweat, and tears that go into a writing life. You have to be desperate to want that.


SECOND, I was desperate to succeed.

Oh yes. Back in the early 1990s, with my 3-year-old daughter at my feet happily playing, I tapped the keys of a manual typewriter with hopes that one day... You can guess the rest. Like a cat pawing under the door, trying to find that elusive toy... Five stacks of manuscripts later (most with dead bodies, which puzzled the romance editors) and many years followed. I worked part-time as a substitute teacher and tutor, enhanced my brilliant daughter's education (schools were good, but she needed more than what they offered), assisted my husband caring for his elderly mother, published in the children's market (very little money in magazines, trust me), and even set aside my writing throughout my daughter's high school years to help (and lead) the Band Boosters. Once she hit college running, I needed time to recharge my batteries. Oh, and do housework. Housework is always last on my list. As it should be. It will wait for you.


THIRD, I finally took my dream seriously.

No longer would my writing be a hobby. I wanted a real career. I wanted that publishing contract and even an agent. But first, I had to figure out why -- while friends had published (romances) -- why, oh, why the editors praised my writing but pulled the carrot away. So I decided to get an M.A. in Writing Popular Fiction at Seton Hill University in Greensburg, Pennsylvania. My husband supported my decision. Doing the week-long term residencies and the hard, hard, hard work of writing at home between, I identified my strengths and weaknesses. I even found my voice (lo and behold, it wasn't romance!), shored up the weakness in my writing and infused more of my strengths into my work. I graduated, celebrated, and snagged an on-line writing job to help pay bills -- but that's not why I earned the MA. I set aside my "thesis manuscript" (flawed, despite two years of hard work), and revised the manuscript I'd written before I started the MA (just to prove to I could finish one again, after a four-year hiatus, although it was more romance than western).


That book became DOUBLE CROSSING. Nobody wanted it. Not even after winning awards and finalist berths in unpublished writing contests. That's when I realized I had to PUSH HARDER. What would it take to get a foot in the door? I accompanied my daughter to Vienna (in spring!) to recharge my batteries, think, and pray. We had a lovely time. Writing was furthest from my mind. Sometimes you just need to get away, relax, sightsee and eat Sachertorte.


When I returned, I accepted an offer from a small press -- no advance, but it was grand seeing my name in print at last. And I am SO GRATEFUL to the Western Writers of America for choosing Double Crossing as the Best First Novel of 2012. I'd submitted it to many contests, but that win helped me realize this was for real. My dream HAD come true. But the hard work wasn't over. Staying at a small press wasn't the end of the line for me, despite a supportive writing community of friends. My college friend and long time critique partner Sharon Pisacreta helped me write the sequel to Double Crossing, DOUBLE OR NOTHING, which won the Laramie for Best Mystery - Western. It helps, when you're stuck in the middle of a book, to kill off a character -- her words, exactly.


But while driving to her house for that helpful session, I had the brilliant idea (all thanks to God, of course, for pinging my brain) of pairing up Eliza Doolittle and Henry Higgins as amateur sleuths. Since Shaw's Pygmalion is in the public domain, that gave us license to "take over" the characters while keeping his original intent in mind, plus his witty humor. Together we wrote the first draft and came up with a pseudonym, D.E. Ireland. We also snagged an enthusiastic agent three hours after sending a query. And John Talbot landed a publishing contract within three weeks from Minotaur Books. We were thrilled.


No, our book is not a western. But it is historical, and it is a series. I haven't left the western genre, since I have ideas for future dabbling. But for now, my mind is far, far to the east, in jolly 1913 England. And our first book, WOULDN'T IT BE DEADLY, has been nominated for an Agatha Award for Best Historical of 2014! Wow. We are in grand company! Long established mystery authors Charles Todd, Rhys Bowen and Victoria Thompson are in that same category, with the decision to come at Malice Domestic the first weekend in May. We are SO HONORED.


And we are working on page proofs now for the second book, MOVE YOUR BLOOMING CORPSE, which is coming September 22nd, including Royal Ascot and the suffrage movement. We had so much fun writing it, and are enjoying these characters immensely. So while I may not be around much in the western field, I am still posting here... and plotting for the future.

Happy to place my nose back onto the grindstone... 



Award-winning mystery author Meg Mims -- also one-half of the writing team of D.E. Ireland for St. Martin's Minotaur mystery series featuring Eliza Doolittle & Henry Higgins -- lives in Southeastern Michigan with her husband and a sweet Malti-poo. She loves writing novels, novellas and short stories, both contemporary and historical. She earned a Spur Award, a Laramie Award and an M.A. from Seton Hill University's Writing Popular Fiction program. Follow on FacebookTwitter & Pinterest!







Sunday, August 11, 2013

Why Jump Into The Rat Race of Publishing? by L.J. Martin

After 30 years of writing and over 30 book length works, dozens of short stories and articles, a blog with over 3,500 postings, a half-dozen screenplays (only one of them optioned) and helping my wife become an NYT best-selling, internationally published romantic suspense author (who's convinced I'm nuts), why would this fool rush into where angels fear to tread?

