Based on more than a decade’s experience in pioneering e-books and non-traditional methods of publishing non-genre novels, I am embarking on a costly experiment to determine whether it is possible for an author of such works to take control of his own career, increase his readership and beat the odds in an increasingly confusing and destructive traditional publishing environment.
My latest novel The Serpent’s Bite will be published in September by my company Stonehouse Press. It will hopefully establish a new paradigm for an author of numerous novels to continue on a career path in an environment that does not favor an author of non-genre novels.
I define non-genre as mainstream novels, strong on both character and plot that tell stories that offer insightful revelations into the human condition that cannot be slotted into the traditional genre and sub-genre categories such as mysteries, fantasy, thrillers, romance, zombies, vampires, young adult, children’s books and on and on.
My hope is that following my experiment will be instructive to the vast numbers of non-genre novelists who believe their work is worthy of readership by discriminating serious readers, and who are either unknown or, like me, modestly branded but still determined to keep on writing and finding readers.
My objective is to inform, instruct and lay out what I will be doing over the course of a number of blog posts and to keep interested readers up-to-date on my progress and the various strategies to be employed. Essentially this is an experiment in marketing and although it might seem blatantly self-promotional, that is not the final objective of this instruction.
Whether or not my experiment works, to break out of the box will be largely dependent on the size of my investment and the choice of companies I have made to administer this experiment. I have incidentally experimented in other ways, having released five of my books simultaneously with Amazon exclusive, about which I have learned the hazards of multiple releasing.
For this marketing experiment and after careful research, I have hired Greenleaf Book Group for distribution, Media Connect for Public Relations and Verso for advertising. I will keep all those interested in how this is working out in future posts. As a further inducement we will be offering limited free downloads periodically of my earlier works in advance of publication and during the launch phase beginning with The Children of the Roses (Free Download), the sequel to The War of the Roses. Keeping my back list viable will be an essential part of my promotion.
Beyond that will be the subject matter, style and interest in the novel, which is completely unpredictable and in the end, will decide its sales fate. In my case, I write only what interests me with little thought to its marketability until the book is finished and awaits public exposure.
Everything will be transparent and designed to instruct those who will hopefully profit by my experience or discover its flaws. There is no way to assess whether or not it will succeed or fail.
Below is the present reality that is the fate of the self-published non-genre novelist.
There are thousands of books being published every day, both by traditional publishers large and small and a growing band of intrepid self-publishers. The fiction category is dominated by genre novels.
Among the most successful are “factory†books, published under the name of branded authors who “supervise†and no longer write their books like Patterson, Cussler and many others, some acknowledged, many not. Yes, your favorite author may be a gaggle of ghosts.
The young adult category influenced by the astonishing success of the Harry Potter books and romance fiction aimed at women is currently in vogue for publishers, both traditional and self-published. Vampire and fantasy books are particularly strong.
In the non-fiction category, note the number of best-selling “authors†who flack their largely ghost written or committee written books daily on their own television programs.
Such books by authors branded by other industries, particularly entertainment, politics, finance, news and discussion TV personalities, are now the primary sweet spot for commercially minded publishers. This is why you see so many books by television personalities like O’Reilly and novels by Gingrich, et al, many of them out of context with their day jobs. That kind of “free†promotion is eagerly sought by publishers.
Books by celebrities, mostly ghost written, in categories like children’s books, memoirs and biographies are also the fare of choice by many publishers for their brand recognition sales potential.
The fact is that traditional publishers are reluctant to invest in promoting non-genre novels, especially by non-branded novelists, although they are attempting to brand a very limited number of first time authors hoping for a breakout. Many are quickly abandoned if their books don’t sell.
Even well-known novelists are falling off the sales cliff because of the revving up of technology, the reading tablet distraction factor, the shortening readership concentration spectrum and the swiftly widening generation gap. Warhol’s fifteen minutes of fame has been reduced to fifteen seconds.
Add to this the reality that big box bookstores are imploding at a fairly rapid rate, with Borders gone and Barnes and Noble struggling and shifting to their Nook device and beginning to sell products other than books in their stores. Amazon, relentless and creative with its own publishing company, is eating the traditional publisher’s lunch.
Beyond all this gloom and doom meandering is my belief that there is still enough of a robust market out there for emersion reading, for books self-written by serious novelists who wish to engage with serious readers, who look for compelling stories that provide insight into the human condition, excite the psyche and offer a parallel world for people in search of meaning to explore and enjoy.
Serious novelists who self-define themselves in such a category are, of course, opening themselves up to discourse by peers, critics, and academics who believe themselves to be the expert arbiters of such interpretations. But then, that has always been the case. Such folks, who consider themselves keepers of the canon have strong and influential opinions and may look askance at the self-published and ignore their work.
So what is a serious novelist to do to gain readers in the hurly burly unpredictability of this revolutionary phase of modern publishing?
For those who are determined to stay or enter the non genre fiction arena and have exhausted the shrinking traditional publisher route, the only course of action is self-publishing. A giant industry has arisen to guide self-published novelists through the technical shoals to launch their work into cyberspace. This will give the novelist the possibility of discoverability in the huge open landscape of cyberspace.
Finding readers for even the genre self-published novelist is a tough slog. For the non-genre self-published novelist it is like scaling a sheer cliff without climbing equipment. Indeed, the list of free e-books is the fastest growing category of books, offered by writers trying to get a foothold into the reading public.
There is a huge cottage industry promising miraculous sales but in the end, those who have aspirations of self- supported economic independence will most likely be faced with financial disappointment.
