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

Thursday, February 25, 2010

ICE, WIND AND FIRE ... break out the bubbly!

They say a picture is worth a thousand words, but this one, above, only needs to say a half a dozen or so:

IT'S HERE, IT'S PERFECT ... THANK GODS!

To be just a little more wordy about it: the proof copy of ICE, WIND & FIRE was delivered to DreamCraft a few minutes ago. It was checked thoroughly, and Jade popped this shot and emailed it over to me. I'm uploading it right now, and I can tell you that the journey to Amazon.com has already begun. However, if you want the paperback ahead of time, you can already get it direct from the manufacturer, CreateSpace. (Amazon takes about an extra 10 days to get a title into their catalog). If you're in a hurry, you can in fact get it right now. If you need if for a birthday, something time-sensitive, here you go:

Buy the damn' thing now!

And a heart-felt apology to Rie, who donated the copy to be quite literally guillotined out of its bindings. Rie: You are looking at YOUR copy in the above image. Jade assures the both of us, it will be back in the mail to your address tomorrow -- it's too late to make it to the post office today.

Speaking of Jade, did you see this:

This was a mockup cover done to illustrate a point she was making about how 3D art is perfect for book covers ... notice the byline. The illustrious author of this piece is one John J. Doe. I took one look at that cover and said, I WANT IT. Now, don't hold your breath, folks: I have Hellgate to finish this year, and a NARC novel to do, and MINDSPACE is being packaged very soon. But this piece here is calling to me. It's seducing me. When the book comes back your way, it probably won't be called by the same title, but you will see it wrapped around a Keegan. Because every time I look at it I get this weird feeling that whispers in the back of my writer's brain, "You know this book, you've told this story, you just have to remember what it is..."

Is that weird, or what?

Cheers, guys!
Mel

Sunday, November 15, 2009

ICE, WIND AND FIRE ... the ebook is launching now!

At last! You might have wondered what the *&@! was going on behind the scenes, and you'd have been right to wonder. All hell has been busting loose, and several times "Mephistopheles skated to work" (as in, the day did arrive when hell actually froze over, and whatever wasn't supposed to happen before the great ice age down there ... happened).

However, we all survived, we've almost dug ourselves out from under, and we're launching the ebook version of the novel on the blog right here, right now.

It will eventually be at Kindle, but don't wait for that: it'll also be $2 more expensive at Kindle ... and *our* prices have NOT risen. Amazon whacked 20% on the price of Kindle books recently, at the same time as still paying the publishers only $3.50, and paying affiliates zip. Zero. Nada. However (and this should interest you strangely), they also have a free file conversion service. You can send a PDF to them, and they'll convert it the the Kindle format, and then you download it again, directly to your Kindle.

Whenever you do this with a book published by an indie press, the publisher gets the full price to divvy up between press, writer, editors, cover artist, advertising, review copies ...

On the other hand, whenever you buy an $11.99 direct from the Kindle store, the publisher receives just $3.50 to divvy up among the above.

Is it any wonder indie publishing is having a bloody rough time? Is it any wonder writers and artists have to work part time jobs to keep the lights on?

So do us all a favor, folks, next time you're thinking about downloading books for your Kindle: buy the PDF direct from the publisher, and use the free file conversion process --

And to get you started on this new habit, here are the buy-now buttons for ICE, WIND AND FIRE, as PDF:

EBOOK DESIGNED FOR PC & MAC: $9.99  Add to Cart


EBOOK DESIGNED FOR SCREENREADER: $9.99  Add to Cart

This mini-launch is actually intended for my newsletter members who know all about this book, and have known about it for a very, very long time indeed. The general book launch will be happening in a few weeks, when the paperback comes along.

The book is celebrating its own 20th Anniversary at this time! Here's the back cover material from the original edition:

"A raunchy gay adventure with a Caribbean setting..."

Alex Connor and Greg Farris are investigative journalists on holiday in Jamaica to escape their usual hectic schedule of worldwide assignments. But their tranquility is shattered by their discovery of a skeleton in the wreck of a light aircraft which went down in shallow waters just off the coast. Reporting the incident to local officials only marks the start of their troubles, and they are soon caught up in car chases, kidnapping, drug smuggling and murder, with events complicated by a hurricane and a bushfire raging across the island. Cover notes from the original printing: "Ice, Wind and Fire introduces the work of an exciting new Australian writer, in a fast-moving and colourful thriller set against the skillfully evoked background of the Caribbean."

REVIEWS: "This rip-roaring and colourful new gay thriller zooms along with a breathless enthusiasm that never flags" — Time Out.

Now, sample chapters are not available yet, but if you've been waiting to get your hands on the ebook for eons, you don't need to read the first 10% ... you've been hanging on for this moment!

If you're not a member of the above party -- bookmark this page and come back in about 48 hours. I'll be out of the office tomorrow, but on Tuesday I'll be making the pages on my own site and at the wiki, and the sample readings will be right there, in both places.


Suffice to say, the new cover looks fantastic ... this is what I imagined when I wrote the book 20 long years ago. Imagine my joy when I saw the new cover proof a few weeks ago. Jade has come to the rescue again. The book is absolutely the same, interior-wise, but the packaging (which left a lot to be desired in the original) is astonishing.

Incidentally, if you want ICE WIND AND FIRE for your Blackberry, iPhone, smartphone ... Tuesday. It's also going to Smashwords, where these formats are provided.

Cheers,
Mel

Sunday, September 13, 2009

GROUND ZERO - Launching now!

2048: the city of Adelaide – the capital of South Australia – has grown, developed, changed. The population has doubled, and the city’s livelihood is high technology. A new university has grown up since the Twenties – Franklin University, in the hills above the city. It’s the home to Doctor Robert Strachan’s Paranormal Studies department, where Lee Ronson and Brendan Scott head the data analysis team.

They’re the best in a difficult business, and they’ll be tested to their limits in an assignment handed to Strachan by Metro’s most senior criminologist, DCS Maggie Jarmin.

It’s winter when the city suffers a series of bizarre murders, robberies at high-tech labs – and a virus which sprang from nowhere. Every two days, a fresh body is discovered … entirely drained of blood. Every two days, a weapons research or energy technologies facility is robbed of a seemingly bizarre list of oddments. Meanwhile, the virus known only by a codename – 2048-3a – is so new, no part of the community is immune and the city is crippled.

Murders, robberies and virus are intimately connected in a mystery that will astonish. Lee Ronson and Brendan Scott find themselves taking point in an investigation filled with unexpected hazard – and equally unforeseen reward.

Sexy very-near-future gay action/adventure from the pen of the maestro.

Read the first 10% of the novel, free!
(Caveat: material in this free sample is not suitable for juniors. Consider youreself warned!)

Novel length: 103,000 words
Rated: R (18+; sex, violence, language)
ISBN: 978-0-9807092-0-9
Publication date: September, 2009
Publisher: DreamCraft.
Price: $9.99 - ebook; $19.95 - paper (due)
Cover: Jade

Current availability: eBook, in many formats. Paperback: due at Amazon in October 2009


eBook as PDF for iLiad, BeBook; PDB for Sony reader and iPhone; MOB for Mobipocket reader and Kindle; LRF for Sony Reader.


 For iPhone, smartphone, Sony, Palm, Mobi, Blackberry...


 Kindle ebook: $9.99


eBook for PC/Mac -- $9.99:  Add to Cart


eBook for Screenreaders -- $9.99:  Add to Cart



Friday, June 26, 2009

GLBT Bookshelf launches publicly ...!

Hi guys ... you must be wondering if this blog has been abandoned -- and after it suffered the Great Google Krunch (had its page rankings zeroed out for no reason whatsoever), it probably wouldn't have surprised you if it was abandoned, right?!

However, it's not. It's just neglected, the reason being that my other project, GLBT Bookshelf, is such a time-gobbler, there's not a minute left after I get done there, to do anything here.

