MAY DAY: DRAFT2DIGITAL - THE NEW KID ON THE BLOCK -E-PUBLISHING MADE EASY: AND CHILDHOOD TALES REVISTED. By Pam Howes
Even though it's the 2nd of the month I'll still wish you Happy
May Day. Who used to take part in the Whit-Walks and May Day parades? Trips to Manchester
for a new dress with a sticky-out skirt and a fancy hat were a highlight of my
childhood. The walk through the town with everyone dressed in their finery,
and mums, proudly standing watching, Pac-a-Mac's at the ready in case of the
odd shower. Then a dance around the Maypole at the end of the ceremony. Try
telling kids today what fun it was and they'd laugh in your face and go back to
playing with their I pads or I pods or whatever. Sad really.
I slipped back into childhood recently by reading a free
Kindle download of Anne of Green Gables. I've read it umpteen times but this
was the first time since my very early teens, a time I couldn't get enough of
young Anne Shirley and her tales. The story has captivated me again, even
though I can now see errors and how it all needs tightening up a bit, but then
maybe it doesn't and that's the beauty of the old classics. They didn't need to
be sharp and peppered with modern lingo. Even though the descriptions are way
over the top by today's standards they still take you right onto to Prince
Edward Island; riding in the buggy with Anne and
Matthew, through the White Way
of Delight and across the Lake of Shining
Waters. It was somewhere I always wanted to visit
as a kid, because of those descriptions and I didn't even know where it was. Canada
was just a place on a globe that I was hardly ever likely to visit in my
lifetime; until I ended up living there for a few years, but I'm still waiting
to visit P.E.I. I may get that chance eventually, as my brother, who lives in Toronto,
is thinking of retiring to Nova Scotia
in a year or two.
As an alternative to Smashwords, and for a bit of an
experiment, I've recently uploaded three of my books to Draft2Digital. I only
discovered the company a few weeks ago after seeing people talking about them
on various author sites. The process was quick, clean and painless. No such
thing as "auto-vettor errors" or "wrong size pixels for your
cover", whatever that might mean. Why can't they just say - it's not big
enough? And no having to "nuke" your book to get rid of rogue font's etcetera
and then sweating to put everything back together again.
Anyway, like I say, it was a fairly easy thing to do and the
books soon went through to B&N, Apple and Kobo. They don't "do"
Sony as of yet but it's apparently in the pipeline. The thing I was most
impressed with is the fact that they will prepare your word doc in readiness
for a print book via Createspace. Now I'm not familiar with CS, my print publisher
is another company, but one of the novels I uploaded to D2D was never supposed
to be published in any form other than as an e-book, through my own choice. It's
always done well as an e book and has regular sales. However, I've taken
advantage of this easy option, approved the PDF, commissioned a full cover
design and have sent the cover over for full publication. I will come back next
month with a quality control report. I don't dislike Smashwords and have good
sales on all my e-books via their affiliate sites, but it's necessary to have
as many sales points as possible these days to bag the readers who have
something other than a Kindle to download to.
And that's me done for now. I hope you're all enjoying the
warmer weather and long may it continue. Until next month. Pam.
Comments
For those who avoid small print - like all US companies you'll have to fill the tax waiver form if you don't want them taking 30% of what you earn AND they do point out that they are doing a 'generic' CS format so that won't suit all - but their 'model' seems to be to take a small % off your sale which seems reasonable enough for people who struggle to convert their own documents OR perhaps as I shall test it, to get into the Apple Store (which I've been finding hard for admin reasons - Apple do NOT appear to have good customer service in such cases) So I'll give this one a test for the apple store. Each to his own and some people may find that a 'portal' approach serves them best - for others - don't forget that you will be paying out of each sale so if you're competent with Kindle (and epub) formatting this might not be necessary. But great to start seeing alternatives to the monoliths. Thanks Pam.
and the sun's shining, and we're sixteen miles from both manchester and huddersfield. who said god's dead?