PDA

View Full Version : Self Publishing


Auld Fella
01-07-2008, 08:06
I came across the article below in our local newspaper and thought of you aspiring authors. It basically tells about how new technology/companies make it economically do-able to self-publish even a small number of copies of something you write. I would just provide the link but newspapers archive stuff so quickly it would be dead in no time, so I just cut and pasted.

Hope this is of some interest to someone!

Auld Fella

Everyone's an author
On-demand publishers have tapped into a huge market of writers who want their works in print
BY CANDICE CHOI
Associated Press
Article Last Updated: 01/06/2008 08:11:20 PM CST


Getting a book published isn't the rarefied literary feat it once was.
New printing technologies are making published authors of legions of aspiring writers, a population that once toiled for years on tomes that might not see the light of day.

The vast majority of today's instant authors may sell only a few dozen copies of their books, but on-demand publishing is letting thousands realize the ambitions of generations of would-be writers.

On-demand publisher Lulu.com (http://lulu.com/) has churned out 236,000 paperbacks since it opened in 2002, and its volume of new paperbacks has risen each month this year, hitting 14,745 in November. Retail giant Amazon.com (http://amazon.com/) got into the game this summer, offering on-demand publishing through its CreateSpace, which was already letting filmmakers and musicians burn DVDs and CDs.

The programs are easy for just about anyone to use: Authors select basic options, including the book's size, binding style and paperback or hardcover. After the manuscript is uploaded, users go to a page where they select a font and design the book's cover. Even after a book has been printed they can fix typos for later printings.

Unlike vanity publishing, in which aspiring authors pay to have their books run on traditional presses, on-demand publishing doesn't have to cost writers a cent.

Publishers produce books only after they're ordered and paid for, which eliminates overruns and the need for warehousing. They charge for printing, or take a cut of sales, and they set up payment systems, online bookstores and Web marketing tools. Some authors publish on-demand books in hopes of catching the eye of a major publisher. But not all writers who use on-demand publishers aspire to write the great American novel.

The system also allows small businesses to print high-end brochures, screenwriters to shop their scripts around and others to assemble wedding and other special-event books for friends and family.

"I'm just amazed I have the book in my hand," said Catherine Dyer, a 49-year-old Atlanta resident who co-authored a cookbook with her four sisters through Lulu.com (http://lulu.com/). "I knew trying to get a traditional publisher would take ages. With this, I knew at the onset I could have a book in my hand."
"You Want Me To Bring a Dish?" - the sisters' 104-page cookbook - sells for $22.76. They've ordered about 100 copies to stock stores around Atlanta and are promoting the book through local signings and radio appearances.
Dyer's already brainstorming ideas for a spinoff.

"Cause I know I can get it published," she said.

The challenge for authors now is getting the word out about their work.
"It's all about the marketing and distribution. We realized early on that that was the bigger challenge," said Eileen Gittins, founder and CEO of Blurb.com (http://blurb.com/)., an on-demand publisher with 11,000 available self-published titles.

To help authors, Blurb automatically creates widgets that can be dragged and dropped onto other Web sites.

What makes self-publishing viable is the Internet, which gives writers instant access to audiences that share their same interests, no matter how obscure. Authors also use online communities such as blogs, MySpace.com (http://myspace.com/). and others to market their works.

"It used to be, if you created a book about an obscure topic, your audience was limited. Now maybe you're part of an online gardening community, and you already have an audience of 5,000 who care deeply about roses," Gittins said.

For most aspiring authors, a book deal with a major publishing house remains the ultimate dream, however.

Big companies like Random House Inc. or HarperCollins Publishers can promote authors on a national scale and get titles in major bookstores. Professional editors also polish copy in the traditional publishing world, a step that can transform a manuscript into a best-seller or perhaps a masterpiece.

Users of Amazon.com (http://amazon.com/).'s CreateSpace are listed the same way as literary giants online. Keyword searches will pull up self-published books along with those of Grisham, Shakespeare, Hemingway or Rowling.

The writers are willing to live with drawbacks that would drive a purist crazy. Printing quality can vary, with images possibly emerging denser or brighter in some copies. Some in the industry say the quality of on-demand publishing has improved greatly and few would be able to distinguish the difference from those printed on traditional presses. And on-demand books are priced according to their length, making them pricier than books printed en masse.

But Gittins said shoppers are willing to pay a little more for a book tailored to a specific audience.

"It's really an opportunity for people to get their creative content out there to millions of people," said Stacey Hurwitz, spokeswoman for CreateSpace.

Da-Chief
01-09-2008, 12:50
to add on this post..
If your a author and a member of Corpsman.com we will soon be having a literary area and would love to host your book on our site as book of the month etc. We will help you get the word out.

puckmedic
01-17-2008, 06:13
I have just completed the first few pages of a book about the Patriot Guard Riders.

DeeDee
01-18-2008, 19:35
awesome puck - if you need a proofreader let me know :)

dvldocjoe
03-12-2008, 16:36
I currently have about one hundred thirty pages of Rescue Two typed of roughly one ninety if anyone is interested. First book of two written to start a series.

Da-Chief
03-17-2008, 08:50
Hey,
Congrats on your book, if you want a proof reader let me know..
later
D/C

dvldocjoe
03-20-2008, 01:16
Thanks for the offer Da-Chief.

I am working full time while doing the retyping around work hours. I think it might take me about another three months to finish and can provide the copy when I have finshed. I wrote it from Jan 2001 to November 2001 so the medical info needs to be updated. It is based on my runs with OWLVFD in Occoquan, VA. so its real material just changed to protect patient information.

Hope all is well in the midwest while we enjoy sunny southern California.

DeeDee
03-22-2008, 15:45
Hope all is well in the midwest while we enjoy sunny southern California.
Thanks for rubbing our noses in the fact that we are once again up to our proverbial arses in snow. :D

I love that people around here have the talent to write stuff like this - i am crafty, in that i can make things, but not talented enough to put words on paper that others would be interested in reading

dvldocjoe
03-27-2008, 21:37
I saw that an EMT by the name of Pat Ivey from Lake of the Woods, VA (Beyond the Lights and Sirens?) did it so I decicded to try. There is a few books like this (Rescue 471?) but none really were what I wanted to read. I was looking for a series, not just nonfiction or strictly fiction. I have three written copies and added to it every time after I learned more information with the medical changes. I work full time so I can get twelve pages written in two days and then go a month without touching it. Its really irritating not to be able to just sit down daily to do it.

8404
03-28-2008, 05:17
Its really irritating not to be able to just sit down daily to do it.

Don't you just hate it when work gets in the way of life! lol

dvldocjoe
03-29-2008, 04:44
Motivation is an issue. Some days I want to sit and plug away and can't while others I don't want to touch the keyboard but finish several pages while varying work shifts don't help. I can work from six in the morning to six at night and be on from six pm to three am the next day. My access and noise level at home has a lot to do with it since the wife works as a journalist from home.

dvldocjoe
04-13-2008, 14:28
I thought I would post an update: work has stopped on typing Rescue Two while I am reading on a book recommended by a friend on one of the topics to gain much needed information; in other words, research. Hope all is well.