Today, for example, all I have time for is this personal note, and a swift paste-in of the press release which is going out even as I type! We registered a domain for the Bookshelf, and the first advertising campaign has begun. All very exciting, and -- here's the official press release!

Cheers,
Mel


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Sara Lansing, Press Secretary
GLBT Bookshelf
Email: saralansing762@gmail.com



GLBT Writers and Readers
Launch Revolutionary Online Community
Gay Indie Literature Industry Unites

Adelaide, South Australia – June 25, 2009 Bestselling gay author Mel Keegan has masterminded a web-based cohesive organization combining the skills of writers, publishers, editors, agents, reviewers and artists in the GLBT community to provide an unprecedented public access portal to independent- and small-publisher titles. GLBT Bookshelf is an online resource designed to counter the perceived discriminatory practices of major players in the book retail scene.

Frustrated by the infamous “AmazonFail” fiasco of early 2009, in which the online retail giant was suspected of attempting to deny GLBT literature the benefits of its promotional systems, Keegan conceived of an online community in which all such systems were circumvented -- replaced by “community promotion” with direct links to authors’ and publishers’ pages.

Keegan is highly motivated toward the success of this venture. “Nothing convinces you to act like being forced to the margins of an already marginalized community. In a way the AmazonFail business was a desperately-needed kick in the pants. Now we have a public contact venue and direct sales channel which is not dependant on the big boys, their promotional tools, their advertising -- not even their search engines.”

In creating GLBT Bookshelf, Keegan set out to answer the needs of most GLBT writers and artists: Create a place for their works to be cataloged, described and sampled, linked to their publishers and independent sales pages -- and promoted by joint funding amounting to peppercorn contributions from community members. In this way, all writers benefit from wide media exposure while no individual foots the advertising bill.

The site takes the form of a “wiki,” where users sign up (free) and a pilot page is created for them. They then use editing tools to flesh out their pages with text, graphics and video. They develop their own virtual website within the wiki, which is built on the EditMe engine, operated by EditMe.com.

Visitors find authors, titles and publishers via multiple, categorized contents lists, as well as the fully-featured Search function. The site features user forums, book reviews, author pages, and directories for publishers and cover artists. A free PDF user’s manual is available, and the public launch is underway.

After just one month GLBT Bookshelf boasts around 200 “authors and others” online. Writers are booking low-cost advertising in high-traffic page locations, months ahead. More than 1000 user-pages have been created, and 500+ books are currently cataloged. Projected growth rates suggest this is the tip of the iceberg.

Find GLBT Bookshelf at www.glbtbookshelf.com, and watch for developments in the months ahead. While it remains early days, Mel Keegan is highly optimistic. “We could be seeing a quiet revolution in GLBT book marketing, in which the community takes its fortunes into its own hands. Technology has freed us from the restrictive practices of the traditional industry -- the Bookshelf is the joint venture of a lifetime. We must evolve new ways of thinking to take full advantage of our opportunities.”

Mel Keegan lives with an eccentric family in South Australia and is the author of more than 25 books. “The Deceivers” won the Stonewall Fact and Fable Award in 2003, while “Death’s Head” was nominated for the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 1992. GLBT Bookshelf is the culmination of Keegan’s creative vision.

###

Friday, April 17, 2009

Independent publishing -- and bookselling -- rock!

I'm still on the subject of Amazon censorship -- last time, honest engine! -- and I'd like to give you something to think on.

Thanks to Vashtan at Live Journal for this:
http://community.livejournal.com/meta_writer/13973.html

And to pique your interest -- so that you buzz off over there and read the rest! -- here's a couple of choice paragraphs:

Amazon’s "Glitch" Myth Debunked
by Francine Saint Marie


I am the author of the LAMBDA Notable Book, The Secret Keeping [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1419682369], as well as The Secret Trilogy [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1438240570], Girl Trouble [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1438202105] and several other popular LGBT paperbacks sold on Amazon.com.

All of my novels have been aggressively censored by Amazon since (at least) January of 2008, when they were first released as Kindle editions and promptly rigged in the Kindle store so as not to register any sales ranks and bestselling categories, or to show up properly in Amazon search results. I have also experienced mysterious "sourcing fees" applied by Amazon to the list prices of my LGBT paperbacks, as well as the deletion of five-star customer reviews of them, the removal of their "in stock" status, and a host of other handicapping techniques which are still in effect today.

Since the first quarter of 2008 to the date hereof, I (and my team) have, in vain, relentlessly pursued Amazon about their insidious censorship of my titles. Through telephone calls, e-mails and forum posts, we have repeatedly demanded that they cease and desist burying my novels in their browse tree and otherwise hindering my sales. We have also urged them to provide all authors with "equal access" to their site features and a "level playing field" upon which to compete. As Amazon can confirm, the cry "missing sales ranks" and "discrimination" was Team Saint Marie’s mantra in 2008, and it was even the title of a widely read "thread" we posted in the Kindle publishers’ forum, which Amazon hastily deleted. Indeed, "missing sales ranks" and "discrimination" was the subject of many circular (and recorded) phone conversations with Amazon’s representatives, not to mention an awesome number of e-mails!

-----end of quote!

Now, please! Go and read the rest ... and maybe Keegan won't be sounding so paranoid.

You know me: I'm a LOUD supporter of indie anything, being it writing, publishing, film making, bookselling, the works. Indie Rules. Indie is best -- globalize the "power," beat monopolization. In my world view, it's all about human rights, of which gay rights is a crucial (in fact, watershed) subcategory.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Big possibilities! Inspiration, anyone?

I had an interesting email this morning. "MK," he said, "do you know where you're going with the Legends novel, or are you doing this on the fly?"

It's not a bad question, but it does prompt me to wonder how much of the page people are reading! Because if you scroll down, the pedigree is Legends is given near the foot of the page, before the Research Tales.

On the speculation that many people haven't looked that far, let me quote the text here:

This story has its roots in the 1980s. About the time I signed with GMP, I was kicking around the idea for a massive novel -- the problem being, I had no time to develop it. At the time, one of my "literary friends" was Lane Ingram, who passed away some years ago. When Lane volunteered to develop the narrative from my storyline, I was surprised and very agreeable; and a version of it was circulated on a small scale, to a very appreciative audience!

Lane had no aspirations to be a professional novelist, which meant writing was fun, and remained fun, while I did battle with "style" and "technique." And then one day Lane was gone, without leaving much of anything to mark the place in the world which had once bee occupied by an individual who was large in every sense of the word.

Let's change that. I'm bringing LEGENDS "to the screen" in a form which preserves as much of Lane's input as I possibly can, while at the same time properly developing it, bringing it up to full professional standard ... cutting and trimming, correcting the errant, though enthusiastic, amateur ... polishing it to the professional sparkle you've come to expect from Mel Keegan.

LEGENDS will be Lane's memorial. Here's to you, kiddo, wherever you are: enjoy.

Lane Ingram passed away before GMP was sopped by by Prowler Press which was, in its turn, soaked in by Millivres and ... scrapped. Until the end, Lane hoped we could "do something" with this novel to get it into print.

I knew better, but I wasn't going to say so! Even the version which was developed all those years ago was way too big to be handled by any existing gay publisher. It was also way too steamy to be given an airing in that form. And, though I wasn't about to say it to Lane, it also needed a great deal of work done on it, to pull it up to the professional level.

The concept, story, characters, mythos, geography, research -- the bones of the piece were, and are, mine. Lane took them and put flesh on them, but the writing style was (and this is no mark against Lane!!) typical of the writer who has no professional aspirations. Lane was a focused on the "now" of the plot -- what was happening absolutely in the moment -- and on the characters. The original work is almost shorthand, brief to the point of sometimes falling back on the "sketch" from which it was constructed.

What am I doing with Legends, to bring it up to pro standard? Am I editing Lane?

It's more like trying to salvage the original spirit of the developmental work, and here and there hunting out a turn of phrase which was choice ... and building the novel up afresh from my old sketch -- which I still have! -- and the initial development of the piece.

