Writing failure got you down? No matter how hard you try, you can't sell any books? You're depressed. Thinking of quitting. Getting a real job. (You must be really depressed if you're that low!)
Well, I'll have to say to you is, 'You're in a good place.'
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Is going Indie worth it?
That’s a question I’ve often asked myself in the last year
or so since I’ve “gone it alone” as an ebook author. My answer (if you want the
really short version) is yes.
The longer version follows. Like many of my Indie comrades I
started down the traditional path of submitting short stories to magazines. I
met with a fair amount of success, even getting published in a highbrow
literary magazine like “Washington
Square ” (with the likes of Billy Collins no less).
It was great. I was on my way. I also knew I wanted to write novels though and
so rather eagerly abandoned the short story quest and began my first novel.
Well, I could sense that my first novel wasn’t very good and
made no effort at attempting to get an agent to represent it. I wrote if off
(no pun intended) to being part of the learning curve. My second novel was
better, but again, I knew it wasn’t quite there. Same with the third. But my
fourth…
My fourth novel was high art (LOL). I was sure the masses
were just waiting to devour it. It was so distinctively different, so bold, so
moving. (Yes, I’m kidding now, but
back then I believed it.) So I fished around for agents and sent out query
letters. I met with what I would call a “fair” response. I got a few partial
requests, but then a big New York
agent requested the complete manuscript.
Really on my way now, right? I remember calling my girlfriend
and telling her the news, and she practically sang “Gregg!” into the phone,
extending my name, her voice thrilling.
Well. That was four novels ago. And I slugged through the
agent-seeking process with all of them. Again, the short version here: no luck.
I have no chip on my shoulder against agents, but it was
hard. One agent really liked one of the novels but suggested a point-of-view
change, which I made (a lot of work, mind you). When I got the novel back to
her she wrote: “Sorry. Not handling fiction any more. Too hard to get it sold.”
Well all right then.
Now Indie. What’s going Indie been like? Short version:
shockingly hard.
The longer version follows. Going Indie has been a whole
world of things. I remember when I first started checking around for ebook formatters,
Book Baby and places like that, they seemed so expensive, and I planned on
writing a lot of books so I looked for alternatives. I found that I could
format my own ebooks, do my own covers, etc. Hmm. Maybe I could do that, I
thought.
My enthusiasm met with a harsh wake-up call when I looked at
what was entailed with formatting for Kindle. It was this gigantic step-by-step
procedural with different versions (in no particular order), any misstep
sending me directly back to square one. I got chest pains looking at it.
But I stayed after it. (No heart attacks, thank you very
much.) And even got to enjoy it after a while.
Hey, wait a minute, I thought this guy said it was
“shockingly hard”? Oh yeah.
It was and is shockingly hard. I’ve put out four novels as
ebooks, designed three of the covers, formatted them all, poured my heart and
soul into these books and sold just a handful of them in over a year. And I
know that many of my fellow Indie authors are going through the same heartache.
Really, it’s not so much about the money. Anybody who goes Indie isn’t in it
for the money. If you’re Indie, though, you do want to be read. Desperately.
So yeah, it is shockingly hard to go Indie…but it is also so
rewarding. Why? The short version: control.
The longer version follows. As a writer trying to get an
agent and a publishing contract you are constantly jumping through somebody’s
hoops. It starts out in your writers’ group maybe. Then proceeds to the agent,
then the editor, then the marketing team, then the cover maker, then the
bookseller, then…
As an Indie, your art is your art. And that means everything
to me. Go the mainstream route and when you’re done you look at your book and
say, “There’s my book. Well, actually it’s really a conglomeration of people’s
ideas. The agent told me I needed to drop a character (that I loved). The
editor told me I had to cut ten percent (which ruined the tone of the book, not
to mention making the ending make no sense). The cover guy made me use a cover
I despise and doesn’t fit my book at all, and they made me change the title. But
yeah, here’s my book.”
Go the Indie route and the book is yours.
And I have met so many great people going Indie. I have learned
so much about technology. I have come to value all the people who are so
generously giving heart and soul to people’s lives via the Internet (all the
“open source” free software is just one example). And I am truly proud to be a
part of this tribe of independent outsiders called “Indie.”
Maybe I’ll never have my book in a hardcover or in the
window of Barnes and Noble, but I have so much, so much more.
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