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16 posts tagged publishing

Midlister Dreams in the Age of Ebooks

Wattpad brings you a guest post from J. Alexander Greenwood, author of Pilate’s Cross on Wattpad:

My grandfather was a midlister. Sean McLachlan aptly describes this devoted breed of writer:

They’re not rich, they’re not famous, but they make their living by writing and they’re responsible for the majority of all published titles. They’re called midlisters, and they keep the publishing industry running.

[…]

They’re the serious professionals whom publishers rely on to produce good, marketable books year after year, spanning all genres from nonfiction to fantasy to romance to young adult. They’ve moved beyond the small press to win regular paying contracts, but they do not have bestsellers.

Robert E. Trevathan

My grandfather wrote historical fiction. Specifically, he penned Westerns. A Michigan boy who saw combat in the South Pacific during W.W. II, his true love was the Old West–a passion that was fed by his posting in Oklahoma as a base historian for the Air Force. He won an award here and there and was published by respected imprints including Tor, Avalon and Manor. As far as I know (and sadly he’s no longer around to ask) he never made a huge amount of money on any of his dozens of books and short stories. He wrote because he loved telling stories.

“Ballanger” book cover

Starting in the pulp cowboy field, as the years went on his work earned respect and praise for historical accuracy and reader-friendliness. He was inducted into the Oklahoma Professional Writers Hall of Fame a few years before his death.

I learned from him some things you can learn from any true professional writer: read a lot, write every day, edit, edit, edit and most importantly: don’t quit.

Another important thing I learned from him was the quality of discipline. Grandpa Rob awoke every morning at 4:30 a.m. and turned on his egg timer. He wrote for precisely an hour every morning.

I’ve read that the British author and red mailbox inventor Anthony Trollope did the same thing (and if he finished one of his massive novels with time to spare, he would start on another until his time ran out).

Read more

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Listen to our podcast - Write What You Know: Legal & Crime Thrillers with Mary E Martin

Why are writers always told to write what they know? Listen to our discussion with Mary E. Martin about how her years of legal practice in Toronto and her art interests have influenced and inspired her writing career. Find out more about her legal thriller “The Osgoode Trilogy,” art-world mystery “Trilogy of Remembrance,” and more about her current projects.

113,054 Plays

Was Self-Publishing The Right Decision?

Check out this great post by writer David Gaughran on his self-publishing experience:

Sunday will mark a year since I first uploaded to Amazon. At the time, I was wrestling with a question that many writers are still dealing with today: should I self-publish?

The argument about whether to self-publish has been debated in great detail both here and elsewhere. I don’t want to add to that general discussion today, rather I want to offer up my personal experience of self-publishing.

Given that this is an anniversary of sorts, I would like to look back over the last twelve months and examine the results of that decision, and compare it with what would likely have happened had I decided otherwise.

Regular readers will know that I broke my own impasse by deciding to publish some short stories, while holding A Storm Hits Valparaiso in reserve. It was still being considered by a handful of agents, and I wasn’t completely convinced that self-publishing was the right approach.

Continue reading on David’s blog

allenlau:

Yesterday at the London Book Fair I participated in an Oxford-style debate called “The Great Debate”.  Having been one of the biggest (and most fun) events at last year’s London Book Fair, The Great Debate returns this year with the motion “In the fight for survival, outsiders and start-ups are taking on today’s heavyweight publishers and will ultimately deliver a knock-out punch.”.  The debaters included Evan Schnittman, Managing Director of Bloomsbury Publishing; Fionnuala Duggan, Managing Director, CourseSmart; Bob Young, CEO & Founder, Lulu; and yours truly.  I don’t believe I have to tell you who are supporting and who are against the motion :-)

The motion was purposely provocative, which was great as it made sure the debate was entertaining.  It was great fun for me as I haven’t participated in any Oxford-style debate for a long long time. If you want to know who won at the end, Publishers Weekly had a great coverage here.