To give you an idea of the process: currently I have about 25,000 words "on paper." There's something like 40% of this text online right now. Lane managed to pack the same material into about 5,000 words!

How in the world was that achieved?! Well, by dropping the backstory of two kingdoms, and omitting almost all of the descriptive passages which tell you what places and things look and sound like.

Why in the world was this done? Simple, guys. Lane had one real objective -- and I'm not going to knock it! The whole mission was to get Soran and Faunos together as fast as possible, and commence the steamy scenes ... and the steamier, the better!

Like I said, I ain't going to knock it! But when you haul a story out into the pro arena, and you don't want to be categorized as, published as, and shelved with, "erotica" ... you have to be careful what you say and how you say it. And how often you say it. And how soon you say it!

Don't get me wrong: there is NOTHING wrong with erotica. I've written tomes of it. Volumes. We all have. Some of us even have the guts to come out and admit it.

But as Legends continues, grows and matures, you'll soon begin to see the incredible depth, scope and potential of the work. There is so much in it that will be dismissed, if I don't trim it here and there, prune back the red-hot pages, and also properly develop the work.

Which leads inevitably to another extremely good question...

What's to become of all the sizzling scenes?! O...kay. Let me open the floor to questions here.

There's a couple of choices, and I don't at all mind inviting readers to decide how it goes. God knows, you guys are the ones I'm relying on to keep my bills paid, while I devote several hours per day to plowing through a gay fantasy novel that's more immense than you realise at this point!

I can prune the lot, cut it all back to MA15+ (ie., suitable for upload to an "open" blog) and call it good. I do intend to "hide" the more steamy scenes behind a little swatch of code that gives the first couple of paragraphs in, then warns that the rest of the post is a sizzler, and invites the reader to continue -- or not, if they prefer not to for whatever reason. Like, maybe the boss just stuck his head inro the office, and he has the nasty habit of standing at the water cooler behind your terminal, with his distance glasses perched on the end of his nose?!

The second thing I can do is to preserve Lane's original, sizzling scenes and package them as TXT files, add-ons, which you can download via a link on the MA15+ edited page that says, "Nice, but show me the sizzler!"

The third thing I can do is make the red-hot-chili-pepper version of the whole '"book" available as an ebook at the end of each segment --

Which reminds me to mention that Legends falls neatly into five parts, "Book One, "Book Two," and what have you -- but it is NOT a series. It's one novel. It's just one bloody great big novel.

So: let me know, guys. What's your fancy?!

For the moment, you might like to know that The Lords of Harbendane is enjoying very nice sales at Amazon and Payloads. I'm extremely gratified there. And Legends has made an excellent start, with a "core readership" of something like 125, after having been online for only about four days! Again, I'm very gratified. There's a lot more work to be done, but we're getting there.

For now, I want to "cheers" to Lane Ingram, who is probably laughing fit to break several ribs, in some dimension slightly "out of phase" with this one. All credit to you, kid: you did a good job, way back when, and the novel is polishing up a treat.

On that note, I'll leave you with a couple of links, as usual:

Chapter Six has commenced at Legends...
and
Relics of the hunt is my post at Digital Kosmos.

Ciao for now,
MK

Thursday, January 29, 2009

The Adelaide Heat, the Icelandic MP, and the Gay Oracle of 1996

The Adelaide heat is making headlines -- as well it should. We had the hottest day since 1939 yesterday ... 45.5C, which is something in the order of 115F, and remember, that's a shade temperature. In the sun it was ... much hotter.

The forecast for today? The same. They forecast 44 yesterday, and we're going to the same again, and there's little in the way of relief for the next week. Click this to get a version large enough to read:


It's a question of survival ... and trying to get some work done on the side. For this reason (!) you'll forgive me if I'm a bit brief!

Two items landed on my desk late yesterday, and one gives cause to rejoice while the other has that sepulchral sound ... like the thuddd you hear when the door closes on a tomb.

The good news is that Iceland is, by all accounts, about to elect an openly gay PM, who's a woman to boot. Fantastic. See the story on Huffington: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/iris-lee/icelandic-pm-would-be-wor_b_161311.html

I could wax rhapsodic about this, but -- today? I'll just give you think link and defer the celebrations!

The second item is a strangely oracular feature article dating back about 12 years now:
http://www.qrd.org/qrd/www/media/print/bookstores/glbrhtml.html

It's an old article, and permission is granted on it to forward, copy, and so on, so I'll save you the trip over to the above url, and will paste the whole thing in below. Remember: this was 1996! And every word the article said has come true in spades. The feature was a call-to-arms for readers in the GLBTI community to "support your local," and I fear, too few of us heeded it. At the same time -- late 1990s -- along came Amazon, and suddenly we had access to used (gay) books for .70c, and the rest ... is history.

Fact: used books and remainder stock hurt publishers. Publishers and writers only earn their grocery money and rent money when a brand, spanking new copy is sold. Used book stores (of which Amazon is the King) don't do the traditional publishers, and their contract writers, any favors. Amazon is great for used book vendors, and utterly indispensable for POD publishers! This is the way of the future ... and part of the process of evolution is the gradual, unavoidable atrophy of the deadwood: the traditional publishers who brought the rot on themselves by seeking ever-greater profits via the business model of Mergers and Conglomeration.

In fact, I was just saying all this yesterday, in my response to a wonderful comment from Mark Coker of Smashwords, on a previous post of mine. If you're undecided about POD -- and particularly if you're a fresh, (largely) unpublished writer hoping to break into the market today, you owe it to yourself to read Mark's comment, and my response: http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2009/01/pod-publishing-writers-dilemma.html

(Also, if you're just happening upon this post, it might be useful to read this -- On any Saturday ... except this one -- my post for January 24, in which I fielded a reader's question, "How difficult is it to sell books on Amazon.")

And now, that oracular feature article ... read this and shiver. It all came true:

Gay and Lesbian Words Are In Danger Today

Please consider this before you make your next book purchasing decision. Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered bookstores exist in a fragile ecosystem made up of the members of our community who support them with their purchases, the small gay, feminist, and lesbian publishing houses which supply them, the authors who write the books, and the stores themselves. This living web is very fragile and easily disrupted. It could possibly even be destroyed if we let the large "discount" chain stores influence us into "discounting" the efforts of all these people and saving a few cents on the purchase of a book, even the latest Times bestseller, at the expense of our sisters and brothers and friends.

Make no mistake, our bookstores are under attack, as are all independent bookstores. The large chains (and there are only a very few) want to control all our book-buying decisions and are deliberately targeting areas where large independent stores have a loyal customer base. You'll pardon me, I'm sure, if I say that I believe feminist, lesbian, and gay stores are under particular assault. A recent issue of Ms. Magazine (May/June, 1995, Volume V, Number 6) had a graphic illustration of this in the form of a photograph of the new Borders Bookstore which "just happened" to open up directly across the street from Sisterhood Bookstore in West Los Angeles, California. Look it up if you haven't seen it. It's scary.

Fight back! If you're browsing in a big chain store and see an interesting title your local store might not carry, jot down the name and author and have your local gay and lesbian bookstore order it for you. They need the business and you need them. Many of these stores,and the publishing houses and authors who depend on them to sell their books, may not be there when you want and need them unless you continue to support them with your purchasing power and with your time.

If you can't buy a book today, do something! Volunteer to help out with publicity, help with a book table at a local Pride Festival, or any other needed task; at least tell another woman or man about our stores and ask them to buy their next book from one of our stores and keep our stories being told.

Community Losses
Old Wives' Tales in San Francisco, CA
Judith's Room in New York, NY
31st Street Street Bookstore Cooperative in Baltimore, MD
ClaireLight in Santa Rosa, CA

All these stores share in our common problem, in spite of large and active gay and lesbian communities in their immediate neighborhoods they have closed their doors and can no longer serve us. There are others whose names do not appear on this short list who are also gone or are in serious trouble. The people who run these stores share a common dedication to making it possible to find gay and lesbian books, to support our common community, to furnish a forum for those who want to publish works that might not find a ready market outside our community. There's not much money in it.

