Legitimate or Illegitimate?

Last night, after trying to balance the checkbook and finding it $52.13 off in an undiscoverable place, I went back to working on my income taxes. Most everything is calculated, with the help of spreadsheets, and I’m at the point of filling out forms. My writing business Schedule C is done, ready to print. On our stock trading business partnership return I had only depreciation to calc then I was ready to fill out the forms.

Last night I did the depreciation—really easy. I filled out most of the form 1065 (for partnerships), but came to a place in the form I’ve skipped over before, but which I decided this year I’d better read the instructions and see if I’m supposed to be filling it out. It has to do with capitalization and balance sheet sorts of things. Since this is just a partnership between me and the wife, I’ve never worried about that. I didn’t feel like reading the instructions last night, so decided to pull off of it, and hopefully do it tonight.

Looking for something to do, I started looking at my Yahoo inbox, and discovered I’d never listened to a webinar I signed up for. It was a free webinar back in January, an interview of Jerry B. Jenkins by Terry Whalin. I found that the links were still good, and since I signed up for it I had access. In less than a minute I had the speakers cranked up and was listening.

Most people know that Jerry Jenkins was author, along with Tim Lahaye, of the Left Behind series. Those books sold over 60 million copies (I think 14 books in the series). Jenkins has written many other books, and claims over 175 to his credit.

Part of the reason for the seminar, and its being free, was to promote Jenkins’ The Christian Writer’s Market Guide for 2012, which he took over from Sally Stuart. I’ve had a copy of this in the past, and it is an excellent resource. I’m not buying it anymore since I’m not submitting books to publishers or agents, and I’m not actively seeking freelance assignments in the Christian market, but anyone who is doing those things in an active way should probably buy a copy of the book.

About 25 percent of the 70 minutes was essentially ads for the book, though they weren’t distasteful. The rest of the time was responding to questions that readers had sent in. Whalin read the questions and Jenkins gave answers from his vast knowledge of writing and publishing. I’m not sure I learned anything new, but it was interesting to listen.

One problem was how Jenkins described the self-publishing business, or rather how he described the “traditional” publishing business, and the implication for what that meant for self-publishing. He encouraged writers to not rush to self-publish, but try long and hard to be published with “a legitimate publisher”.

The writing world has been in a bit of a struggle of what to call publishers who publish most of the books in this country, the kind that you have to submit to and hope they select your work. Some call them “royalty paying” publishers. But that doesn’t really work, because even self-publishing companies pay royalties. Some call them “traditional” publishers. But that doesn’t really work, because what is “traditional” now wasn’t many years ago. In the days of Wordsworth, Burns, Lamb, Irving, and even up to Mark Twain, most writers were self-publishers, paying for the publication through pre-sales as subscriptions. So what is traditional? It changes all the time.

Some have settled on the term “legacy” publishers, I suppose thinking that these companies help a writer to build a legacy. I don’t care for that much, but I suppose it’s not too bad. You could call them “advance-paying” publishers. But advances are starting to go away, so that might not work. You can’t call them “commercial” publishers, because self-publishing companies are also commercial publishers. So, the writing world has a terminology dilemma.

Jenkins called them “legitimate” publishers. Since he said that while trying to steer writers away from self-publishing, that means he must thing self-publishing is “illegitimate” publishing. That stuck in my craw. Jenkins is essentially saying that self-publishing is illegitimate. Maybe that’s not what he means, but that’s what he said.

I don’t view self-publishing as being illegitimate. Sure, for a long time I resisted self-publishing, but I think that was as much a cost thing as it was a stigma thing. Since so many self-published books are poorly written, un-edited, poorly designed, and badly assembled (in the print versions), many people shun self-published books. And rightly so. I’ve read some self-published books that were awful. The story-telling was good, but the writing craft lacked, and the printing quality was certainly sub-par. But I’ve read books published by “legitimate” publishers that had too many typos and had less than stellar story-telling.