Here is what I had prepared in advance.  Of course, the live version was a bit different.  E.g. In the beginning I added “I wonder why Bob and I are using iPads to take notes while our opponents are using paper” :-)  

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The Lipstick Kiss

Wattpad is very pleased to bring you today’s guest post from author Margaret Atwood. Ms. Atwood has recently embarked on a new adventure in online publishing and we’re happy to see her dive in! We are also incredibly happy that she has been generous enough to share some advice and insight with the Wattpad community on the process of selecting a title and cover for her latest original short story. 

Choosing the Title and Cover Image for Byliner’s I’m Starved For You

Choosing a book title is sometimes a dream, though more often it’s a nightmare. The title is like a doorway: it’s the first thing a reader sees in addition to and the cover image. Whoever decides on the title of a book hopes that it will invite the reader to open the door and go in.

Sometimes a writer has the title very early, and knows it, and the publisher’s enthusiastic. But if there’s uncertainty, the process of deciding can be nerve-racking, because not everyone involved – the publishers, the marketers, the editors — will agree. 

While I was writing I’m Starved For You, I called it Consilience, which is the name of the town where the story takes place. This word has a comfortable, friendly feel to it, though what it actually means, according to Wikipedia, is “a ‘jumping’ together of knowledge by the linking of facts and fact-based theory across disciplines to create a common groundwork of explanation.” This kind of fits what’s going on in the town of Consilience, where the justice system and the economic system are linked by turning a prison into a full-employment scheme, with cost savings and other benefits. These include house-sharing by its citizens, who take turns being prisoners.

But who knows what “consilience” means, right off the bat? So I changed the name to Lockers. This seemed fitting as well, since each of the four characters who share a house has a locker in which to stow the clothes they won’t be wearing during the months they spend in the prison. The lockers are different colors: red, green, purple, pink. Stan’s wife, Charmaine, has the pink one; she briefly considers putting Stan into it, though she realizes she would have to cut some pieces off him in order to cram him in. As a title, Lockers also dovetailed with the prison theme, for prison is a place where people are locked away.

But the editors at Byliner felt that title didn’t jump off the page. They wanted something “sexier,” more alluring; something that would evoke all the longing in the story. We all cudgeled our brains, sending titles back and forth by email – Shackle Day, The Red Locker, Purple Kiss, The Heart Goes Last, I’m Starved For You.  Finally we narrowed it down to the last two. Then we voted, and I’m Starved For You won by a narrow margin.

It’s a line from a note Stan finds hidden in the house that he and Charmaine share with their “alternate” couple, whom they are never allowed to see. The note appears to be from the wife, Jasmine, and is addressed to her husband Max. It’s sealed with a purple lipstick kiss. At the beginning of the story, Stan falls in lust with the imprint of this kiss, and determines to track down the woman who has made it. 

Once the title was decided on, it was the turn of the cover image.

There was a brief flirtation with a picture of a red scooter on a deserted beach – the mood was “escape” – but as there was no beach in the book, I wrote to my editor, “Never promise a beach when you don’t have one to offer.” It didn’t take us long to decide on the final image, which was the purple lipstick kiss itself, on a folded and slightly crumpled piece of paper.  It fit the title – the final title – because an open mouth can be sexy, or it can be hungry. As for the dark pink color, it can be seen as provocative or maybe a little vampiristic. “Starved” implies desperation, and viewed from a certain angle the vertical creases in the paper slightly resemble fangs.

A title and a cover image are indeed like a doorway; and doors are gateways to the unknown. I suppose that’s one of the reasons we read: to follow mysterious pathways; to be taken somewhere we’ve never been before. It might be a little dark in there, but that’s always the chance you take, with doors.