The large chains don't care whether gay and lesbian publishing of our thoughts and issues continues or not. They're really only in it for the money. They're glad to skim the "cream" off the top of our literature, the most popular titles, but won't be there to support us when it counts. The gay and lesbian publishing houses cannot survive if the only titles they sell are the one or two most "mainstream" every year. Think of what our world of books would look like with no Seal Press, no Knights Press, no Cleis, no Firebrand, no Naiad, to name only a few of the small presses dedicated to publishing gay and/or lesbian words.

Our words make a difference. They count. Please make your money and effort count by putting it where it can do us all some good, into the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered community.

Hopeful Note
I didn't want to end this in a completely gloomy vein. There are still people opening new gay and lesbian bookstores and I don't know about all the gay and lesbian bookstores there are. I'm sure I've missed a few, maybe yours. If you know a store I've missed that carries a large selection of books that empower lesbians and gay men (and doesn't carry books that oppress them), please tell me so I can share it through this list. These new stores are part of our common hope for the future.

Most of the books sold in this country are purchased by women; doesn't it make sense that we could support any kind of publishing business we really wanted, if only we all worked together?
These stores, and the many other stores already on my list, are here to serve us now. Please help keep them open and make them a success.

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I Need Your Feedback
Please e-mail your comments to me at:
leeph@netcom.com
or write to:
Lee Anne Phillips4200 Park Boulevard - Suite 250Oakland, CA 94602
Please include a self-addressed and stamped envelope (or enclose two International Reply Coupons) if you would like me to reply by mail.Thank you so much for your help and support.
This file may be freely copied on the Internet or mirrored if the copyright notice below is retained in its entirety, if the text is unaltered in any way (except for minor modifications to URLs, file names, and the like, and/or inserting additional links to make it fit into a local file structure or web site), and if no charge is made for its use.

...Chilling, isn't it?

Cheers,
MK


Tuesday, January 27, 2009

POD Publishing: the writer's dilemma

With the start of a new working week ... and an a/c unit that makes it possible to actually get something done! -- well, I guess work is on my mind. Right now, that other four-letter word that ends in K means, to me, 1) marketing books, 2) sorting out whatever is going haywire in the LEGENDS template, and 3) continuing to work on the text of the digital novel.

Since I can't quite bring myself to get to grips just yet with the template (being, the guts behind Blogger ... the css gibberish that makes it go, and sometimes doesn't make it go; and right now it ain't goin' nowhere) I thought I'd do a little book marketing.

And ran into some interesting things before I'd even had the chance to open a file.

I start my book marketing by looking at who my recent visitors are, and how they found me. And several of these readers have been on Google around the world (India, Thailand, France...) searching on a term which took me by surprise -- and would give a gentleman by the name of Mark Coker headaches and/or nightmares! The search parameter is, and I quote, "smashwords writers beware."

The antennas went up, obviously, because I'll soon be intimately involved with Smashwords, to take advantage of their document conversion to the Stanza format (makes ebooks readable on the iPhone, and soon the Samsung Omnia, all being well).

The good news appears to be that these searches are writers around the world doing their "due diligence" -- which we all do; or should, if we had out brains wired properly. I followed the search results and found nothing that would stand as a point against Smashwords. I breathed a sigh of relief there, obviously.

And along the way some other interesting things (for a writer, at least) popped up. Have you ever heard of the IDPF? No, neither had I, till I saw this: http://www.teleread.org/2008/04/23/harlequin-librie-digital-deal-beware-of-drm-traps-harlequin-but-yes-youre-right-to-think-about-interactivity/

Turns out, it's the acronym for International Digital Publishing Forum. Since digital publishing is -- increasingly -- where I live and work, I clicked through with half a mind to join, you know, participate, make my ten cents' worth heard ... until I saw that the membership dues. They want A$1,000 for a year's membership for an individual.

I clicked out again without even touching the ground. That's idiotic. Digital publishing is where the future is going, it'll affect every writer, reader, publisher, distributor, so -- what's the first thing the the high mucky-mucks do? Form themselves into a forum and organize themselves a hierarchy, an infrastructure, that costs so much to run, their membership dues look like this:

...and you notice that their dues are "only" US$1000 for companies with revenues over (!) $5m per year, and go down to US$650/A$1,000 for non-profit organizations!!

A literal translation of this is, "If you're a publisher earning less than $5 million p.a. you fall off our radar ... and "non-profit organizations" are obviously the high-power info honchos who give out free info ... digitally.

And the 99.999% of writers who sell their books on Payloadz and Smashwordsm, Lulu and so on? We would no doubt suffocate in the rarefied atmosphere breathed by the aforementioned mucky-mucks, whose forum activities must take place at five-star resorts over six-course meals ... otherwise, where in hell are the astronomical membership dues being spent?!

It gets worse before it gets better. Amidst their rarefied air, they've already gone ahead and instituted the Epub Standard: http://www.openebook.org/. Let me illuminate you:

What is EPUB, .epub, OPS/OCF & OEB?".epub" is the file extension of an XML format for reflowable digital books and publications. ".epub" is composed of three open standards, the Open Publication Structure (OPS), Open Packaging Format (OPF) and Open Container Format (OCF), produced by the IDPF. "EPUB" allows publishers to produce and send a single digital publication file through distribution and offers consumers interoperability between software/hardware for unencrypted reflowable digital books and other publications. The Open eBook Publication Structure or "OEB", originally produced in 1999, is the precursor to OPS.
For the latest on IDPF standards, sample files and companies who have implemented our specifications, please visit our
public forums. Getting started? Visit our FAQ's.
http://www.openebook.org/

So far, so good ... but if all the writers, artists, garage publishers and editors, "cowboy" distributors and so on-- who are the life's blood of the growing electronic publishing industry, its meat and potatoes -- are shut out of the forum unless they pay big (and unaffordable) bucks ... what use is a standard? How appropriate is it, to try to force this standard on writers, editors, publishers, who were locked out of the forum? How can you police a standard when it was decided arbitrarily by the high-powered honchos in the stratosphere? Why would the rest of us want to abide by regulations instituted in such a draconian system?!

Having said all that ... welcome to the wonderful world of DRM. Digital Rights Management. I brushed shoulders with this about eight months ago, when I was working long, extra hours to get my novels ready for Microsoft Reader ... only to discover in the nick of time that you might as well paste the text of your novels to web pages and give them away! The LIT file format is fine and dandy, and I actually like the Microsoft Reader interface a lot. But it's the ebook equivalent of "open source." Anyone, anywhere, can do absolutely anything they want to the text -- there are no controls, no safeguards...

Aha! Unless you lay down a few hundred more dollars to buy a DRM system for the Reader program. This was -- months ago -- wrangled by an online company called OverDrive. I looked into it, and it was going to get expensive, with the fee and then registration to pay on lots and lots of individual projects (I have a long backlist), all to have their rights "managed."

Once again, the system was set up to facilitate DRM for big, big publishers whose revenues are more than high enough to rationalize the fact that there's a digital monster with its pseudopod in your pocket, and it's insinuating a tentacle into your wallet while chatting with you.

And ... the rest of us, the cowboy operators, whose sales are too modest to pay and pay again? Those of us who just want to use our time and talent to earn an honest living? Well, in a word, we're screwed -- and that's two words.

So I ditched the idea of issuing my novels in the LIT format, and went with Adobe PDFs which were formatted two ways -- large screens, and keyhole screens for the ebook viewers. So far it's worked out quite well. A lot of readers have a use for ebooks; a lot don't. And those that don't won't buy an ebook no matter how you format the little buggers. (There's also a disturbingly large percentage of customers who don't know how to open a ZIP file, and I still don't know what to do about the question they raise. I'm working on it.)

Right now, DRM is back in the mixmaster: a new system is out, and OverDrive is being left behind. Urk. Something called Libre Digital is flying the flag of the new technology ... and without even looking at it, I can tell you, manging your digital rights via these guys will be expensive. It's not for self-marketing writers. It's for publishers. Big publishers.

