Category Archives: Publishing

So, You Want to be an Author? Traditionally published? Self-Published? Read here!

This post made me laugh till I peed, cry buckets of tears, walk away and digest for a while, kick the dog, reach down and rub his tummy, bang my head against the wall, and then laugh some more. While it is written by a traditional publishing proponent, it has much insight to offer ANY aspiring author. It also offers the realistic support and encouragement I need, especially since I am my own agent and publicist. It was a long guest post on Chuck Wendig’s blog “terribleminds”, by Delilah S. Dawson, and you’ll want to read every word.

http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2014/01/08/25-damned-dirty-lies-about-publishing-by-delilah-s-dawson/

For more about Delilah check here

http://delilahpaints.blogspot.com/p/about.html

I know you can surf the internet just like I can, and you may already subscribe to Terribleminds, but I didn’t want you to inadvertently overlook this one. Read, come back, and let me know what you think!

Learning About Books and How to Produce Them: My Lists of Threes

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New Year’s Day I posted a brief “In a Nutshell” about my one goal for 2014: 1) to put my fingers to the keyboard and write.

I also made a 6 point list of things I had learned in 2013 that minimized the enormous amount of information my brain has digested over the past year.  This post addresses #6. “Books are books.” Honestly, it wouldn’t fit in a nutshell, so I have decided to post some of this information in hopes that it might offer to you some insights on the vast amount of information that is out here and how to apply it to the process of writing, publishing and marketing your story. ***Warning***This is a very long post. I picked just three things about each of these three aspects. I do believe this is the longest post I have ever made.

First, writing has rules. Rules offer guidance, but they are not the be all and end all of the writing process. Some of the best literature the world has ever seen breaks the rules.  So why have them?

Rules offer a foundation for getting started.  We all have to start someplace. Obviously there are books and books of rules, but these three have special significance to me. Before I list these three rules, I want to stress to you that these rules are simply someone else’s opinion. They are not carved in stone. Don’t let them cramp your own style.

1. Show not tell. We hear this a lot. I get this. Telling a story is like having it unfold as if it were a movie on a screen, whereas showing allows for more imagination in the reader’s mind to develop from your words a mental image of what is taking place.  For example: Instead of saying, “She angrily slapped his face and he reeled from the sting. He grabbed her wrist,” you might say, “Her reddened cheeks danced with fire as she looked directly into his icy eyes and drew her hand sharply across his face. He recoiled in that instant, shaking off the sting, and grasped her by the wrist.” Don’t state the emotion, but show how it plays out in action.

2. Minimalist versus eloquent prose. This is a preference thing. While the example above describes the difference between show and tell, it also introduces another topic. Details; how many do you need?

Icons, in particular, generally need no lofty description:

“He wore a long yellow slicker and a wide brimmed hard hat that draped down his back. He snapped his red suspenders as he reached for the hose. He smelled of ashes and soot.” He is a, “fireman,” for Christ’s sake, and the building is burning down while he is being so thoughtfully described.

Another:

“It was a great machine, red and covered in grainy brown dust, with yellow paint peeling back from its wheels and dry rotted tires long flattened by labor in the fields.”

Come on…wouldn’t, “Rusty old tractor,” suffice?

Is it enough to say, “Roasted pig?” Or do we need, “The porcine product lay on the silver platter with brown, crispy skin curled back to reveal the tender, moist, steaming flesh inside?”

Admittedly, this is a matter of what your reader audience prefers, but it is something to consider.

On the other hand: I would like to know what color hair she had. It occurred to me with a recent book that I read, not once did the author describe the protagonist’s hair color or features. Throughout the entire book…something critical seemed to be missing. I couldn’t get my mind around the character. Maybe the author did that intentionally, perhaps it was an oversight. But, as a reader, it left a gaping hole in my experience.

I am not saying that one way is right and another wrong, but the reader audience must be taken into consideration. Just like fifty dollar words are not going to make sense to children, an audience of forty year old rural farmers is not going to appreciate the same things that an audience of thirty-something urbanites would, or the same things that a college degreed  group of  50 year old world travelers would, or the same things that teens coming of age would. This sentence brings me to my next topic.

3. Same words.  Don’t use the same word in the same sentence…the same paragraph, on the same page if you can help it. I understand that this rule is important in preventing redundancy. Sometimes redundancy is necessary for emphasis, but nobody wants to read four sentences on one page describing the fog with the word “fog”.

The fog cast an eerie glow to the lamplight. The valley below was obscured by the fog. They walked through the fog across the bridge. The thick fog began to rise and then the fog lifted with the coming of the morning light.”