Margaret Atwood is the author of over forty books, including The Handmaid’s Tale and Oryx and Crake. I’m Starved for You can be found at www.Byliner.com/originals/i-m-starved-for-you. Read an excerpt here

Friday Find: “Secrets of Successful Writers”

Every Friday, we bring you an undiscovered gem to read on Wattpad. This week, our secret Wattpad Talent Hunters recommend Secrets of Successful Writers, a non-fiction:

Secrets of Successful Writers by Darell Pitt

Interviews with fifty writers as they speak about writing, publishing and promoting their books in the digital age. Some of the writers are traditional authors. Others have built careers as self-published ebook authors. It contains interviews with authors who write detective stories, westerns, romance, thrillers and children’s books.

Included are: John Locke, Micaela Wendell, Dolores Durando, and Robert J. Randisi.

Last Day To Enter!

Win a copy of “Girl Meets Boy” from Chronicle Books, and get writing feedback plus publishing insights from author Kelly Milner Halls!

Enter the “Girl Meets Boy” writing contest on Wattpad.

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Becoming a Published Author: Wattpad Interviews Scott Kelly

Finishing novels, publishing, writing inspirations - join our discussion on the process of becoming a published author. Listen to our podcast interview with Scott Kelly, author of Frightened Boy on Wattpad.

Frightened Boy is currently a Featured Story on Wattpad! Go ahead and check it out:

Frightened Boy

A young man is caught in a battle between existential terrorists and a paranoid populace over the last metropolis in America. Our hero must decide whether to destroy or salvage the last bastion of civilization. A gritty dystopian thriller (think Hunger Games meets the Matrix.)

Read it for FREE here!

18,129 Plays

What’s Up With Wattpad?

What’s Up With Wattpad?

by David Gaughran

Kids these days, eh? Always wandering around with their noses in their iPhones, up to no good.

Well, maybe not. Because lots of them are using an app called Wattpad which might just be the biggest revolution in reading you’ve never heard of.

Continue reading!

Q&A With Brittany Geragotelis: Author Of “Life’s A Witch”

There have been plenty of books about witches already, but one in particular cast a spell on us, leaving us longing for more — Life’s A Witch by Brittany Geragotelis. Brittany’s novel is a YA retelling of the Salem Witch Trials and since she began sharing it with the Wattpad community, it’s achieved much attention, attracting more than 13 million readers and becoming one of the most successful stories on the site!

Inspired by the support of Wattpad users, Brittany recently self-published Life’s A Witch through Amazon CreateSpace. We met up with her at her launch party last week to chat about how the Wattpad community has impacted her, how she’s bringing a new perspective to the supernatural genre, and what it’s like to self-publish a story…

Read more on YPulse!

“Life’s A Witch” Book Launch Party!

Yesterday, Wattpad’s Nina Lassam attended the book launch party in NYC for Brittany Geragotelis’ “Life’s A Witch”! You can get your own copy now on Amazon!

Here are a few highlights:

Shout-out to BrittTheBookSlayer’s fans on Wattpad:

Find out more about Britt’s amazing publishing journey on Publishers Weekly.

Author With Huge Wattpad Fan Base Tries Self-Publishing

Despite attracting 13 million readers to her serialized novel, Life’s A Witch, on the online writing community of Wattpad, aspiring young adult novelist Brittany Geragotelis decided rather than seek a conventional publisher, she would do the job herself.  Geragotelis is publishing the book in print and e-book formats through Amazon CreateSpace and launching the book this week with a party in Manhattan.

Read more

Life Cycle of a Book

Marketing Tips from Wattpad’s Nina Lassam.

See more tips and the rest of the cycle here!

Publishing Journey: Congrats to Wattpad Writer Shanice Williams!

Wattpad writer Shanice Williams recently hosted a book-signing event for her novel “Kane Richards Must Die”.

Read the beginning of her novel on Wattpad! (Mobile Wattcode 791443)

Wattpad author Diana Ilinca: My Journey to Getting Published

Diana answers your questions about becoming a published writer. Find out more on her blog!

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