Which leaves the rest of us right back where we started! In the coming months, I'll be experimenting with Smashwords, and the reason I'm going that way is because they can get me onto the iPhone and the Omnia ... and the sales of these smart little gadgets are so vast (running into the tens of millions in a year) that the sales of ebooks have to rise accordingly.

The one reservation I have about Smashwords at this point is that there's no file encryption on the product served to readers -- and how can there possibly be?? You have to be reasonable here -- even I have to be reasonable! -- and admit that a lot (a majority?) of ebook customers are reading on Very Cheap Devices which can read TXT files, or HTML or RFT at a stretch of the imagination. These machines, you can buy for $150 or so; therefore there are a lot of them out there. However, these cheap devices don't, can't read PDFs; fancy-shmantsy files, with formatting and encryption/protection and all, are off the list for these customers.

Here's the dilemma -- and it's a beauty. To get sales, you have to make your work available literally on a platter. You have to hand your work out in a format that anyone and his dog can copy, manipulate, resell. If you try to protect your work, you cost yourself sales ... but how many sales? Would you sell 1000 copies at $5 each, for an HTML file? If so, the income would be high enough to make it not so damaging if/when your work is pirated and other potential sales fly away like smoke.

It's an experiment, and I'm going to run with Smashwords for a couple of extremely good reasons. One: they're high profile, high visibility, and industry recognized. What this means is, if I put THE SWORDSMAN on Stanza for the smart phones, and LIT for Microsquash Reader, and so on, and three months later the book is available as a torrent on 10 different pirate download sites, I have the proverbial leg to stand on! I can go to the torrent site owner and show they my Smashwords agreement, which is dated and reliable, and would actually hold up in court. I can have them kill the torrent, fast. The second reason I'll run with Smashwords is that they're high visibility, and can only get higher: sales should be there ... and it's all an experiment. Lots of sales and no torrents? This is what we're hoping for! Moderate sales and controllable torrents? This is okay too. Poor sales and too many torrents to handle ...?

You're never going to know unless you try -- like anything else in life. But at the very least, Smashwords gives you something to go to bat with. You can come out fighting, knowing you have a high profile Internet presence as your platform.

At this time, I routinely have readers swinging by my websites after having searched on "mel keegan torrent." Meaning, the little darlings were hoping to find somewhere where they could just download me without even offering a dollar to help pay rent and bills. (A lot of readers also also searching on "josh lanyon torrent" and landing on my blog, because Josh and I are cross-linked, and a search for one will sometimes pop up the other! Nice, that.)

However, Smashwords is growing, and as the profile gets higher there will almost certainly be oversight here: an automatic system that pops up an alert when the names of their writers appear on the torrent sites -- this is the most obvious place to start. (Obviously there are many more ways for pirate copies to be circulating, but you gotta start somewhere.)

I'm impressed by the way founder Mark Coker is proactively marketing Smashwords ... to the point where he's on writers' forums. This doesn't always work out as intended and expected -- I've been very leery, myself, about getting involved in forums, because they're all different, with the tendency to be cliquish; they all have their own graven-in-granite rules, and you can put your foot right in it without ever even realizing you're doing it. This is both interesting from a writer's perspective, and a perfect illustration of what I mean: http://www.absolutewrite.com/forums/showthread.php?t=123538 ...

...how to get in dutch on a forum without knowing you've done anything ... and then investing hours and sweat and maybe even a few tears of utter frustration, trying to ameliorate the situation, only to discover that when "they've got their hooks into you," nothing in this world will make them let go ... and the thread will go on and on, as long as you continue to try to do the amelioration thing! (Now you know why you don't see Mel Keegan on forums (yet). You can trip and fall into the swamp sooooo easily, and you'll come up smelling weedy, no matter what you do or say. Not good news.)

The other side to this is that "any publicity is good publicity," and I take my hat off to Mark Coker for the way this was handled. He might not have known it at the time, but he was in a no-win situation from the get-go, and one can only applaud both his restraint and his eloquence. Personally, I've been in and around the publishing industry for almost 30 years, have been pro-published for 20 ... and User Groups scare the willies out of me. If there's a "writer beware" caution in any of this, it would have to be along the lines of, "Writers, beware of forum rules and regs, because no two are alike, all turn into cliques sooner or later, and you shouldn't really say anything that could be in any way construed as promotion or honest debate to the local paradigm, much less a rational argument based on "Research Not Currently Known to This User Group" until or unless you've become a qualified insider in the clique ... which can take weeks or months, and a whole lot of posts. Urk. I don't have the time to go there.

On my travels around the book-marketers' web this morning I stumbled over this:

National novel writing month: http://www.nanowrimo.org/ ... looks interesting, and I must investigate further! Now, if there was a similar site where two hundred POD publishers with tip-top lists got together, pooled resources and ingenuity to market books ... I could get excited. Because the marketing part of this is far harder than writing the books.

Still, at least I am the Master of my Fate and Captain of my Destiny -- in other words, I'm out there working for myself. Get a load of this: Reading in an Age of Depression

And on that chill-inspiring note ... back to work!

Cheers,
MK

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Rumblings from Keegan Country

Sunday afternoon in the lull between heat waves: it'll be 107 degrees again in a couple of days, but -- I look up and there above me, mounted on the wall, is nothing less than a 2.7 HP a/c unit. Oh, yes. Hit the remote control switch, and in three minutes I'll want a sweater. I'd say cool -- and it is! The a/c will make it much easier to keep up with projects; in the past, it's been a struggle to keep up during the summer months, but those problems seem to be solved.

"Projects" to me, right now, means the Legends digital novel. My next job, as soon as I finish this post and upload it, is to run home to Blogger and set up a new one using the template that has been meticulously designed and destruction tested while I've been working on the first 20,000 words or so of the text. I've got a nice buffer in hand now, and we're about ready to start uploading. Time to set up the blog/novel itself. The great experiment.

This is all very exciting. This coming week, we'll be doing a newsletter to launch the serial, and the plan is, if even 25% of the people on the the MK mailing list are interested in a professional quality free read ... and if they'd be good enough to tell just TWO other people the URL and give it a recommendation ... and if just 50% of those people would do the same -- well, a Very Large Circulation is achievable in a rather short time. You know the way exponential numbers start small and slow, and then get very big very fast? Same principle.

I'll let you know how the experiment goes.

Meanwhile, the photography blog continues to be a load of fun. I can't believe there are already over 60 images there already. It's only been "up" for a couple of weeks.

Then again, have you looked at Aricia's Album of Deicious Decadence today? My mind is in the process of boggling. David Beckham stark naked with a strategically placed soccer ball, and a label on him that reads what?! Wolverine's day at the beach? David Tennant as a ravishing highland lassie tending bar in a Scottish pub?! Where does AG find this stuff?

I'm just not trying. As I said, my mind is in boggle mode while I laugh my ass off at the same time.

Anyway -- back to work. It might be Sunday, but if I want a day off on Tuesday, I have to work today. I thought I'd go see The Day The Earth Stood Still on one of the monster screens down at the megaplex.

Ciao for now,
MK

Saturday, January 24, 2009

On any Saturday ... except this one

My kingdom for something meaningful to blog about! However, the wait continues for any response to be offered by Google, and as per the proof of The Lords of Harbendane ... it's Saturday. The mail doesn't deliver on Saturday or Sunday -- and this is the Australia Day long weekend, which means they won't be delivering on Monday, either.

The big news -- and I guess it's meaningful! -- is that Dangerous Moonlight has made it into the Amazon engine at long last:



That's pretty darned good news from where I'm sitting. This just popped up in the last couple of hours -- wasn't there this morning. I know. I looked. I've been looking for days while ... waiting.

I should also give a little plug to a new blog here, too. Aricia is at it again. Where does she find this stuff?