I’m not sure where I’m going with this post, other than to tell what happened. Despite this unfortunate use of terms, Jenkins is obviously a successful writer, and to be that you have to be a good writer. Maybe with time he will come to see that self-publishing is not illegitimate. At the Between the Lines blog last week, when the self-publishing vs. whateveryouwantocallit publishing debate came up, one commenter said,

After sending a hundred queries and waiting for months to get back rejections of our work, self-publishing seems the last hope. We do it, not because our work was rejected, but because it was never looked at. A huge wall appears that says, “Keep Out! We have too many queries already!”

Self-publishing is a salvage mission for the disheartened looking for some tiny oasis of hope. Unfortunately, the oasis is most often a mud puddle on a drying sidewalk.

Unfortunately, to some extent I concur with those sentiments. Meanwhile, I’m going to try to think of a name for that other publishing path.

Time to Back Off

Yesterday I had great plans for my evening. I was hoping to add between 1,000 and 1,500 words to In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People, as well as write several blog posts and do a little research reading.

However, yesterday was not the best day for work. I had a couple of hits against my ego and professional practices. They festered all day long, and even almost continuous rain couldn’t pull me out of my developing funk. After work I ate supper with my mother-in-law, got home by 7:00 PM and was in The Dungeon ready to work before 7:30 PM.

But I just didn’t feel like writing. Not anything. Not in the book, not blog posts. Nor did I feel like reading for research. I played a string of mindless computer games, read a few writing related blogs (and made a post on one), but got little done.

At some point I began working on TCSG, re-reading some recent additions, completing previously uncompleted thoughts, adding a little here, deleting some there, improving the wording in a few other spots. Eventually I began adding some new material to one chapter that was barely started. Throughout all this, I’d write for two minutes, read a blog for five, and play games for fifteen, then cycle back.

By the end of the evening I had just short of 600 words added. I was surprised at the amount. The total stands somewhere around 22,800 (I think; hard to remember after a sound sleep). The chapter I’m working on needs another thousand to be complete, but I’m not sure exactly what the direction I’m taking it in.

By the time this morning came around I came to a decision: I’ll back off writing for a little while and concentrate on other things, such as income taxes, filing, clean-up piles of stuff, etc. Perhaps by then I’ll have worked through some things, and will be better able to focus on the writing stuff. I’ll keep making blog posts, here and at An Arrow Through the Air. I might even work a little on editing In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People. But TCSG is shelved for the moment.

Miscellaneous Monday Musings – On Tuesday

I had great intentions to blog yesterday. I did so over at An Arrow Through the Air, but didn’t get back here. We had quite the storm yesterday and last night, and actually it’s not over. Radar shows another storm wave is about to come over us, probably more potent than the last couple.

I’m batching it again, Lynda having gone to OKC to help Richard and Sara with grandkids and other things. It’s a busy time for a young pastor and his wife, and it’s good to be close enough that Lynda can go up there from time to time and help out.

So in my temporary bachelorhood, I should make good progress on a number of fronts. I should get the income taxes done—except I haven’t even touched them the last few days. I should get caught up on the family budget—except that has gone the way of the income taxes. I should maybe clean somewhat in the house, and use this opportunity to throw out some things that Lynda’s saving, but which she will never actually miss—I’ve ignored all that.

What I have done over the last two days is write. I added over 4,000 words to The Candy Store Generation between Sunday and Monday. I wrote all of chapter 4, Boomer Congress, and most of chapter 14 (the last chapter), Had Enough. At the same time I completed some good research on Saturday, did some more on Sunday and Monday [the rain just started again], and outlined the remaining research for the book. I don’t have a lot more to do.

I can now see an end to this project. I at first thought it would be around 40,000 words, but the chapters are completed in fewer words than what would make up the 40 thousand. That tells me I’m more likely to be around 35,000, maybe even a little less. I don’t want to pad the book and make an arbitrary word count. I feel already that I’m more repetitive than I want to be.