Self-published authors will, of course, receive great psychic rewards e.g. the ability to be recognized by peers as an authentic novelist, join groups of common interest with other writers on the vast number of websites where writers with similar yearnings can share conversation and experience, widen one’s circle of readers through book signings, book club discussions, attract local media, and, if really really lucky, generate a following of loyal fans that will provide recognition, favorable feedback, some reviews and personal satisfaction. Not too shabby for hours spent in isolation pursuing one’s artistic bliss.
This is the reality for the self-published writer. My goal will be to help others transcend this outcome, increase their chances of greater visibility and sales and refine ways in which the present and future non-genre novelists will be able to increase their odds of success. In the end, of course, content rules and whether or not, once discovered, the novel connects with the reader will always be the wild card that will determine an author’s success.
Stay tuned.
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Comments: 23
I just downloaded Children of the Roses! I seem to remember similar dolls in the movie. I downloaded it on my Kindle for PC!!!
honestly~ I've gravitated toward ebook more and more since daughter gifted it to me over the holidays~ I find within its electronic byways and highways an absolute treasure trove of self published eauthors~ some are mind blowing gems who wouldn't have been published elsewise~ for example, Ryan Forsythe's fantastic NONGENRE and non classifiable meta novel (shades of Kurt Vonnegut) Dick Cheney Saves Paris~ I have tossed my financial cannibal of a publisher and am going Kindle and Nook for book 8~
thank you for a wonderful, insightful and intelligent article~
Thanks for sharing in the Triple Name Club.
It is becoming a much more interesting venue!
It is important to offer Nook, since we never want to let Amazon become the sole provider. It is also important to offer other formats. ePub Digital Editions from Adobe is nice and is in third place. I have about 50 titles on that format. I just switched to Kindle for PC two weeks ago and have 20 on it, so far.
What I like about Kindle for PC (free Amazon app and also Kindle for Mac) is that I can:
change font and # wds per line; can have full screen or regular screen; can choose sepia or black background; I use white on black; seems to reduce the eyestrain from white background. can adjust brightness. Can bookmark and note locatuon for citations. oxford american dictionary. Kindle owners can loan their Kindle books to people. Kindle owners get more free Kindle downloads b/c they are Amazon Prime, Amazon offers free and 99 cent days with Kindle books, which has been proven to vastly increase sales.
I can browse each chapter via links. I like to have a guide on the left. I bookmark frequently and refer to the bookmarks.
http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2009/10/kindle-numbers-traditional-publishing.html
And here is another bunch of numbers that are cool and which also speak to e-tailing:
http://www.publishers.org/press/62/
http://www.publishers.org/press/62/
Excerpt from page:
''Adult books
Hardcover: $69.8M in January 2012; $57.4M in January 2011; +21.6% increase
Trade Paperbacks: $105.1M in Jan 2012; $99.1M in Jan 2011; +6.1% increase
Mass Market Paperbacks: $30.4M in Jan 2012; $39.3M in Jan 2011; -22.5% decrease
eBooks: $99.5M in Jan 2012; $66.6M in Jan 2011; +49.4% increase
Downloaded Audiobooks $8.4M in Jan 2012; $6.5M in Jan 2011; +29.4% increase
Children’s/Young Adult
Hardcover: $57.4M in Jan 2012; $34.0M in Jan 2011; +68.9% increase
Paperbacks: $38.0M in Jan 2012; $23.5M in Jan 2011; +61.9% increase
eBooks: (new AAP category) $22.6M in Jan 2012; $3.9M in Jan 2011; +475.1% increase
Religious (new AAP categories)
Hardcover: $39.6M in Jan 2012; $38.4M in Jan 2011; +2.9% increase
Paperbacks: $5.3M in Jan 2012; $5.9M in Jan 2011; -10.3% decrease
eBooks: $6.7M in Jan 2012; $2.7M in Jan 2011; +150.7M increase
Total Trade
Total Overall: $503.5M in Jan 2012; $396.0M in Jan 2011; +27.1% increase
Total Adult Trade: $323.0M in Jan 2012; $277.4M in Jan 2011; +16.4% increase
Total Children/YA: $128.2M in Jan 2012; $71.0M in Jan 2011; +80.5% increase
Total Religious: $52.4M in Jan 2012; $47.7M in Jan 2011; +9.9%
''
So you can see that a large percentage of the increase in total number of books sold is in the e-category, with children/ya books increasing in sales by nearly 500 percent and adult e sales increasing by nearly 50 percent in dollar volume.
precisely!~ with my Nook Tablet I can read customer reviews at a touch~ I can explore hook in genres through a single book and open a vast world of possibly exceptional reads~ it was through Nook that I read and absolutely fell in love with The Hunger Games Series after reading a couple dozen reviews by readers which I prefer to "professional" reviewers~
user reviews are much more helpful. they were not paid. they read/saw the thing out of their own free will.
Thousands of Books that Won't Cost You a Cent
Note:
Please tell your friends! Anyone can get a free download this week only by clicking here: http://www.warrenadler.com/giveaway?Code=G0424
PC
http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=1000426311&tag=googhydr-20&hvadid=7442400567&ref=pd_sl_6g97entshf_b
MAC
http://www.amazon.com/gp/kindle/mac/download
These are free apps from Amazon to read Kindle books on your computer. You can: change from black on white to white on sepia or white on bloack. I like blackbackground; adjust brightness; font size, words per line. Oxford American Dictionary. Bookmarks. Full screen, regular or split screen. You can go from chapter to chapter by links so you can browse the beginning of each chapter.
Kindle for PC also comes with Pride and Prejudce, Aesops Fables and Robinson Crusoe, free public domain books.
There are a lot of free and low-priced Kindle books. You'll be adding to your library in no time.