It's Aricia's Album, and the gist of it is (and I quote), "Aricia's album of delicious decadence, hot goss and hotter bods, gay goodies, celebs being silly, sweet treats and candy for your senses! Adult Content: you'll see some hot bods on this page, and very occasionally it'll get explicit. I'd rate this page MA 15+, but you make up your own mind." Unquote.

I have no idea where AG gets this stuff, but most people would pay money for it if it wasn't free! How about Brad Pitt in drag? John Barrowman on skates. Viggo Mortensen and Orlando Bloom canoodling. Antonio Banderas and Sean Bean in underwear. And ... so on. I'll hand it to you, kiddo: this one takes the cake.

And if you have the slightest doubt that I'm not telling you the pure, pristine truth, click on over there and see for yourself! Here it is, in all its, uh, digital glory:

http://ariciasalbum.blogspot.com/

Which leaves me answering a reader's questions, before I repair to the kitchen to make guacamole!

I was asked a couple of days ago, how hard is it to sell books via Amazon? And this is a difficult question to answer, because it's all about how hard you want to work on marketing. I can't stress enough that Amazon is your marketplace, not your sales team! Yes, your books will appear there, but it's like the "catch 22" of Google, or any other search engine: if people don't know what to search for, they won't find you. They have to know your name, or the title of your book, before you will suddenly pop out of the zillions of titles in the Amazon engine!

A few readers might be willing to go to Amazon and search on, for example, "gay historical novels," but the results that show up here are impossible. 978 titles appeared. I'm sure Mel Keegan is listed in there somewhere, but who's got the time, much less the inclination, to sift through the lot -- and then read scores of reader reviews --

And that's another thing. The reviews. They're all over the spectrum, with any ten readers/reviewers contradicting each other so massively that in the end it's as if the book wasn't reviewed at all.  To see what I mean, scan just a little bit of this: Customer Reviews - Shadows Return (Nightrunner)

You'll see what I mean in short order. I've heard about the Nightrunner books but haven't read them. The first two apparently went down well and earned a lot of praise; the third was heavily into torture (with about half the book devoted to it), and would also have profited from a good editing. However, readers are thoroughly divided on whether it's a two-star or five-star book. In the end, you'll have to make up your own mind!

So, how hard is it to sell books on Amazon? Depends what you call hard! You need to be blogging and have webpages, and doing press releases, giving away review copies, doing interviews, and basically getting your name in front of people everywhere. About 1 in 1000 will be interested to chase up what you've written, and you might just get a sale out of it. But if you get your books into the Amazon engine and wait for them to sell themselves via the "Amazon recommendations" or something ... uh, no. You'll have a long wait. Which is a very different thing from saying you can't sell books! You can. The little buggers just don't sell themselves. 

And now, the guacamole awaits, so --

Cheers,
MK

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

POD Publishing ramps up for a smash-and-grab future

Publishing has been an industry in turmoil for some time now, and the dichotomy between Camp A ("You gotta get a real publisher who prints and sells five figures of more, or you're not a real writer") and Camp B ("I've got a top-notch book that no one will look at, so I'm going to fly solo") is getting wider. Rapidly.

Here's a quote from the press release headlining today at Author Solutions, Inc.:
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Author Solutions, Inc. (ASI), the world leader in the fastest-growing segment of book publishing, announced Thursday the acquisition of Xlibris – a pioneering leader in print-on-demand self publishing services. Kevin Weiss, ASI president and chief executive officer, made the announcement to Xlibris employees.“ASI is pleased to add Xlibris to our industry-leading portfolio of self publishing brands,” said Weiss. “This acquisition solidifies our leadership position and strengthens our ongoing commitment to offer the world’s most comprehensive set of publishing, promotion and book-selling services to authors.” Xlibris joins AuthorHouse, iUniverse, Wordclay and Inkubook in ASI’s expanding family of self publishing brands.
http://www.authorsolutions.com/News.aspx?id=194

There's more to the story, obviously -- click through and see the whole thing -- but the most important thing to grasp is the pearl of wisdom in the first line: the fastest-growing segment of book publishing.

Sit quietly. Close your eyes. Repeat that line to yourself several times over. Grasp the gist of it.

And then think a while on this:

From The Smashwords Book Marketing Guide by Mark Coker:
Book marketing is a tough uphill battle. Even most authors published by big mainstream print publishers complain they get little or no marketing support from their publishers. Bottom line, most authors, whether they’re traditionally published or self-published, have to do their own
marketing.


At Smashwords, we don’t make promises we can’t keep, so we cannot promise you your book will sell well here. In fact, most books, whether they’re traditionally published or self-published, don’t sell well. Whether your book is intended to inspire, inform or entertain, millions of other books and media forms are competing against you for your prospective reader’s ever-shirking pie of attention.

Ebooks represent the fastest growing segment of the book publishing industry. Ebook sales have been increasing around 50% per year for the last five years or so, according to the latest industry research, while traditional print book sales have stagnated or declined. If you’re an author, you’d be silly not to start exposing your work to the digital realm.

Despite the rapid growth of ebook sales, ebooks still represent less than one percent of overall book industry sales. But this is changing. You’re smart to publish your book in ebook form, and even smarter to publish with Smashwords, because no other indie publisher is so singularly focused on helping you leverage the power of digital publishing to reach your readers.
http://www.smashwords.com/books/download/305/1/2588/the-smashwords-book-marketing-guide.pdf

POD is the fastest growing growing segment of the paper-based book publishing industry, and ebook sales are growing exponentially -- a trend which can only get more powerful with the sheer volume of sales expected in 2009-10 for the iPhone and its competitor, the Samsung Omnia. (I blogged about this a little while ago: Ebooks in your pocket, along with your music, vids and pics, camera and phone. Get a load of that gadget! I, uh, want one.)

There's the data -- raw and wriggling. Conclusions anyone?

Well, I can see numerous conclusions, and as many probable outcomes....
  • The publishing industry has ignored and rejected new writers for decades, and would go on ignoring them, if only it could;
  • The reason for this is purely economic: you make more money off a handful of bestselling authors, for a fraction the editing/printing work; but...
  • Technology has caught up with them, and the newbies, wannabies, and those like myself who're stranded without recourse to "proper" or "traditional" publishing can fly solo; so...
  • We're doing it. In ever-increasing numbers ... most of us trusting to the Internet to be a viable marketplace; meaning...
  • Traditional publishers have got to be feeling the squeeze! The POD revolution has to be contributing to their downward spiral; and...
  • Very few people will mourn their passing, because the big publishing houses brought it on themselves by chasing the big bucks at the expense of the raw new talent and the burning passion to write.
This, more or less, is the framework the future of publishing and writing is likely to be built around. The traditional publishers slooooowly go belly-up; huge chain stores and remainder stockists thrive ... for a while, before there's no more leftovers to sell through at 90% discounts. Then, what?

Well, the bestsellers will always be there. Wilbur Smith and Maeve Binchy, Eric van Lustbader and Daniele Steele, Clive Cussler and J.K. Rowling. There's probably about 100, maybe 200 writers in the bestseller bracket, who'll churn out a book per year. That's (gosh, wow) a whole 150 or so new books for the bookstores, every year!

In fact, the big publishers will very likely rejoice, because the charade is over. Here's a fact the rest of us might not like, but need to get to grips with: publishers make about 90% of their money from about 10% of the world's writing stable. Less. The rest of us are allowed to tag along because we feed niche markets, worth small amounts of income which aggregate fairly nicely over time and distance. But it's nothing by comparison with the top-end writers who are properly marketed, shelved, aired on TV, and so forth.

In the next few years, chain bookstores are likely to contract both in size and number: some will go online and cast off the physical presence entirely. However, book exchanges and used book stores are likely to thrive, because so few new books will be coming along in print, on paper. A majority of readers still have absolutely no use for an ebook. Books are paper. Period. So, these readers will trade, swap, sell and buy and resell the paper treasure trove of yesteryear.

They'll also -- sooner or later -- land on sites like Amazon.com and Lulu.com, and are sure to find themselves reading a POD book, possibly without even realizing they're reading one!