Perhaps a page that includes the following sentences, “The lamplight cast an eerie glow as morning mellowed its light,” …  “A white blanket shrouded the valley below,”  … “Wispy tendrils surrounded their ankles as they walked across the bridge,” … “Sunlight melted the mist of darkness.”

It might be acceptable to describe fog four different ways, but it might warrant moving away from once you’ve made your point. Once you have established that it was foggy outside, need you say more?

One sentence might be plenty enough for making your point. I get it. It was foggy outside.

Then again, if we NEVER used redundancy, we would not have such great classic statements as, “It was the best of times; it was the worst of times,” (“Tale of Two Cities”).

In general, once you’ve made your point, it is best to move on; else you may lose your reader in the fog. Basically, it boils down to setting the scene and then allowing the reader’s imagination to do the rest.

Reading is a subjective experience. These are just a few writing rules that I have seen mentioned time and time again, and my personal thoughts on them. I could spend hours on the many writing techniques that are illustrated on the many writers’ blogs, but these are a few that struck me over and over again. Reading what you most enjoy is the best way to develop your own writing style. It also helps you see those methods that simply don’t appeal to you.

“Rules” can be intimidating. The best thing you can do is glean that which you truly feel might be useful to you and let the rest fall off like water on a duck’s back. Develop your own writing style, a comfort zone, and don’t let opinions and “rules” alter your style to the point that you are no longer happy writing.

I can’t stress the importance of READING enough.

Second, publishing has become a very simple process in consideration to how it has occurred in the past.  Are you ready? That seems to be the question that plagues most writers.

1. I have already mentioned that I published before I had a blog, before I was influenced in any way by all the writer rules. My writing was influenced more by the work I had read than any set of rules. I have also indicated that I would most likely have been far too intimidated to publish if I knew then what I know now.  Is that to say the writing is not worthy?  Did it require revision and editing? No, and yes. Is it my best? Probably not.

I recently reread some of the novels published traditionally by Anne Rice under the names of Anne Rampling and A.N. Roquelaure. Being an old lady, I have had the pleasure of watching this 72 year old author evolve over time.  I saw her come into her own. I saw her hit her stride. I have seen her falter, and I have seen her rally back.  It has been a fascinating journey. There is nothing that she has not written that I have not read. She is one of the most fantastic contemporary authors the world has ever witnessed. Also, one of the most successful.  Success did not happen with her first books, or Stephen King’s, or Charles Dickens’. The serial publication of The Pickwick Papers gave Dickens the opportunity to test his audience while he honed his craft.  Bloggers have that same opportunity.

Editing, revision, proofing…they are all necessary…mandatory!  Professional editing, copy and line, as well as having beta readers will greatly increase your potential for success. There are things that only other eyes are going to find…hear in your words.  However, picking the pieces to pieces is probably not going to help your progress.

There does come a point when you have to let it fly.  You have to do the best that you can with the knowledge you have and let it go out into that great big wide world!

2. Traditional or self-published? I don’t think that there is a right or wrong here. I am a big proponent for the sense of control that self-publishing offers, but at the same time I can see many benefits that traditional publishing provides. I won’t go into details here, but I would advise any writer to examine carefully what it is that they hope to achieve and what resources they have at their disposal.  There are risks with or without a contract.

3. When do you know it is time to publish?  If you have already edited your edits, and revised at least once, and you find that you have proofed it and it has passed…it’s probably ready to publish…as ready as it will ever be.  Perfection is not going to happen. It isn’t. If you think that it is, you are kidding yourself. Why?  Different people have different tastes, and you will never please them all.  Hopefully, you have written something that is marketable and will please an audience, but do not ever expect to make everyone happy. It is not going to happen in life or in writing.

I spent last week in a serious examination of reviews of books available online. It was almost laughable that some reviewers loved things other reviewers hated. Generally, you could see if it was a make or break novel, but it was profoundly amusing what some thought made the books and others thought broke the books.

I would highly recommend any potential author to go to the reviews and read both good and bad.  Not only will you come to understand and value the significance of being imperfect, you may also find your audience before you push the publish button.

Here is one review that I personally took to heart in consideration of my own type of writing.  It was a book written about a family of sisters who were socialites in the 1930s and 1940s:

 “Yes, these sisters are all rich and/or famous, but I found it very hard to care. Maybe because I found them boring. I’m too old to care about Paris Hilton and too young to find the era these sisters lived in very interesting.”

I found this review, as simple as it was, full of valuable information to me as a writer. There is an audience of people who prefer interesting over famous. There is, perhaps, an era in time that is neglected. People want to be able to care about their characters.

I was also amazed to see books published years ago holding a high sellers rank in the single digits, yet displaying a majority of scathing reviews. Likewise, it was amazing to see books published within the past year with hundreds, even thousands, of stellar reviews ranking around #800,000. I have yet to figure out these phenomena, but I do think marketing is a significant factor.