All other writing is on hold, except for articles for Buildipedia.com. My last one went up Friday March 16. As of a few minutes ago it had been read 132 times, but remained unrated and without comments. That’s how all of them are. These are informational pieces, not subject to controversy and not likely to generate comments.

Meanwhile, over at Suite101.com, I haven’t written an article since February 2011. Changes in the Google algorithm in February, May, and October of last year pretty much killed the site. Page views and revenues (which had never been much) dried up, and continuing to write didn’t seem to make much sense. Except lately page views are trending upward, and revenue has somewhat recovered. So far this month I’ve earned $5.29 for my 127 articles. That’s not much, of course. For the full month it might come out to between $8 and $9 dollars. But every little bit of revenue helps.

A few days ago I received this comment on my article on George Washington’s cabinet:

Mr. Todd,  Thank you for your article and your work. It gave me a nice insight into the workings of the early government which I needed for a class. I made sure you received credit!  Mark I.

It’s not exactly fan mail, and doesn’t make me a rock star among writers, but it’s a nice comment. I’m glad I was able to help a student out.

I haven’t yet pulled the trigger on writing for Decoded Science. I may do so after I finish TCSG.

Interspersed with all of this, I should be preparing Doctor Luke’s Assistant for Kindle and Smashwords, and making one last round of edits on In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People before also e-self-publishing it. I think, though, I need to get two to three thousand more words done on TCSG before I pull off for a short while and tend to these other books.

Well, these musings have certainly been miscellaneous. This week I may blog a few times about TCSG, or at least about the premises behind it. They say that a blog, to attract visitors, needs to be about something more than yourself. It needs to give value to a reader. I don’t want my blog to become a political blog, but since TCSG is about a political topic, a few political posts will be necessary. Hopefully I’m going to post all the rest of this week on that.

End of the Legacy Deal Dream?

As I alluded in my last post, I don’t have any submittals out with a traditional publisher right now, nor with any agent. I say that based on information given on an agent’s website.

Back in January I submitted In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People to a literary agent. I had pretty much decided this would be may last attempt at a legacy deal for this work, and probably for any work. I never met this agent, but we’ve interacted some on-line via blogs and e-mails. Based on these contacts and on her statement of what she represents, I felt that she would be the best agent for this work and for my career in general.

Alas, more than sixty days have passed since I submitted my query letter, and I have not received a response. The agent’s website says that no answer within sixty days means “we aren’t interested”. So it appears she isn’t interested. Maybe my query was poorly written. Maybe her representation needs aren’t what I thought they were. Maybe she has a similar book and author she’s already representing. No problem; a tacit no is a no.

I’m not going to send her an e-mail and withdraw my submittal. If I receive an e-mail in a few days saying she’s interested, I won’t stand on a sixty day statement. But I know that’s highly unlikely.

So I’ve made up my mind: I’m not going to submit it again. I’ve submitted it to one editor and five agents, each saying no. The traditional publishing route says I’ve only just started. I should gather a basket full of rejections, continuing to seek an acceptance. After all, many best sellers have had fifty or more rejections (e.g. Harry Potter, the Chicken Soup series). I’ve only just started. Persevere! Don’t give up so quickly.

I’m not giving up. I’ve just decided to seek a different path to success. The traditional path is broken for most writers. Success that way is still possible, but highly improbable. Recent (last two years) events have shown that alternate paths are available. E-books are quickly overwhelming print books, Internet purchasing grows while brick & mortar store sales stagnate. The ease of self-publishing, both e- and print, causes a writer to more carefully consider all options.

I’m rambling. I’ve said all this before, as have many proponents of self-publishing, and you all are tired of it. I hope to have Fifty Thousand Screaming People self-published by May.

An Interesting Post About the Current State of the Publishing Industry

Leave it to Joe Konrath and Barry Eisler to take on the titans of the publishing industry without fear. In a recent blog at A Newbies’ Guide to Publishing, Joe and Barry take apart a post made elsewhere by Scott Turow. Scott is the president of the Author’s Guild (I guess; so say Joe and Barry). His post was against the recent lawsuit threats made by the Department of Justice against Apple and five of the Big Six publishers.

