Guest Post: Resolutely Writing into the New Year - by Die Booth
Authors Electric are grateful to Die Booth for stepping in at the last minute, when the guest blogger booked for today failed to provide a post, despite being reminded several times. (Something we do not appreciate.) So, with thanks, we hand over to Die...
2012 was another steep learning curve for me as a fairly
new, self-publishing writer. I spent 2011 writing for and co-editing the
Re-Vamp project with fellow author LC Hu.
This is a misconception that is still widespread about self-published
books and in particular e-books and sadly it’s not entirely based in fiction.
The ease with which it’s possible to publish your own books these days is a
double-edged sword; it gives authors more control, but it also gives the
readers little quality control. So what’s the solution?
It’s that time of year again - the Resolutions time. The
time when writers everywhere - regardless of experience - start to make those bullet-pointed
to-do lists for the new year. I’m making mine now (right here, in this blog
post!) so let me share it with you.
Things I learned in 2012
Re-Vamp |
This was an initially online project
that took all those done-to-death horror tropes right back to their traditional
roots, in the form of artwork, video clips, poetry and
choose-your-own-adventure, but mainly short stories.
The online nature of the
project let writers from all over the world take part and allowed for an
unlimited amount of audience interaction. It also gave us a very real lesson in
the amount of work it takes to run a project like that - reading competition
entries, controlling sock-puppet votes, editing the stories that were chosen
for the final project anthology, print layout, e-book layout, promotion - the
list goes on.
The amount of work involved was immense, yet at the end of it we
were exhausted but had produced an anthology that all the contributors can be
really proud of.
2012 saw me talking about Re-Vamp and my experience of
self-publishing at The Chester Literature Festival. The reception I got for the
book there was fantastic and the main thing that everybody said was ‘you
self-published this? But it looks so professional!’ To a one, they all expected
a self-published horror anthology to be poor quality and littered with
mistakes.
At the Chester Literature Festival |
This year, determined to get some ‘legitimate’ publishing
credits under my belt, I started sending stories off to anthology open calls.
Not being a complete novice I
attempted to exercise a certain amount of discretion in choosing my targets.
Reading examples of previously published work where possible, avoiding dodgy
cover-art and brand new presses whose submission guidelines were riddled with
typos - that kind of thing. I thought I was being pretty savvy, but still
managed to end up with a story in a professional, successful and highly
advertised anthology from a prolific (should’ve tipped me off a bit!) publisher,
in which I counted no less than 326 errors.
Comparing my experiences of the past two years, Re-Vamp,
although much harder work to produce and much less successful in the profit and
reader circulation stakes, was by far the more rewarding.
So, what have I taken from all that 2012 threw at me? I could say in summation that you’re better
off working alone and avoiding being reliant on anyone else at all when it comes
to writing because at least then all the mistakes are your own, but I think
that a more positive spin on it is that as self-publishing authors, these days
we have the facilities available to write and produce our own work entirely on
our own. And there’s no greater satisfaction than taking a project from
conception to finished book having completed every detail to your own personal specification.
My 2013 New Year’s Resolutions
* Do not get
side-tracked by ‘legitimate’ anthology calls - your self-published work is
every bit as legitimate as small press releases (and in some cases probably
more thoroughly edited!)
* Finally get that novel edited, formatted and
published!
*Write a piece of
flash fiction every day. It’ll be a challenge, but also great writing exercise.
*Enjoy what you’re
writing. Because if you don’t, then you can’t expect your readers to.
*Read the Authors
Electric blog every day for insights, tips and musings.
Best wishes to all readers of Authors Electric for a happy,
peaceful and successful 2013!
You can visit Die Booth here: diebooth.wordpress.com
And buy Re-Vamp online at:
Ebook:
Smashwords: (ePub, PDF, mobi, pdb, lrf and more)
Smashwords: (ePub, PDF, mobi, pdb, lrf and more)
Paperback:
Comments
Very well explained. I would like to say that it is very interesting to read your blog. . .
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As an ex-magazine editor I can understand the frustration of working with others on a project like this though!