Finally, marketing, should it be so complicated?  I don’t know if I can answer that question but I am going to share with you a few of my ideas on the subject.

1. I don’t believe establishing a huge fan base and a reader market before you publish is necessarily going to keep selling your books.  I am not saying that it isn’t helpful, it is the greatest support a person can have in this world of many writers and readers, but even that becomes saturated…and where do you go from there? Write more books!

2. The more eyes you are able to put your title in front of the greater your success will be in getting it read.  There are 20 million plus books on Amazon alone.  We are grains of sand on the beach. If you have a fan base and a reader market already established, you are at least going to sell some books and have your material read.  Beyond that, you are going to have to find ways to get your book noticed as broadly as possible, utilizing your fan base and reader audience to promote your book.  Have blog tours, reblog other author’s work, offer guest posts, and ask for interviews.   Again, it may not sell hundreds of copies of every book you produce, but it is a start at getting your name noticed and establishing yourself as an author. The most visible authors out there have more than one book. Did I say, “Write more books?”

I am reminded of how I felt when I went from my little hometown’s bookmobile into the University library with my mother as a small child. Online bookstores are comparable to a whole world of University libraries and the search feature may not be as effective as the Dewy Decimal System if you don’t know what you are doing.  Where do you start once you have your book, your blurb/book description, cover image and all of the elements of a good product to market?

3. Keywords and advertisements.  I haven’t published thirty books, or even three, but I do know that nobody will see your book if you can’t even find it.  Before you title your book, do a search and see what comes up. If your title is too very similar to others, you may find yourself a small fish in a big pond.  I have a friend with a book that has so many similar titles that I have to put in both her title and her author name to pull up her book.

Also, while studying those reviews, look at the categories of similar reads posted at the bottom of the page.  How are these books categorized?  This is helpful information to know when selecting your keywords. If you would like more information on keywords and how they aid searches, you may start with this post, http://sknicholls.wordpress.com/2013/10/06/keywords-and-visibility-on-amazon/

And keep clicking through until you have found what you need to know to categorize your book effectively.  Selecting the most suitable genre is only half the battle.

Once you have figured out how to set your book up where it should be, just how do you get others to notice that it is there?  These are the folks who are not in your fan base or the reader audience you have established. These are total strangers in the greatest sense of the word.  How do you get exposure to a greater audience?

Book signings, independent bookstores, brick and mortar magistrates and/or newspapers if you are traditionally published or have already sold 3000 copies and published through contracted sources, online platforms, magazines, book reviewer processes, contests, offer promotions (but not too many), library groups, book clubs, online advertisements, (This link might be helpful: http://sknicholls.wordpress.com/2013/12/12/ad-your-book/), writer conventions, societies, schools, book fairs, as many of these methods as you possibly can…and few are free. Most are labor intensive and can be expensive. Some methods work better for some genres than others. Oh, and write more books!

It’s a Catch 22. The more books you sell, the better your rankings, the better your rankings, the more books you sell.

Reviews can also make or break you.  Some people are going to love what others hate and some people are going to hate what others love. You can have great reviews but few of them or you can have many reviews but they are poor.  When I reviewed book reviews, I looked for common threads/themes, whether there were many or few…both in the good reviews and the not so good. I believe most readers who are seriously looking to purchase will do the same. Pay attention. Take action. One of the glorious things about self-publishing is that you CAN easily correct things that need attention, or at least put some effort into it…or into future writings. At the same time, some of these common threads/themes may just be differences in style preferences, so don’t over react. Balance poor reviews against good reviews, criticism against praise, before you make any dramatic changes.

NEVER, EVER respond to a reviewer on a selling platform, either favorably or unfavorably. On a blog, it would be acceptable to thank a reviewer for their time and consideration, but to engage a reviewer in debate would be unprofessional and totally unacceptable. Many feel to even show a presence is somewhat distasteful. I suppose it would depend on how well you know the reviewer and whether or not you already have a relationship with them. Personally, I would not post a review if I could not give it at least three stars. But that’s just me…somebody is going to give you a one or two star review, and that’s okay. That person gave you their time…or as much as they could of it.

This is my nutshell cracked open. Did I say, “Write More Books!?”   

Writing, publishing and marketing ramblings of a mad woman. It isn’t all encompassing. I am not an authority on anything at all to do with books. These are my observations as a writer, reader, and author of one fiction book that has managed to pay for the cost of publishing it. Now, if it could just pay for the cost of promoting it and hiring a publicist, I could move easier onto the next project.

In the end, books are books. Ha!

Fastidious Paperback Finally Launches

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Nearly seven months since this project began “Red Clay and Roses” is finally available in paperback.  The process was a learning experience. It does feel good to have this accomplished!

