It was sad news when Capital Crime Press, my honest, hard working publisher, decided to throw in the towel, but more than that, it was scary. How about the agreements with the distributors? Where were readers, bookstores, and libraries going to find my books? And what made it the scariest was how fast change was happening all around me. But how could I be surprised, though, with major bookstores going belly up and taking their WiFi and coffee bars with them? Larger publishers than mine were calling it quits; eStuff was replacing dead tree stuff so fast it just felt rude. Okay, maybe books must go, but why not with a little more dignity? Nope, no time for that––the future had arrived.
The truth is, I wanted to go all
Pollyanna and believe that things would take care of themselves, after all,
folks weren’t going to stop reading books––were they? So I let much more time
slip by than I ever should have before reading some altruistic Joe Konrath
rants and seeing the light. Joe has a way of throwing that switch. No more
dragging my feet, I had to go digital or I would be the last writer in the
neighborhood to do so.
For me, going digital, meant
penning 2nd editions of the first four Baby Sharks and releasing them on Kindle
Select. This was the beginning of the “process” part of leaving one world and
entering the next.
Okay––making the books available
for Kindle readers was step one. But how about all those folks who like holding
a “real” book in their hands? After all the badmouth that has been given Print
On Demand (POD) by the traditional publishing guys (to serve their own
purposes, I fear), I was happily surprised to learn that POD books look EXACTLY
the same as the book traditional publishers print. Hooray! That meant all
readers would be served.
So, new covers for the PODs would
need to be arranged, as well as some other details, since I was now the
publisher, but it was all within reach. I think it is fair to say that Amazon
(Kindle) makes it easy to self-publish, but that’s relative. If you want to go
this route, be prepared to exert some effort. It ain’t rocket science, but
there are many niggling details that must be addressed. Patience and
perseverance are required, and also some thick skin, since there is still a lot
of resistance to “going it alone,” even if it is the American way.
The final stage of the “process”
is the marketing, of course––the Sisyphean task of making folks aware of your
books. Amazon offers help, but as in all things, you must help yourself, as
well. I am now in that final stage.
If you TWEET, on May
18th, please Tweet this: Free Baby Shark on Kindle http://tinyurl.com/freebabyshark
Welcome to my mountaintop, Bob. I've read and enjoyed your BAby Shark series.
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