I have a novel and two novellas to edit. So why am I procrastinating? Why am I reading Stephen King instead of reading ME? I need to get this done. I need to begin to think of it as a job rather than a hobby. That’s hard to do sometimes when you have a full time job already. I wish I could devote most of my day to writing. If wishes were horses….
I was all set to find an agent for my second novel. Well, as soon as it was edited anyway. I thought that was the way to go. But now I’m beginning to wonder if that’s what I want to do. My friend Zoe, who is a wonderful writer and very savvy in a lot of business related areas, is all for self publishing. She owns her own publishing company now and is planning on self publishing her books.
I think my biggest problem is marketing. I’ve always thought if you had an agent, you wouldn’t have to worry about doing your own marketing. Zoe has sold a bunch of copies (over 2,700, I think) of her novella “KEPT” in the Amazon Kindle store and I’ve sold about 12 of mine. She knows how to market her books. She’s constantly blogging and people are actually reading her blogs. No one reads my blogs. No one but my closest friends know about my book. I’m terrible when it comes to marketing. If I didn’t have a full time job, would I do better? Who knows? But I need to change some things if I want to even make a little spending money on my books. $10 a year isn’t going to cut it.
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Finally, finally, finally I’ve finished the first draft of my second novel. I had put it down for a really long time, only lacking a few more chapters. I finally got back on track and finished the rest of it in a matter of a few days. Or maybe a week. But it’s done now!
The next steps are 1) Edit, edit, edit, and 2) Find an agent.
Finding an agent will be a long, grueling process. The trick is to make sure you query agents specific to your genre. It makes no sense to write, say, a romance novel and query agents who specialize in science fiction. So do your homework. There are websites to help you. Preditors and Editors are brutally honest about agents that they recommend and DON’T recommend. What I like to do is go to agentquery.com to find agents specific to the genre, then go to Preditors and Editors (anotherealm.com) and find out what is said about that agent.
However you choose to find an agent, please don’t get discouraged by rejection. It’s part of the process. Keep at it. Never give up.
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I read my novel again, finally, and got back into the mood for writing it. I found a few typos and went ahead and corrected them while I was reading. I really need to try to get this published. I’m still thinking about trying to get published the traditional way. It would only cost me $100 to get Writer’s Relief to give me at least 25 places to submit my novel. If I don’t get published that way, there’s still Amazon Kindle. But I would love to get picked up by a publishing house, even if it’s not a big one. How cool would THAT be?
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Ok, so I got in a big hurry and just wanted to see my book in print. So I paid someone about $400 to print my book. I did the cover art from a picture I took, and I did the editing along with a friend. Yay, my book was published! I sold exactly 10 books. Five were purchased by the same person. I knew all of them. The company gave me lots of opportunities to market my book. But at a premium. I couldn’t afford it. I put my book in the Amazon Kindle store free of charge. Even though the price is less, the royalty percentage is larger. I’ve sold about six on Kindle to people I don’t know. Did I mention it was FREE? LOL
I was planning on publishing the second book electronically only. There’s no monetary investment to put it on Kindle. Then I started reading about Writer’s Relief. I had applied for a job as proofreader with them awhile back, but apparently I wasn’t perfect enough for that. But now I’ve subscribed to their newsletter and their Facebook page. This looks like a company that really could help. For $100 they will give you 25 agents in your genre to which to submit your work. And they have a BUNCH of free articles on their website that are very helpful. When I finish my book, I may just give them a shot. They also have other services that are more expensive. You can pick your level depending on what you need.
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I am gradually getting my files saved from my old computer to my new one. The old one konked out and I was afraid I would lose all the files I didn’t have backed up. Luckily, I’m able to get the old one to stay on long enough at a time to back up files before it goes back off. I did have my book in progress backed up on a flash drive.
This is a lesson to all of you writers out there. ALWAYS make sure your work is backed up. In fact, make sure it is backed up at least three different place. Mine is backed up on my laptop, a flash drive, and my computer here at work. Can you imagine how sick you would be to put so much work into a book, then have it just disappear? Back it up, people!
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This is my first post on my new author blog. Most of these posts are going to be boring accounts of my writing, the frustrations caused by it, and possible tales of submission and rejection later on. For those of you brave enough (or patient enough) to follow this blog, welcome! If you are at all interested in my boring life as a frustrated writer, I’m glad you decided to come on board. If you see it and think that’s it’s a big yawn, then I completely understand. So there it is. It’s just me. It’s a pen name, of course, but most of you will know who I really am. :0)
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