 YOU CAN GET YOUR DISCOUNTED COPY ORDERED TODAY!

Buy Right Here: Amazon

Since the eversion was first published in March of this year, I have met up with a whole new world of people, made dear new friends, acquired access to resources, and enhanced both skill and knowledge.

After all of that hard work, the stress, and emotional ups and downs, it was honestly rather un-climactic. I can’t say anticlimactic. The excitement and thrill I was expecting didn’t happen.  I logged onto Amazon today and there it was, a little message that read:

It seems like there should be some sort of ceremony.  I am very happy.  I am overjoyed that it happened before Christmas!  Now I have to get out and distribute books to the twelve independent bookstores that are waiting.

Writing & Publishing: Would You Have Done Anything differently?

Truth is: I did not sit down and say, “I am going to write a novel.” Or, “I am going to sell books.”  I feel being candid about my personal experiences with these processes of writing and publishing is the best way to help other aspiring authors. I deeply admire and respect all of you who have authored books. Yesterday, I made a post about my progress with getting my paperback version accomplished.  That post prompted more questions which I am attempting to answer in this post.

First: What is “Red Clay and Roses” about?

Red Clay and RosesGeorgia, the elbow and the armpit of the Southern U.S.A post-Civil War. Jim Crow Law is enforced keeping the black and white races separate. A century after the Civil War started, nearly two lifetimes later, battles are still being fought in the 1950s and 60s.  Major changes are introduced in the South.  Follow an African American family’s trials and tribulations and an interracial couple’s struggle to face an unaccepting society in this faction novel, “Red Clay and Roses”, by S.K. Nicholls.  An engaging read that explores the harsh realities of living in the South during this era, one that slices right down the middle of serious women’s issues and racial issues that our constantly evolving society continues to encounter today.

You can also read a more detailed book description on my novel page here  or at Amazon.

I don’t want to belittle the work effort that went into this project, it was enormous, or the work effort of other authors, but I want to tell you, honestly how this went for me:

  1.  As I have mentioned in my interviews, I wrote a factional account of events that occurred in other eras, a fictionalized true story. After a year on the shelf, I shared it with many friends who encouraged me to publish. They were teachers, nurses, college professors, family, friends and colleagues.  A couple of these people are even authors.  Retrospectively, to spend the time to creatively develop the writing into a formulaic novel template did not occur to me.
  2. When I made the decision to publish, I was clueless.  I did not have a blog. I had researched some, but honestly, if I knew then what I know now, I would have been too intimidated to put it out there.  I did it. I put it out there.  It won’t be unpublished simply because it is not my best possible work.  It will remain there as example of my earliest writing.  It is a good story.  It is not bad writing, but I know that it is not the best I can do.  The publishing process for the eversion was simple in comparison to the paperback.  If I had it to do over I would have had them published by the same company at the same time.  I think that would have simplified the paperback process.  I would have also passed the MS through the hands of a couple of professional editors BEFORE publishing, not after. Revision and final editing was done recently, rather than before the publication of the eversion in March 2013.
  3. To date, I have sold 110 copies since March 23rd.  Most of those were sold on Amazon and through smashwords the first three months after publication.  I had thought it was selling better on Amazon than smashwords but my data shows me that smashwords and all of the other retail platforms combined (according to my independent publisher) have sold 58 copies, and Amazon 52.  Technically, Amazon is the single best retailer, because smashwords figures are combined with all of the others (B&N, Kobo, Apple, Sony, etc…).  I had no plans to get rich, or even be a best seller, so I am not disappointed. At least 110 people now know the true story that I wanted to tell, and they know of the sacrifices real people made to get us where we are today.  Would I like to sell more? Of course.  I want the story told.
  4. I set out to document a story. I did not set out to make a name for myself as an author.  Seriously, I wanted the story recorded for posterity.  I truly did not intend for it to be entertaining.  People might ask, “If not to be entertaining, then why write?” It was written to encourage others to think about harsh realities of other eras and to reflect on their personal indoctrinations and belief system.  Is it entertaining? The reader would have to decide. I am sure parts of it are. Parts of it will make you think deeply.  It is supposed to. It is an engaging read that explores the harsh realities of living in the South during the 1950-60s, and during the Civil Rights Movement. It will force you to examine your own belief system and come to understand the origin of a hatred we still seek to eradicate. It speaks to women’s reproductive rights and responsibilities.
  5. Specifically, what would I have done differently about the writing process, the technical aspects of putting a novel together?
  • There would have been no separate Introduction or Conclusion chapters. Possibly, there would have been a prologue introducing the ledger and The Good Doctor via Hannah Hamilton and her visits with Ms. Bea.
  • The first two chapters regarding Ms. Bea, and the first two chapters regarding Moses Grier, would not exist in their current form, but parts of their stories would have been incorporated into the remainder of the book.
  • The entire book would have been written in third person omniscient, using fewer dialogs and more show than tell. A craft aspect of writing that I am seriously working on developing.
  • The first chapter would have opened with the action of Althea’s tragedy and the reactions of all involved.