The lawsuit is about price-fixing between Apple and the five, based on Apple’s “agency model” for e-book sales via Apple’s iTunes store. I’m not sure I fully understand what the agency model is, but that’s probably not germane to this post. Suffice to say that DoJ considers it price-fixing, and are in the process of taking the perpetrators to task.

Warning: Joe and Barry are not shy about the language they use. You will have to wade through a few four letter words, though not too many.

The writers basically say that Turow and the Author’s Guild are supposed to represent authors, but the post appears to be one in favor of publishers at author’s expense. Turow argues that the actions by the five were justified because Amazon is taking too much market share. This is bad for the literary world in that it will restrict consumer choices and reduce author income.

This is clearly ridiculous. Amazon’s e-publishing platform and store have busted wide open the stranglehold that the Big Six previously held on book distribution. Consumers now have a much greater range of choices, and authors have a distribution outlet that doesn’t require a Big Six or Little Seventy-Five (or however many other publishers there are) contract.

One wonders why Turow and the Author’s Guild aren’t sticking up for authors. I’m working through the comments on Konrath’s blog. It will be interesting to see if Turow himself leaves a comment, or if anyone defends him.

I have no stake in the traditional publishing industry (or legacy publishing, as Konrath calls them). So far they haven’t deemed my work worthy of inclusion in their publishing plans. Then again, the world isn’t beating a path to the door of on-line publishers to buy my stuff either. As I’ll report in the next post to this blog, I currently have no submittals pending to any traditional publishing outlet, neither agent nor publisher/editor. I think I’m pretty much locked in to independent publishing from this point on.

But I have nothing against the traditional publishing world (other than they don’t recognize my obvious genius :), but I’m going another way. This lawsuit, if it comes to that, will be an interesting development. If the Five lose, it seems that will hasten the day when they will be obsolete.

Kindle Sales of “Documenting America”

Last week I posted about sales of “Mom’s Letter,” and how I had some in early March. Since then I had one more, making 3 in March, 6 in 2012, and 15 over all. My total royalties for it are $5.65, some paid, some accrued and waiting for the next payout. So that’s less than I would have received had I placed the short story in a literary journal, but more than I would have earned if it never placed at all. In fact, I don’t know if I’ve earned enough to cover the postage to the places I mailed it to, all of whom rejected it.

But the subject of this post is really Documenting America. I ran the sales graph for it this morning from Amazon Author Central, for all available data. Here it is.

As I hope shows on this graph, the most recent sale was in mid-February; the highest ranking was 53,121 in early November, and the current rank (as of the hour in which I pulled this chart; it’s updated hourly) is 499,108.

As I mentioned before, I’m not all that concerned about ranking. I’m more interested in sales and royalties. This chart does show, however, the power of a single sale when you’re way down the list.

Someday I’ll have enough sales that I won’t worry about this stuff, or at least won’t bore you, my faithful readers, with it. But it’s new enough to me that I want to do it at the moment.

News Flash: A fellow author just contacted me to say she bought a copy of “Mom’s Letter” today, which isn’t yet showing on the charts. Woohoo!

Miscellaneous Monday Musings

I was sick last week. It started Monday evening, when I felt a tickle in my throat. I thought nothing of it, though it did seem unusual. On Tuesday the tickle persisted, and I had to cough to relieve it. I told several people at work that it was just a tickle, and to not worry about my coughing.

Then, Wednesday morning I could feel the head cold starting. This is opposite of how my colds usually come. Usually I feel tiredness in the eyes a couple of days before the sinuses start working overtime. Sometimes those colds go to my chest after another couple of days, sometimes not. The last cold I had, back in October, I think, was mild and I didn’t miss any work.