And it's here, on this one point, where dedicated writers pin their hopes for the future.

The drawback is that POD books are damned expensive, and postage is getting expensive too. But it's also true that as an industry settles in, matures, the technology gets cheaper -- the machines pay for themselves and so forth. Prices might not actually lower, but perhaps the race of inflation in the general marketplace will rush ahead as per usual, while the price of POD books stays put for long enough to make them seem cheaper.

So, dedicated writers can live in genuine hopes that in the next -- what? say, five years? -- the technology will settle in, the price of POD books will seem less horrific, and dedicated readers will find themselves reading a POD book without even knowing it's POD.

Because the latest products from CreateSpace and Lulu and so forth are virtually indistinguishable from a mass market book: it would take an industry professional to tell the difference, and it comes down to this: "What difference does an indiscernible difference make?" I'll tell you how much difference it makes: so little, it's indiscernible.

Indiscernible
In`dis*cern"i*ble\, a. [Pref. in- not + discernible: cf. F. indiscernable.] Not to be discerned; imperceptible; not discoverable or visible.
Secret and indiscernible ways. --Jer. Taylor. -- In`dis*cern"i*ble*ness, n. -- In`dis*cern"i*bly, adv.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.
http://dictionary.reference.com/cite.html?qh=indiscernible&ia=web1913

That's good enough for me.

In five years -- by 2014 -- the loooong list of books I need to get off my hands and onto Amazon will be complete. There'll be something like 40, maybe 50 Keegans on the list, and with a good, solid advertising campaign -- excellent reason to be optimistic. Devoted readers will find themselves in a position of having to buy POD books, because if you want to stay the hell away from the bestsellers (some of which start to sound like echoes and re-echoes after a while, since they're formulaic, ie. based on the Proven Winning Formula), well, there's no further choice.

And here, the process hits the rocky shoals. Because devoted readers want good books. Not lash-ups. Not self-published books which are clunkers beyond description that would be best consigned to the bottom of the budgie cage. I read on some site or blog, in the last week or so, that few readers have a problem buying a POD book; the problem is, finding one that's worth buying!

There are some really, disgustingly bad books out there. Companies like Lulu and CreateSpace and iUniverse and so forth, don't give the proverbial toss what's printed on the page. You pay them, they print it, they list it in their e-store, and if you pay them some more money, it'll be listed on Amazon.

I've actually said this before, somewhere in the hundreds of posts I've made in the seven months I've been on line: the onus is on the reader, the buyer, the customer, to find the good books and just not to buy the bad ones.

The problem with this is that as the DIY publishing field blows out bigger and bigger, the really good POD books will be outnumbered by their scabrous cousins, about 1000:1. How in the heck is a reader supposed to sort through that much chaff to get at a few grains of precious wheat?

Well, it's not actually that difficult! Leave it to the book review sites. You want to buy something good, something new? Read the reviews. There are numerous book review sites already, and they're also growing -- perhaps not exponentially, but they're certainly proliferating! You might have seen Rainbow Reviews, Squashduck, Bitten by Books, Speak Its Name, Rain on the Roof, Oasis Journals, Off Tha Shelf, Aricia's Gay Book Blog, and ... on and on and on. If you haven't -- check out a few. If you have: cheers! (These sites are almost all on the links lists here and/or on Aricia's blog. Good hunting.)

Nostrakeeganus, he guessing along these lines: by 2015 (and Nostrakeeganus, he going to be finished and done writing and working hard in bookselling business by that date!) the major publishers will have merged into just a few big, big, biiiiig combines; the bookstore chains will have pared down to minimums -- almost showrooms; the online used book stores will be going gangbusters; everyone and his uncle who thinks he/she/they have a story to tell will have published it to Smashwords or Lulu or wherever; everyone in the world will have a website or a blog, and maybe both; the amount of dross on the market will out-mass the Pacific Ocean ... good books will fight to be noticed ... online book review sites will be the new meccas for writers and readers alike.

Now, it's not quite as rosy as it sounds, because there are a hell of a lot of good, and great, writers out there. When we're ALL going the DIY road, there will be a positive embarrassment of riches available to readers. Statistically, it turns out that the number of people reading is imploding every year, so --

Our market is shrinking even though more writers than ever before are about to be published (whether they're worth publication or not). Fundamentally, it's all about market share. 1% of a huge market is still a lot. But .0001% of a dwindling market is ... not too much.

So, the competition will be fierce. Good writers and great writers will be competing for attention and bucks, and readers -- not publishers and editors! -- will be the deciding force. This is how the Law of the Jungle works -- survival of the fittest, the best. Evolution used this same process to create everything from the pygmy shrew to the T-Rex, and it works.

Out of the whole jungle, mind you, one new group of power brokers might emerge. It's already being said out there in the forums and blogosphere of the POD world, what book reviews are the only thing that moves books at this time.

This is going to be even more true in the future, as the market tightens even further. The new power brokers could easily be the leading reviewers -- the online critics whose recommendations are taken as solid gold tips (Sure Fire at 90:1, running in the two-thirty at Morphetville...) by devoted readers.

Sad to say, even very good writers will be fighting for a sadly small market share ... in other words, no one's going to get rich at this. And then agan, that's not strictly true! There's an incredible fortune to be made ... but not by writers. Remember this: "Xlibris joins AuthorHouse, iUniverse, Wordclay and Inkubook in ASI’s expanding family of self publishing brands." In fact, Author Solutions, Inc. is likely to be the next trillion dollar company, because they're in at the beginning, a big fish already consuming all the smaller ones. Uh huh.

Food for thought!

I'm going to leave the subject there for now, because it's hot, I'm tired, and I'm out of time. More tomorrow -- albeit probably on less challenging subjects. For now --

Cheers,
MK

Friday, January 16, 2009

HARBENDANE: the saga continues -- or, CreateSpace Strikes Again

CreateSpace strikes again.

I'm starting to think THE LORDS OF HARBENDANE must have been conceived under a black cloud and born during an evil conjunction --

The proof copy arrived at loooong last. This is the proof that was shipped on December 29th without an international shipping label, kept for fifteen days by USPS, sent back to CreateSpace, and shipped again by extra-fast priority mail. Right, so far?

Well, the re-shipment arrived in great time. They just shipped the wrong book.

We have to SEE and APPROVE the proof of THE LORDS OF HARBENDANE before it can start the long road to Amazon ... so, it doesn't help us that they sent another copy of AQUAMARINE instead.

Find me a wall, and I shall bash my head against it. Just two days ago I was saying that CreateSpace is known to make booboos, and this would be one of them.

So right now it's back to the drawing board. They have no phone support service; you go online and send a message to Customer Support from their own internal messaging page. Allow two days for this to be read; another one or two for the book to be printed and shipped; 10 days for it to be delivered to Australia, minimum; up to 14 days for Amazon to process it through into the online engine.

That makes another month. In other words, THE LORDS OF HARBENDANE will be appearing in the Amazon.com engine in mid-February at the earliest ... and there's nothing anyone here can do to make the process go faster.

Sorry, guys.

Other than this, the Mel-o-Sphere is something of a vacuum. I'm working on LEGENDS, and I've made several contributions to the Digital Kosmos photoblog:



Where the ice meets the sea;
Smuggler's Cove;
Fall comes to the Fairbanks hills;
Million dollar legs;
Living rock;
The Greek Islands? Looks are deceiving!;
The view from the Giant's Cave;
Alpenglow on the Chugach.

The photoblog is a lot of fun. It's a great opportunity to talk about photography, and to haul out some pictures which are eons old but still deserve to be shared. This was a great idea, for which Jade deserves the credit.

And now, if you'll excuse me -- got to work!

Ciao for now,
MK

Thursday, January 8, 2009

The Vanishing Website Affair

To answer today's most-asked question, "Why the sweet, flying f**k am I getting some weird website when I try to logon to Mel Keegan Online" --


Well, it's complicated. DreamCraft is sorting the whole thing out even as I type this -- on the phone, long distance. Apparently, when you forget to update your credit card information, (see yesterday's post), and your domain actually expires ... things get seriously screwed up in terms of domain registration. This is not iPower.com at work -- if it were, it would have been easy to fix it online. It has something to do with another "registry" agency, with which iPower dovetails.