I will publish an authored work again, I am certain, but it may be years down the road.  I will also do things differently with regard to both the writing and publishing processes.

If you are interested in the book, the paperback should be ready within the next two weeks, realistically, and I will post the “gone live” date.  For Read Tuesday, the eversion will be available through Amazon for 99 cents during the week of December 8th-14th.  I would have made it free, but Amazon makes it so difficult, I have learned from experience, to go back up to your original price when you do that.

“Red Clay and Roses”: Paperback Progress

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Got my latest proof in the mail from CreateSpace.

I think the brighter book cover image looks much better.

I am going ahead and accepting this proof and proceeding with the process.  I have been over every word. I am not totally 100% satisfied with it.

  1. There is a place in the book, secondary to a revision, where the pronoun “he” was used, instead of the proper noun “Nathan”.
  2. There is a place where quotation marks were used around an enclosed, handwritten letter erroneously.
  3. The preposition “to” is missing from a sentence.
  4. My chapters were long and I opted to put the chapter titles in the header on the left side.  I know it isn’t customary, but I thought it best, now I am not so sure.

None of the issues are the fault of anyone but me.  I would submit another manuscript and make the changes, but each time I have done that in the past, CreateSpace has screwed up something else, and I don’t want to risk it.  It takes too many days/weeks back and forth to get any changes accomplished.   I do understand now why it takes so long for traditional publishers to get anything accomplished.  It seems the more steps and people involved in the process; the more likely it is to be a lengthier process.

Continued Frustrations in Publishing are an Integral Part of My Life Now

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I would very much like to learn how to format and publish my own manuscripts.  I would take a class on how to do this effectively if I thought I could learn it, because depending on someone else to get things right is a terrible frustration for a writer.

As many of you know, I enlisted the services of CreateSpace to accomplish the design of my paperback.  When I sent my manuscript off to my independent publisher for the eversion, he had it published in three days. The only problem that we encountered was that the TOC did not function.  This, we determined, was due to a translation error.  He works on a Mac and I work on a PC.  We removed the apostrophes from the chapter headings and, voila! The problem was solved.

I have been working with CreateSpace since June 6th on this paperback.  Again, I sent in the manuscript from my PC and it was no different from the MS I had sent to my independent publisher.  I had some final edits and a revision that needed to be accomplished, so I made those and sent them the changes on the service file that they required.

I paid extra to have them help design the paperback. There have been ongoing problems with font, front matter, images, handwritten letter size, paragraph spacing, page headers, chapter headers, page numbering, semi colons added to the TOC and other things I DID NOT ask for….I could continue the list, but I fail to see a point.  Suffice it to say, things have not gone well.

Finally, after four or five rounds of proofs, all of which have taken seven to fourteen days to accomplish, I thought we finally had everything good to go and was looking forward to seeing the (hopefully) final proof.

Yesterday, I received this.  For some reason unknown to mankind (or womankind), CreateSpace personnel decided to use lowercase letters in my TOC.  Why would they do that?

Also, there were four places where there was a gaping space between paragraphs.  Again, why?

I know that these things may sound trivial to you, but they are not understandable to me.  I have had to pay them an additional $135.00 to correct errors which should not have been errors in the first place.  I could have ignored them and said, “Whatever, just publish the damned thing!”, and pressed the approve button.  But why should I?  Why should I expect less than perfect satisfaction on a product purchased.  And when these are corrected , are new problems going to appear again?

You would think that they would want to have the best reputation possible with as much competition as is building in the market.  I truly appreciate that they provide a service for something that I don’t feel I could have accomplished alone.  I would just like for it to be the premium service that I paid for.

I hope my readers know that I am genuinely thinking of them as I go about insisting on a quality product.  I am proud to be an Indie author.  I am proud to be able to be in control of producing a quality product.  CreateSpace, of all people, should understand that.  Don’t they want to make Amazon proud?

Am I just being overly sensitive and expecting too much?

Progress with Createspace

I got another digital proof from CreateSpace yesterday.  I am not totally satisfied with it.

Someone thought it would be cute to put semicolons between the Chapter numbers and the Chapter Headings in the Table of Contents (not something I had asked for and it looks a bit absurd.).

There is also a huge space between the first two paragraphs of the Conclusion Chapter (an issue I thought we had resolved in a previous exchange).