This one came on strong Wednesday, mainly coughing but with some sinus drainage. Since some muscle pains later developed, I’ve concluded that I had a mild case of the flu. I left work early and mainly rested. Thursday and Friday I slept lots and lots. When I  wasn’t sleeping I was resting in my chair, reading in War Letters. I finished that, by the way, on Sunday, and wrote a review at my other blog. By Saturday I felt a little better, and was able to leave the house for a short while to pick up a computer from the techno doc. But I still took it easy for the most part. Stayed home Sunday, and left my Life Group without a teacher (since my co-teacher was out of town). I did arrange for someone from the class to lead the discussion in my absence. Now, on Monday, I’m at work, and running on 7 cylinders.

But throughout this period of sickness, I did get some writing work done.

  • Completed my writing business tax calculations for 2011 tax year, and filled out the forms. I made a little over $1,500.oo dollars, but after subtracting my expenses, which were inflated by the trip to Chicago in June (half of which was writing related), and after subtracting my home office deduction (allowable since The Dungeon is a dedicated writing space), I made a profit of $1.36. Or, stated otherwise, my writing income paid fully for my writing habit and contributed about $530 to household expenses. Not bad.
  • Added about 1,600 words to The Candy Store Generation, completing Chapter 3 and working on Chapter 4. The book now stands at around 16,000 words, or a few hundred less, on its way to 40,000 or so. I’m not sure that the words I wrote in the flu-induced stupor are any good. The editing process will determine that.
  • Wrote a construction administration column due for Buildipedia.com. I wrote that yesterday evening, and typed and submitted it this morning. It was due last Friday, but I figure at the start of work Monday morning is about the same as midnight at the end of Friday, so I’m declaring it “on-time”. Not sure how the editor will see it.
  • Uploaded my second short story, “Too Old To Play,” to Smashwords. It’s available for purchase there. Now waiting for the Smashword Meatgrinder to tell me if it qualifies for the Premium Catalogue, or if changes will be needed.
  • Cleaned up a couple of piles of writing papers. These were mostly extra copies from critique group. I discovered two that had critical comments on In Front of Fifty Thousand Screaming People, and made those edits. This wasn’t hard work, and the living room is two piles cleaner.

I also balanced the checkbook, though that’s not writing related. Also washed some dishes.

So, despite the cold (or the flu), I made a little progress. Let’s see what a week of reasonably good health will bring.

Amazon Reviews: To solicit or not?

In a newsletter I receive on-line from a writing industry professional, I found this.

If you have read [book name] could you go over to the Amazon page [page link] and write several sentences along with a Five Star review? The Five Stars are important because they are averaged so please make sure to do Five Stars. Or maybe you have read my [book name]. If so, I’m asking you to please go over to the Amazon page [page link] and write a couple of sentences along with a Five Star review. Even if you read the book several years ago, I would appreciate your support with the review.

I don’t know how others feel, but I’m totally against this kind of request. Sure, a writer would like nothing better than to have a bunch of five star reviews and nothing below that. But to ask someone to give you a five star review? I don’t know, to me is seems rather crass. How about a request something like, “I’d sure like a few reviews for my book, Book Title, over at Amazon. Here’s the link to it. If you’ve read it, please consider going to that page and leaving a review. Be honest. I’d love a five star review, but if you don’t think the book deserved a five star review, rate it what you think it deserves.” That might be an acceptable way to solicit reviews.

Because of what that writer/agent/publisher wrote, I will not be giving him any reviews. I’ve read one of the two books he mentioned, and like it a lot and find it useful in my writing. But he killed it for me with that comment. He prefers praise to honesty. Well, he’ll get neither from me.

I think it would be alright to ask someone to review your book at Amazon. After all, that’s what traditional publishers and authors do all the time when they send out advance reader’s copies to reviewers. They hope for favorable treatment, but I seriously doubt they tell the reviewers how to do their job.

This newsletter guy irks me. “so please make sure to do Five Stars.” I hope I never sink to that level. Would one of you chew me out if I do?