Anyway: Dave has the phone in his hand RIGHT NOW and is talking to an extraordinarily cool young man at iPower, who is fixing the whole thing. It's only a minor cardiac arrest; all will be remedied shortly.

Other things which came my way yesterday: you have GOT to see this:
http://www.darkroastedblend.com/2008/12/astounding-japanese-highways-bridges.html

It's one page on an amusing and astonishing blog/site, and when you see this, you're just hit between the eyeballs with the solid impression that the worlds of Hellgate and NARC are already upon us. I'm going to borrow one image from the above page, to show you what I mean, and as an incentive to get to you GO OVER THERE and see the whole page! There are swags of images like this, and every one of them looks like something right out of NARC and Hellgate:


(Credit on the picture goes to Ken Ohyama, who has a link through to a website, but if you can't read Japanese, you'll have all kinds of fun trying to navigate the site! Give it a shot: http://blog.livedoor.jp/sohsai/)

Update on the dream-craft.com situation: iPower has remedied the whole thing and we're now just waiting for the server to update, which it will do in about 45 minutes or so, according to our tech support guru, who is certain to be beatified.

If you're looking for website hosting, iPower would have to be the one I recommend. You can stuff things up royally, pick up the phone, and it's just ... fixed. In fact (I might have mentioned this before), it's the only ISP DreamCraft has been recommending for eons -- in fact, they actually "re-sell" iPower services. Excuse the commercial, but if you're a similar bind, wondering who in the heck you can trust to babysit your brainchildren, this is worth a look:
pardon the commercial, but -- this one is worth it!

My apologies to one and all about the "Disappearing Website Affair." This is the reason I blog as well as having a major website! Belt and suspenders. Double-indemnity.

Bear with us just a little longer...

Cheers,
MK

Monday, January 5, 2009

Gay books, ebooks, freebooks, and the industry

Three items crossed my desk yesterday, each of them sad enough in its own way, but when you put them together like building bricks, they're fairly catastrophic.

The publishing industry has been on its knees for quite some time now; I've blogged about this several times during the last six months. At this point, the industry is actually starting to do the face-plant that's been predicted for the last year. The nose is hitting the bitumen as I write.

Let's talk mainstream magazines for a second; a magazine in a big, opulent niche -- in fact, photography, which has always been "up there" with knitting and crochet, cooking, cars, sewing, woodworking and so forth, as one of the flag carriers of the high-end hobby niche. As an erstwhile pro photographer myself, I'm always fascinated by photographics magazines; and JPG Magazine has been the brightest new kid on the block. Till January 5th 2009.

JPG Magazine Says Goodbye:
http://jpgmag.com/blog/2009/01/jpg_magazine_says_goodbye.html

They were brilliant, with around 200,000 photographers featured in their 19 or so issues. They had a support group that was far bigger than any small(ish) publisher could ever hope to have. And they just went belly up. It's a sad day for photographers, and for publishers.

And then, at the same moment, this:
http://www.thegaypublishingcompany.com/forFunders.html

The Gay Publishing Company opened its doors to submissions about 18 months ago at the time of this writing, and as the webpage states, if they can raise US$200,000 (AUD three hundred grand or so), they can publish their first title in six months' time. They have "received more than a dozen full-size novels, two agented manuscripts, numerous short stories, a couple of screenplays, and some memoirs," and are now looking at publishing. Frankly, I'm astonished they weren't deluged with manuscripts. They could have been sitting on several hundred books by this time --

At least, they could have if they were prepared to give firm contracts and promise royalties inside the next 12-24 months. Writers are desperate; most of them, however, are not so desperate, yet, that they'll tie down a whole novel (the work of months or even a couple of years) without any guarantee of a contract and some income.

The figure of US$200,000 might look high to the uninitiated, but in fact, it's conservative. I was involved with book distribution about fifteen years ago, and I learned from the inside how it works. This is what The Gay Publishing Company is up against: to get national distributors to deal with you, you must publish 5 or 6 titles at one time. They will have a 30-60 day "shelf life," after which time the remainders are shipped back to your warehouse, at your expense and the distributor will take your next new titles. The accounting period is six months, and you, the publisher, will get paid three months after the end of the last accounting period. In other words, you won't see a dollar for nine months; in that time, you will have published 25 or more titles, and accepted back the returns. Let's say you print 6,000 copies of each title. That's 150,000 books in print. Let's say they cost you $1 each to print (mass market, offset, bulk runs, mean low printing prices). You're down $150,000 before you see any income. Allow another twenty-five grand to pay small advances, $1,000 each; and another twenty-five grand to pay for warehousing, transportation, and all the business expenses involved with phones, computers, accounting ...

There's your two hundred thousand dollars -- and you'll know in about a year if you're going to continue in business or go belly up.

I have nothing but admiration for anyone who has the courage to enter this field, although I also believe it takes a touch of madness, too. All credit to The Gay Publishing Company. I hope they make it. But, as a writer trying to earn a crust, I have to admit -- it'd be royalties I'd be looking for, in a partnership with them, not an investment opportunity! I can only hope they find the investors they need.

The last of the three items which landed on my desk last evening is this -- a question and thread at Yahoo Answers: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080805201341AAqjRtm

The Question was this: "W[h]ere can i download free homoerotic ebooks online?
hi i'm addicted to gay ebooks from publishers like Torquere Press and Aspen, however i'm POOR and if i can get ebooks from authors like T.A Chase for free online that would be great. are there any share-filess site that i can use. thanks


And the most poignant answer was this: "Know what? Those writers are poor too. That's why they write - to try to make a little money. I know two women who write for Torquere, and they're lucky to make $3,000.00 per year for one book (which takes months to write). They work full time jobs and the money they make from writing helps pay some of the bills.Don't steal from them. If you like their work, pay for it. It doesn't cost that much."

Of course, other answers gave urls where you can get free gay ebooks ... and there are numerous places. The "best" answer was the one which gave three free gay ebook sources:

http://allfree.fermanaziz.com/
http://ebooksbyte.com/
http://allfreedownloadlinks.com/

...and the fact is, I can add to this list:
http://www.gay-ebooks.com.au/
http://online-novels.blogspot.com/2008/08/gay-and-lesbian-novels-1.html

(What leaves me a little amazed is that the person asking this question at Yahoo Ask couldn't figure out how to go to a search engine (pick one) and type in "free gay ebooks.")

Some time ago I recall saying that what the top-line publishers in London and NY don't realize, and haven't reckoned with, is that it's not cheap ebooks they have to contend with -- it's free online fiction. There's a growing ocean of it and, alack and alas, I'm about to start making matters worse with my own experiments:



The Fall of the Atlantean Empire will be going online in a week or so. Right now, I'm just trying to get the advertising worked out. I was thinking about using popunders, but I recently discovered two things: people hate them with a passion, and they pay waaaay too little to the publisher to make it worth the angst being passed along to the reader. So, forget the popunders. I'm looking for something else, and when I come up with an answer, we'll "go up." I'm also thinking about launching the novel with less (or no) advertising, getting the traffic going, and adding in the advertising later. Gay Blog Ads, or Gay Ad Network, that kind of thing.

The publishing world is changing. I do believe the existing top-line publishers are still living in a kind of Middle Earth, where things change with glacial slowness ... things are built to endure, and in fact they outlast their time. If Nostrakeeganus were to make a prediction: we'll see the world of publishing, writing and reading change beyond our imagination in the next 12 - 36 months. I think I see it happening now, and my guess is that as we drive into 2011, so much will be different, many of the icons of yesteryear will either be gone or busy morphing into radically new shapes in an effort to survive.

This is how evolution (read: Mother Nature) works. And everywhere save in the business community it's called A Good Thing.

Cheers,
MK