Ebook Jpg (2)The handwritten letter font size was increased so that it is now readable (that is quite an accomplishment considering how many times we have been back and forth about that).

All of the text edits are completed.

Everything else looks great.

They won’t be charging me for the errors that they need to correct and they have pushed me up in queue so that we can get these things corrected before my Birthday on November 15th, so I am looking forward to that as a most lovely gift !

We are finally getting somewhere!logo-csp-no-tm

CreateSpace and Me: New Developments

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This is where I get to suck it up and eat crow.  This is my new paperback proof!  It is finally here!

All hope is not lost after all.  CreateSpace, after my Customer Service call to them, fast-forwarded their process to get my proof to me ASAP.  While they had a slight oversight and failed to note that I had requested four extra proofs be sent, they are sending those overnight delivery today.  They should be here by October 1st.

What’s that you say?  You thought I had an October 1st deadline with the contest?  You are right.  And Charles Yallowitz, I owe you one…you were right too.  There WAS a way to work it out.

I called the prize contest coordinators in NYC, and they tell me to go ahead and send overnight to them, as they have items trickling in all week d/t mail and such, so they are not excruciatingly strict.

I do not expect to win the contest, but at least it is a way to get the book read, perhaps by some who could be influential in promotions.  An honorable mention would be delightful, but it isn’t an expected outcome.  Being able to follow through on my reader’s groups’ expectations of me, and get this book entered at all is the accomplishment.  I am very happy today.

CreateSpace and Me: Bummed

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I am suffering the complete loss or absence of hope.  I have already made a post about my anguish with CreateSpace.  This is another rant but it will be brief.

There was a rather prestigious contest that a reader’s group paid an entry fee for to nominate my book, “Red Clay and Roses”.  My only responsibility was to get four proof copies of the paperback to the contest judges by October 1st, and that won’t be possible.  Today, CreateSpace informed me that my proof copy will be shipped in five days.  Count the days.  Not going to be a possibility to get the proofs and get them FedEx’d to the judges by October 1st.   Needless to say, I am more than sorely disappointed.  I have failed.

I first started with CreateSpace on June 6th.  This process has taken entirely too long.  I wouldn’t be so upset if it had not taken three weeks for CreateSpace to get around to giving my book ANY attention.  I know my revisions were part of the problem, but again, if they did not make their process so very time consuming…well, enough.  I am happy that there is a service that provides POD to self-published authors.  Who’s to say my book would have won the contest anyway?  I am just nettled that my horse broke his leg coming out of the starting gate.

Createspace and Me: An Essay

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I was going to save this topic for a guest post when all was said and done, but I am about to explode and I really must get this off my chest.  My bra is too tight and there is really no room for it. (I hate bras.)

Createspace is a wonderful thing.  They make it possible to do fantastic things like self-publish an ebook and prepare a print-on–demand paperback.  For the Indie author, this is a Godsend.  I know there are a few, like lightning source and lulu that will do the same thing and they are wonderful, too, I am sure, but today I have to talk about my personal experience with Createspace.  This is the company I chose to go with for the creation of my paperback version of “Red Clay and Roses”.

First, I should tell you about my experience publishing my eversion.  Not having any skills for formatting or translations errors or any of that other technical stuff that is supposed to create a better product, I opted to go with an Independent small press publisher, Elderberry Press.

David St. John was quite affordable, and the contract terms were delightful.  David and I developed a very good rapport.  I sent him my manuscript and within 72 hours my first book was up and live on smashwords.  By that third day, I had a file that I could easily upload to Amazon’s KDP.  All done.  Now there was nothing to do but wait for the royalties to come in right? (hahaha…I hear you laughing).

Second, I did not have a professional cover design, and some WordPress friends gave me some really good info, advice and insight on how to proceed with that and I contacted a gentleman in England (Paul Beekly at create-imaginations.com) who also had really good work and really good rates, most professional.  He read my book, viewed my original photograph, and we shared some thoughts.

Within days, I had a fantastic cover image.  He went on to provide a Facebook banner, imprint logo, bookmark design, and several other book shots and a paperback design for extremely reasonable rates. To sum things up, that whole process went very smoothly, and I was quite satisfied.

This cover image, also, was easily uploaded to Amazon via KDP, live within hours, and my publisher uploaded to smashwords and thus it went on out to various retail distributors over time.  In the end, this whole process took less than a month and would have taken less, had I been better prepared.  Being a newbie, but with a little experience, I thought working with Createspace would be a breeze.  Their price for their top of the line assisted service was as reasonable as Elderberry’s had been for the eversion.

NOW FOR THE DIRT

I am about madder than a wet hen at Createspace.

