hedda62: my cat asleep (Default)
So this is the post I've been meaning to get to for ages. I've just realized it's the second half of 2013, so it really is time, and if I write it all down here, I'll have to do something about it.

For those of you who don't know, there are these novels I've written. Four of them so far, out of at least five. (It was supposed to be a trilogy. Insert Douglas Adams joke here.) They describe the adventures of the employees of a time travel company doing contract work for the government and other clients in the 2170s, and in particular those of Olivia Lake, graduate student in English literature turned time jumper with the secret intent of discovering the whereabouts of her vanished husband, and George Merrill, who isn't terribly good at being her mentor. You can read the first three chapters of the first book, Time for Tea, here. These are cast-of-hundreds novels, full of smuggling and sword fights and music and art and time paradoxes and jokes and tragedy and warfare and politics and poetry and fairy tales and semi-sentient machines and love affairs over rather more than three separate continents (not to mention centuries). I've had a blast creating all of this and I'm confident that at least some other people will enjoy reading it.

I started writing the books in 2002 and have been typing and editing and rethinking and fiddling ever since, and now I do actually need to do something about publication. I still have a bunch of research to undertake, but at this point I'm leaning rather heavily toward self-publishing. When I started out, going that route was the kiss of death - it shouted rejection and poor writing and poor sales - but things have changed in the book world in eleven years, and despite the cries of my long-suffering beta readers that I'm good enough to deserve "real" publication (and, you know, I agree with them), I think this is probably the answer, unless any other possibilities spring into view in the near future. Here's why:

a) They're long. I haven't done a word count recently, but earlier drafts of Time for Tea clocked in at about 200K, which is long for publishers to look at for a first novel. And no, I can't trim any more; I can and will strip a few more adverbs and modifiers, but it isn't going to make a whole lot of difference. I just think in long, complex stories, and that's the way it is. And the third and fourth books are even longer (I think the second is a little less).

b) They don't fit easily into a genre. I mean, yes, time travel=SF, but that's not my primary mode of thought here, and they're certainly not romance novels in the traditional sense (the first one sets up that way a bit, but the further in I get the less the romance matters), and they have far too many literary quotations and corsets to be straight-up adventure stories. They're what I like in a novel, which probably means they're what a bunch of other readers like too, but I don't know where they'd be shelved in a bookstore.

c) Most significantly, I am almost 51 and not getting any younger, I've wasted enough time already, and I'm realistic about how long it would take to go the traditional route. Really, I just want to get the books out there so people can read them, because they rock and I'd like to share and make a little money in the process. If that's all that comes of it, I'm fine with that, and one never knows.

So here's the plan. This month I'm going to further investigate publishing options, join some groups, follow up leads, make decisions. I know some of you have looked into this before, so please throw links at me if you have them. Next (maybe August, maybe earlier if I don't freeze and end up with a really clean house and organized garden instead) I'll do that gazillionst editing pass on TFT, fix whatever formatting I need to, set up a website and whatever else I need (Twitter? Tumblr? An author page on Facebook, for sure, to supplement my personal account), start reaching out and promoting. And then sometime in the fall actually get the thing out there. And then start final edits on Time and Fevers (seems to me it would be good to have the first two out there within six months of each other, and then I can settle back a bit. I do have to write the fifth one at some point, too).

The thing about self-publishing is that you have to do all your own marketing (though really as a newbie professionally-published author you have to do nearly as much, and you make less money per sale), so consider this the start of it, and... I will be asking for help as I go along, to get the word out. I'm hoping that people who enjoy reading my fanfic will be willing to spend a few bucks to read my original work and write fanfic for it no don't jinx it but really the George/Halsey writes itself and will tell their friends. And please comment and talk to me and muster up any encouragement you possess. And thank you for being there.

Okay. *deep breath* *jumps*

Date: 2013-07-03 03:50 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] philomytha
philomytha: airplane flying over romantic castle (Default)
*waves pom-poms encouragingly*

I think you're right that nowadays, self-publishing is well worth trying, and from what I've read so far I think it would be a crying shame if the book weren't out there somewhere, in some form, to collect its own audience. Also, you have reminded me that I've been meaning to transfer the last chunk you sent me to my Kindle for more convenient reading, so I'm going to go and do that now. And you can count on me to wave a little flag for Olivia and George when it needs waving.

Date: 2013-07-03 04:56 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] raven
raven: [hello my name is] and a silhouette image of a raven (Default)
I am excited to read time-travel adventures written by you!

Date: 2013-07-03 07:51 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] bloomingpol
bloomingpol: Looking back on a parade of hot air balloons (Default)
Let me know when there are links, etc., and I will push it out to my wonderful friends in NH, and elsewhere, who love stories. And YAY! YAY! YAY!

Date: 2013-07-03 09:59 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] rike_tikki_tavi
rike_tikki_tavi: cartoon elefant (cartoon elefant)
I'm very happy to hear that you'll self-publish those novels. I've recently found a link to those first 3 chapters but not finished reading them and thus not commented. But I think the concept is fascinating and I like the characters and I'll be there to buy the books when you publish.

Date: 2013-07-03 10:01 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] mmegaera
mmegaera: (Default)
Speaking as someone who took the jump two years ago (http://mmjustus.com -- two of mine are time travels, too), epubbing on Amazon and Smashwords (which latter populates the thing out to lots of other places like iTunes, B&N, Sony, etc.) really isn't that hard. Nitpicky and fiddly, yes, but not hard. Covers are the worst, esp. if you don't know anyone/can't afford to pay anyone who can do a professional-looking one for you. I'm taking an online class on the subject this summer to a) try to do something about mine, and b) to learn how to do the inside of a print version, which is a lot harder.

The frustratingly discouragingly hard part is marketing. I've sold a few hundred bucks worth of the two books I have out so far. That's about what telling everyone I know about them got me. Getting people to write reviews and tell their friends is the hardest part of all. Just sayin'.

Two blogs you might want to glom onto from an informational point of view are by Dean Wesley Smith (deanwesleysmith.com) and his wife Kristine Kathryn Rusch (kriswrites.com).

And good luck!

Date: 2013-07-03 11:32 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] mmegaera
mmegaera: (Default)
You're welcome. I think the hardest part about publishing in any form is that I have a nice little circle of friends, who have always been more than adequate on a personal level, but on a writerly level? I'm just not a social-enough person, apparently.

Date: 2013-07-04 12:20 am (UTC)From: [personal profile] pendrecarc
pendrecarc: Woman holding a hooked hand (Default)
That's fantastic! Really happy for you. Not too long ago I spent a fair bit of time gathering resources on traditional agent-cum-publishinig-house routes into publishing, but I know much less about the self-publishing route. Still, happy to be of help in any way you need, even if it's just cheerleading and linking all over when it comes time to do so.

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