With my first publication, it was a small, specialised and generally friendly market: one where even reviewers who slate your work are likely to run into you at the next convention and give some decent feedback, and you spend you time chatting to competitors about joint ventures, successes and ways to promote the entire market. Out in the open market things are less friendly and more competitive. My book is going to be one of thousands published this year, and that means I need to promote it.
As the sort of person who, if I got a chance to shout my name from the rooftops would rather whisper it while hiding behind the chimney, I find self-promotion challenging. It is very difficult to fight the urge to let the book be released, do very little promotion and just say that if it is good, it will sell.
This is how you guarantee a flop. To be honest I suspect that is partly why it is tempting: if anything goes wrong, if my research has failed me, if there is a huge clanger in the plot, if the book is actually horribly written, not many people will see it. Unfortunately it is also how you can guarantee you won't get another book published.
To counter this I keep telling myself that the book deserves better than me hiding under a blanket and pretending it didn't get published. The publisher has sunk significant funds and time into it, in the belief it is a good book and they are counting on it to sell. People don't buy books they've never heard of, and with the book publisher being Canadian that gives me another obstacle to overcome - people in Britain can't order a book they've never heard of.
So I'm compromising: hiding behind my PC screen for the illusion of privacy and meanwhile setting up as much of a web presence as I can and telling everyone I've ever met on any forum that I've written a book. Doing all these wonderful things they keep talking about: book trailers and banners and buttons and blurbs. I can only hope that will be enough.
And here's my gratuitious ad for today: http://www.squidoo.com/Firestorm.
It's my book. It's hopefully great. Please buy it when it comes out.
(Doesn't that sound like a confident, driven, self-promoting author? No? Oh well...)
Showing posts with label novel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label novel. Show all posts
Monday, 14 June 2010
Saturday, 14 November 2009
New lens and NaNoWriMo
It's been a busy writing day for me. On NaNoWriMo I've broken 11,000 words and am hopefully on course. I need to get a few more notes written, but the story is coming together. There's now a two line summary and excerpt also up.
I also have a new lens up. The Surrey Iron Railway was a horse drawn railway established in 1801. Although it was in use for only forty years, it was the first public railway in the world.
Surrey Iron Railway
http://www.squidoo.com/surrey-iron-railway
I also have a new lens up. The Surrey Iron Railway was a horse drawn railway established in 1801. Although it was in use for only forty years, it was the first public railway in the world.
Surrey Iron Railway
http://www.squidoo.com/surrey-iron-railway
Thursday, 13 August 2009
Another lens
Okami Sticker by Akuosa
More Okami Stickers
http://www.squidoo.com/okami-game
Okami
About one of my favourite PS2 games, Okami by Capcom. It's been on the backburner for a while, so I thought I'd better finish it.
I was pleasantly surprised to find that another fan has done a range of excellent fan artwork on Zazzle, including a baby, growing and adult version of Ammy. An example of their designs for a range of merchandise is on the left.
What's been taking most of my time at the moment is a manuscript. With my second novel almost finished, most of the words I write are going towards that at present, so apologies if the updates slow down.
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