I started with them on June 6th to get this paperback accomplished.  I was told it would take approximately 8 weeks from start to finish.  I thought, “Great, I should have my paperbook live by August 6th, right?  WRONG!  NOT TODAY EVEN, A MONTH LATER!

Let me say, I don’t believe I went into this with unrealistic expectations.  I knew, being a paperback, this was probably going to be a more complex project.  I also knew that I wanted to submit some revisions to a completely well edited manuscript.  After all, this was going down in ink on paper. I also knew that Createspace was a much larger company than Elderberry Press, and I would most likely not get the individualized, one:one service that I had received from David.  Yet, I had heard wonderful things about their customer service, so I thought I was going down a well-traveled pathway to progress.

One thing that worried me was the possibility of delays, because I have had my book nominated for a very prestigious award by a Reader’s Group…but that is a subject for another post.  The point is I had an October 1st deadline with them.  That is to say, I have to submit four bound manuscripts to this organization by Oct. 1st to be considered in the 2013 publication phase.  So I had some concerns.  Yet, August 6th as a deadline with Createspace seemed reasonable, and should give me plenty of time. NOT!

First, after paying the money and not hearing from them about ANYTHING to do with progress after THREE WEEKS, I gave them a call.  The very polite girl in CS (Customer Service) told me that they were “backed up” and had not started with me.  Shit, I thought!  I am sure I said it out loud.  She assured me that they would be starting with me very soon, and once under way, things should move quickly, BUT my eight weeks would not start until they contacted me.  So a week later, we are already talking about July 6th, I was contacted…a full month after my purchase.  Eight weeks, let’s see Sept. 6th, right?  If things had worked out well, my paperback would be live today and my copies would be in the mail to the Reader’s Group Organization.  Things have not worked out well.

Second, I want you to know that I am not blameless here!  I am a perfectionist and I want things done right.  I also want to assure that I am putting a quality product out there for the reader to enjoy.  I don’t want there to be any distraction, errors, or other such nonsense to make the reader feel like crap for having had enough faith to invest in me.  I gave my eversion away for free for two full weeks to get enough reader feedback to hopefully get my revisions accomplished, have a copyeditor review and advise, get my line editing done, and proof the final MS.  So, all of this was taking place between waiting periods with Createspace.

Waiting periods, that brings me to my third challenge.  I thought I had done my research with Createspace.  Their upgraded plan included the special features that I wanted for my book.  I wasn’t told how complicated and time consuming “special features” could be.  I had some handwritten letters in my book that would need different fonts.  I also had a black and white image of my book imprint logo that I wanted in the front matter, so I was being particular.  I don’t mind being candid here.  That’s why I included “Me” in the title to this post.  I had a lot to do with what went wrong, so try to learn something here, okay?

Quickly, let me give you the low down on how my upgraded plan with createspace works/includes: 1) A personalized consultation with a team project specialist, 2) Mock ups phase, up to three mockups are sent to the purchaser to make changes (They don’t do this part anymore, more about that later.), 3) Digital or paper proof available to be mailed, 4) Final manuscript submission, 5) Interior Text approval, 6) Cover image uploaded and approved, 7) Final complimentary author proof mailed for review, 8) Approved and ready to go live.  Sounds simple enough?

Here is a list of what all went wrong, (this is just the Create and Set-Up), what was involved, and how long it took to make repairs:

1.       My initial challenge was learning how to navigate the Createspace site- I had to learn the icons and emblems and what they stood for in my member dashboard.  I learned about my message box, project tool box (where downloadable files are stored), and explored all of the steps in the process; Create, Set-Up, Review, Distribute and Sales & Marketing.  Each of these steps has sub steps.  This took a couple of days.  I don’t claim to be real tech savvy.

2.        Next was the consultation- Now we are starting July 6th- The gentleman assisting me was very professional and assured me that they could accomplish all of my special features.  He took notes and told me that they would be both prudent in selecting fonts and fleuron, and in embedding images.  I was instructed that all I needed to do was upload my Manuscript so they could get started, I would be allowed to upload another manuscript later with any text changes I needed, and the three mock ups would give me the opportunity to assure that things were coming along as I planned for the book.  I would be allowed to make changes in the design lay-out, front matter, fonts, fleuron, and images during the mock up phases.  I was figuring on a couple of days turnaround between mock ups, after all, they told me I was allowed up to three and I was expecting an 8 week process with these included.  Erroneous Assumption.  After submission of the manuscript, it took another week to get the first mock up (we are now looking at August 27th   having this ready).