Publishing is easy; the work involved in bringing a digital book to market. Selling books, be they paper or digital, is damn hard. However, I couldn't pass up the opportunity to suddenly be able to have someone in a mud hut in Zimbabwe be able to buy my book without me spending a damn dime on advertising. And be able to buy it for $.99 with my cost being a fraction of a mil…that's a tenth of a cent. And I'm going to make $.34 on that sale. That's the power of the web.

When Kat and I jumped into the writing biz, shortly after I'd had a real estate sales year exceeding a hundred million bucks, the biz was a totally different animal than it is today. Then I quickly developed a mailing list of over 1,200 independent distributors. About 1,100 of them (or more) are now out of the business as individual entities, now consolidated into huge companies. Then, 25 years ago, you may recall that every 7-11 store had a ten or twelve-shelf high four-foot wide book-rack, or a spinner holding an equal amount. Every truck stop had a rack of books twice that number. Kat and I signed for many years at NATSO, the National Association of Truck Stop Operators, and it was a powerful sales tool. Now you can't find a paperback in most truck stops. We were able to visit those independent distributors who stocked supermarkets, drug stores, and chain stores where 80% of all mass-market books were sold. And we could actually talk with—schmooze—book buyers, who made the buying decisions for their area. Now, from 1,200 there are about 20 who make those buying decisions for the WalMarts, Krogers, and Targets of our world. Waldenbooks had 1,100 stores…I don't know of one today, but then I'm happily located in the boondocks. Bantam, who did a wonderful job with seven of my titles, had over 250 salesmen in the field…I bet that number is far, far less today.

I cannot tell you how many drivers meetings I dragged Kat to (kicking and screaming) at 5 a.m. so we could buy the donuts for the guys who actually racked the books in all those supermarkets and drug stores.

You get the point. The business of real hold-in-your-hand paper books, or hardbacks, has changed dramatically. It's becoming a digital world. The bad news? Anyone can get published. The good news? You can rise above all those bad books with good, entertaining, compelling novels that people want to read. But even the best books may not get read if they're lost in that plethora of lousy writing.

Yes, I'd still love to get a million dollar advance from Bantam or one of the other big publishers, and, yes, Kat does very, very well with over 15 million books in print and nice advances, but this wonderful opportunity is out there called the web. And I just couldn't ignore it, for I'm a salesman at heart.

But it, too, has its challenges. Now, due to the ease of getting a book "in print" digitally (and anyone can) every Tom, Dick and Harry (including those who write badly about hairy Toms and their dicks) are getting published. And some of them are doing very, very well with product that would have never gotten published by the so called legacy publishers…those are the big boys in the multi-storied high-rise buildings in Manhattan. There no longer is the filter of acquiring editors between the writer and the reading public.

How does one overcome that plethora of bad books that stand in the way of yours getting read?

One has to get his/her books in the hands of readers, and those books have to urge that reader to buy another…which leads us to the obvious problem: most authors only have one book. No matter how much a reader loves your book, if there's not another one of your titles for that reader to purchase, your ability to make real money is very, very limited. Particularly if you've offered that single book for a low, low price in order to get it widely read. The other side of that coin is the fact you've made $.34 on a $.99 book, one half of what you might have made had a legacy publisher sold your book for $7.00 and paid you a 10% royalty…and then you wouldn't see that royalty for two years, and sometimes not then.

The really good news: Amazon, the world's largest bookseller, has 250,000,000 (that's 250 million) credit cards on file. And if you do a good job promoting and consequently selling your book on their platform, they'll do an even better job doing it for you, and boy-oh-boy, they know how.



Wolfpack Publishing LLC, our new company, has just begun to publish with a dozen authors in our stable and twice that many books. We pride ourselves in selling books, not in editing, but in proofing, not in trying to judge what readers want, but in giving them a choice. Yes, we want compelling books that are properly formatted and without obvious errors, but to tell you the truth, I'm no judge of sci-fi, and not much of a judge of romance; my area of interest is westerns and thrillers, so I'll pass your book onto readers who read that particular genre and who will proof the book for obvious mistakes. And if they say there's someone out there who's a consumer for what you write, we'll publish it.

Our contract is an "author's" contract, after all that's where I come from. I revised the contract so any author could feel confident in signing it. We pay 50% of what we receive, primarily from Amazon Kindle, Amazon CreateSpace (paper), Smashwords, and Nook Press, and we pay within 30 days of our receipt of the money. We, or the author, can cancel the contract anytime with 30 days written notice. You don't like what we've done with your book, cancel. It's as easy as that. We don't expect to make much money from paper books. We attack that side of the business so the author will have something in hand to show mom, grandma, and that brother-in-law who's laughed at the author's attempts to get published. The money, large or small, will come from digital publishing.



As I said earlier in this blog, publishing is easy, you can get your book formatted for Amazon, Smashwords, or Nook Press for $35.00. Selling it is the hard part, for there are millions and millions of books out there on the digital market, and many, many more coming. There's lots of competition.

We signed an author a little over a month ago, and we sold over 450 of his books in July. Some 446 more than he'd sold for himself the month before. And we're still learning. We'd love the opportunity to help you do the same thing with your book. Find us on facebook at:

https://www.facebook.com/WolfpackPublishingLLC?ref=hl

I'm available at ljmartin@wolfpackpublishing.com if you'd like to learn more.