Sales of “Mom’s Letter”

Part of what Amazon gives authors, at least those who publish through Kindle Direct Publishing (the self-publishing arm) is a site called Author Central. It’s a place for you to manage your listed books, add or change various descriptions, both for books and author profile. One of the nice features is…

…sales statistics! For a guy who earned his worst college grade in Statistics class, I kind of like them. Of course, I don’t worry about standard deviations and deltas and sigmas—wait, the sigma might have been the standard deviation. I like to see the number, however.

On March 5 I had a sale of my short story “Mom’s Letter”. That brings me up to 13 sales of it in the almost 13 months it’s been available, earning me a whopping $4.96 in royalties. One of those sales was at Smashwords, the others at Kindle. If sales continue at the pace of about one a month, in three years I’ll have earned about $14-15 dollars on the story. Does that justify my efforts? I think so.

One other feature at Author Central is a graph of sales rank. It probably isn’t meaningful when your book isn’t selling (and a short story is the same as a book in terms of statistics). When “Mom’s Letter” was first released, I had two sales on the first day and it soared to rank about 42,000 in the overall Kindle Store rankings. Since then it has slid. At Author Central you can access this graph, and expand it to “all available data”. The problem is this data goes back only about eight months, so I don’t have the data from the earliest days. I didn’t discover Author Central until that earliest data passed into cyber-oblivion.

Here’s the graph as of 8:30 AM this morning, Central Time.

“Mom’s Letter” Sales Rank as of March 6, 2012

The interesting item to notice on the graph is that, when your rank is way, way down there, a single sale makes a difference. That one sale on March 5 resulted in a jump in the rankings of over 480,000. That tells me that approximately 115,000 titles in the Kindle Store have a sale on any given day. Then each sale of another title will lower your rank. If I ran the same graph right now, the sales rank would be 134,036. That tells me that 20,000 different titles have had a sale since 8:30 this morning.

Actually, since the ranking number is updated hourly, and since I don’t know when on March 5 I had that sale, my rank might have been higher than this. A single sale on Jan 1, 2012 pushed the ranking up to 86,835. Although, I don’t know if that’s really correct, since I don’t know how hourly rankings are turned into daily rankings once the data passes into ancient times.

Sales rank is interesting, but not terribly important. I usually check my sales once a day, but don’t check sales rank unless I’ve had a sale since my previous check. Sure, it would be nice to make a top 100 list (I just checked: it’s not on the top 100 short story list), but I’m not going to obsess over it. Much better to be writing and publishing than obsessing over sales and sales rank.

Finally, a payout

I have recently returned from a road trip to Las Vegas. And no, that’s not where I received the payout. I didn’t gamble at all while there. I attended and presented three offerings at Environmental Connection 12, the annual conference of the International Erosion Control Association. Lynda and I made a road trip out of it, with vacation days wrapped on both sides of the conference, and with stops in Oklahoma City and Santa Fe, New Mexico. On the way back we were at our second grandson’s first birthday party.

No, the payout was from Amazon. While on the trip, I received an e-mail saying that $10.97 of accumulated royalties were being paid to my account,  reflecting sales from the start of my self-publishing with them through December 2011, and that I could expect that amount to be transferred to my bank account within five business days.

Woo hoo! Finally, a payout. I had been uncertain if the threshold for payment was $10 or $20, but I thought $10. Payout is supposed to be two months after you reach the payout threshold, and will come monthly so long as you meet it. That certainly beats the twice-a-year payout of legacy publishers, paid about six months after the end of the period.

So far in 2012 I’ve accumulated $3.48 in revenues, including a sale yesterday. That brings my total revenue earned (from on-line sales and self-sales) to $50.12, with total sales being 48. These are still far from earth-shattering numbers, but I’m not complaining given the limited promotion I’ve done.

Over the next few days I’ll post some more information about my sales, including some nifty graphs from Amazon’s Author Central. Despite being the also-ran among also-rans, I’m a firm believer in being honest.

Author | Engineer