3.       The Mock up phases, where things went terribly wrong- There is a reason that they are not doing these anymore, and my experience is probably part of why they have decided to omit the mock up phases. First mock up- They had the front matter acceptable but had left out the Book Imprint logo I had uploaded.  They had switched the title header and author headers to the wrong sides.  The page numbers needed to be in the top right corner, not at the bottom.  The handwriting fonts for the letters were a nice choice, but very small, and the same for both characters writing letters.  That simply could not be.  Two characters would not use the same handwriting now, would they? The fleuron that they had selected was way off.  I had asked for something linear and curved, simple.  Just a little something to indicate a change in thought/construct in the middle of a chapter.  What I got was a highly embellished round swirl.  They were small details, but important to me. Another week passed.  I uploaded my request for revisions, and some fleuron images that were acceptable to me, and the logo image, again.  It is now July 11th.Second Mock up– By some fluke of fate, and not a very kind one, my cover artist sent me an image of my logo, an Ark, with a silly looking giraffe in in it.  It was a joke.  It was hilarious and very juvenile.  I thought it quite funny.  I didn’t realize that I had even downloaded it.  Guess which one I uploaded to createspace?  Not the original logo of the Ark that is posted on my website, bit this one:stupid girraffe

This is no children’s book. Not even a respectable giraffe. A huge image of this giraffe logo, not the thumbnail sized plain ark image I had requested. The front matter looked good with the dedication and quote, but something was missing.  There needed to be a nice fleuron between them.  The headers were swapped out, the letters had different handwriting, the page numbers were in the right place, the fleuron they selected for the text was acceptable, but the handwriting font for the letters had been grossly enlarged and looked ridiculously silly.  I resubmitted my changes.  It is now July 31st when I get the second mock up back.  I wasn’t totally satisfied with the handwriting size when they reduced it in this 2nd mock up, feeling like they may have gone too small, but I didn’t want to wait another two weeks for them to correct it.  I couldn’t handle a 3rd mock up!

4.       I accepted the material as it was and awaited my first proof copy to be mailed. – And waited, and waited, and waited.  After two weeks with no copy received in my mailbox I gave them a call, on August 14th.  They were just fixing to mail out my copy!  I begged them to let me change it to a digital copy.  I had so wanted to hold a paper copy in hand, because I am, after all, creating a paperback, right?  But no, we must submit ourselves to the travesty of time.  A few days later, I get my digital copy. It is August 19thwhen the digital copy is received.  Imagine what it would have been to wait on a mailed paper copy!

5.       After having so much time to prepare my manuscript, I thought, “Great!  This thing is as close to perfect as it is going to get!  Time to upload it! – Well, herein lies the problem.  Although I had made changes on two manuscripts, my RCAR file for KDP, and my manuscript.docx file that I had originally submitted to Createspace….sound easy enough? ….after weeks of editing 2 copies side by side, I am told that my text changes have to be submitted on the downloadable manuscript file that is in the project tool box on the web site, NOT on the original manuscript.  The formatting won’t be right (or something technical like that, I still don’t understand). The changes have to be made on THEIR service file MS copy. Silly me, I didn’t even know I had a manuscript file from Createspace in my project toolbox!  Yet another week to sit these two files down side by side and line edit precisely between the two. August 26th is upon us when I resubmit my final manuscript.

6.       I am waiting for final text approval, and have yet to upload my cover image (which I need an exact page count for) and I did get some good news yesterday.  They can send me five proof copies when they send my author proof copy in the mail for final review, so I can send those in for my contest (it doesn’t have to be published yet, but must be provided in bound manuscript).  God hope all goes well and it is acceptable to me.  Then I can hit the approved button, and go live!

August 6th was my original date planned go live. It is now September 6th, the day that my book was tentatively rescheduled to go live.  I am impatiently awaiting final approval of my text changes, my cover uploaded and approved, and the final proof copies to be mailed to me.  I am hoping this can all be accomplished at least a few days before my October 1st deadline so that I have time to mail in my four copies for my nomination.  I think Fedex still does an overnight delivery.  I know that I am pushing the wire and I am sitting on the edge of my seat biting my nails.

My advice to anyone using Createspace, especially if you have special features:

  • Expect it to take longer than expected.
  • Be very clear in your initial phone consultation.
  • As they no longer do Mock Ups, make absolutely certain that you have your manuscript one hundred percent ready to go with the first submission, including any fonts or fleuron that you can upload images for or provide samples.  Try to not have any need to make changes.
  • Trash any old MSs or images that you don’t want to accidently upload.
  • If you think there may be a demand for a paperback, do your ebook and paperback at the same time through the same company.  I wasn’t expecting to do a paperback.
  • Thank God that they don’t do time consuming mock ups anymore, but be 100% certain that you are prepared on the first run.

I will get to “Review, Distribute and Sales & Marketing,” in due time.  I hope your experience runs smoother than mine and your book gets published without a hitch.  Good Luck!!!