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Science Fiction & Fantasy author

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Survey Results: What did you think when you sent your first book off for epublication?

September 25, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Fly away and propagate.

I was curious what other first-time authors thought when they sent off a book for publication.  Mine was about the grammar errors I might have overlooked.  I am an English teacher: what else would cross my mind? So I asked via GoodReads, Twitter and Google+.  These are the results.

  • Marcy Peska, Hashtags and Head Buckets:  “Ooops!”  It
    was when I published Head Buckets & Hashtags, and I accidentally
    pushed the publish button before I’d finished formatting photos. 😉
  • Kevis Hendrickson, The Legend of Witch Bane: I published my first ebook when the Kindle still had fresh paint on it.
    My thoughts at the time were more along the lines of Megatron’s famous
    words: “Their defenses are broken. Let the slaughter begin.”
  • Rinelle Grey, Reckless Rescue:  With the ebook, it was “Well, that doesn’t feel any different”, but the
    print book, which I only hit publish on yesterday, it was “What if I
    missed something?” 
  • Micah R. Sisk, PleshaCore:  But if I were to describe the moment after pushing the button as a
    sound, it sounded like nanometer-sized needle dropping into a
    galactic-sized haystack.
  • Adam Osterkamp, book in process, Minnesota Writer blog:  Having just ordered the “proof” copy for my print version, my first thought was along these lines. “What if it prints terribly?”
  • Jason Letts, Powerless: The Synthesis:  
    It was unbelievably exciting. A lot of times I was checking my
    sales at work, and I was so much more concerned with the dollar or two I
    was making a day from the story and gaining potential fans than
    everything I had to do at my job. 
  • Debra McKnight, Of Dreams and Shadow:  Mine ran along the lines of, “Oh no, I forgot to fix the type-o on page three.”
  • Jennifer Priester, Mortal Realm Witch: Learning about Magic: Sadly my first thought was more money related. I was thinking something
    like this: When will the books be available for purchase online and how
    long until my copies arrive so that I can start selling them? And my second one, although you aren’t asking for it, I just find it
    interesting, was about whether or not they would sell and if people
    would like it as much as I do or not.
  • Philip G. Henley,  To the Survivors: My KDP book launch felt unreal and disconnected, although I enjoyed
    seeing the free downloads happen along with the first reviews. Print
    was a different surreal experience. There was my name on a physical
    book. What followed was even more odd, giving the copies to friends and
    family and then being asked to sign them. All very odd, embarrassing
    even.

 I wish more people had responded.  I enjoyed finding others who remembered that moment of final decision.  It is one of those firsts that will stay with us whether we felt fulfilled, let down, frantic with worry or ready to battle bears. 

Now the second time I sent off a book into the eather of e-publication, I wondered why I felt no elation, no panic, no heart thrusting wildly against my ribs.  I wasn’t blase, but I hadn’t been rocked by an overwhelming run of sales on book 1, so I had less uncertainty about what would happen next: Only I would celebrate by dancing in the kitchen, making my daughter blush and my husband shake his head.  Since I now have four books published and my fifth in R&D&R (research and development and redraft), I do feel rather moved peering at the list when I check on Amazon and Smashwords for updates. I think come this July 2014, I may discover a few thrills running up my spine to see book 3 of the Students of Jump hitting the road.

Anyone want to add to the list of first reactions at the cry of “Engage” catapulting off their coddled canary? Post a comment, and I’ll update the list above (this week) and enjoy hearing from you.

Filed Under: Writing Meditations Tagged With: authors, ebooks, epublication, Publication, publishing, survey results, Writing

I found a hole in my publishing activities

August 3, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

I knew Smashwords covered all the main bases in distributing to e-book sellers, but I overlooked the Amazon portion of that distribution net.  Apparently, my books were not available at Amazon.

Three years ago when I was looking into e-book publishing, I checked out Barnes & Noble and Amazon.  Through my research I kept seeing posts about Smashwords, so I finally followed their trail and did more research.  I created accounts at all three as I worked out my decision for which one I wanted to use.  Two accounts remained dormant as I made my final decision and published with Smashwords.  I still feel I made the right decision.

But recently, finding that hole forced me to do some more thinking about this.  Smashwords offers the option of closing out a distribution route, so I closed Smashwords distribution to Amazon since I did not meet the eligibility requirements to get on the list and went direct to Amazon and published all four of my books this past week.  Hole closed.

Moral of story: (is not women are entitled to change their  minds) Stay aware of the process you are working and adjust as needed.  I am still with Smashwords, but I am with Amazon, too.

Students of Jump, Book 1:  In Times Passed
Smashwords http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/77866
Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00E6HEQ1C


Students of Jump, Book 2:  No-Time like the Present
Smashwords https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/338367
Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00E6XLFF6

Gardens in the Cracks & Other Stories
Smashwords https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/177065
Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00E6VKC0W


The Little Handbook of Narrative Frameworks
Smashwords https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/331101
Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00E7G44NM

I dare you to find me.

Since I own a Sony ereader, I largely go to Sony for my e-books.  Sony also has my books through Smashwords.  Where do you look the most for ebooks, and where do you buy them from (could be different places)? 

Filed Under: My Publishing Worlds, Writing Meditations Tagged With: amazon.com, E-books, formatting for publication, Publication, publishing, Smashwords, time travel

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