Tuesday, November 15, 2011

So much for a writer to do ...

It’s almost time to launch Part 1 of The Bones of the Earth, the first novel I have actually finished writing. But while I could post the EPUB on Amazon and Smashwords tomorrow, there are still so many tasks that I have to do as a publisher.

I have already done a lot. I have written the book, then read it, rewritten it, edited it, re-edited, re-written, re-read and re-written again.

I have given it to two different editors and accepted most of their advice. I have found a terrific cover designer in Lisa Damerst, who has given me a dynamite cover.




The publisher’s job

As an independent author, the publisher’s job is my responsibility. There is so much advice to follow from blogs, websites, books etc. — too much to read it all, let alone implement it. But it seems that most agree on one thing: the importance of the author’s “platform.” All the book-promotion pundits make it seem deceptively simple, if time-consuming.

I started building my “platform” with this blog; I also have a presence on Twitter, goodreads, LinkedIn, Google+ and, of course, Facebook. I know I have not done enough to take full advantage of social media yet, but I am working on it.

At this point, I have to do the following at least:

- make more friends on goodreads (hint!)

- create a fan page on Facebook

- expand my Google+ page and Circles

- join writer-specific social networking sits like the Independent Author Network and Scribd, and possibly paid promotion sites like Book Buzzr

- start a blog tour.

Then, I must follow the advice of last month’s guest blogger, marketing expert Becky Illson-Skinner:

- join some writing groups where I would meet real, live people in the flesh, as opposed to online.

- set up some events such as book signing or library reading.

I have been fortunate to receive a number of positive reviews for my short stories. Those for Dark Clouds, my little Hallowe’en story, were completely unlooked-for; I also got some unsolicited and very positive reviews for my benefit story, Sam, the Strawb Part; even the reviews I requested were all positive. I feel good about that.

In the meantime, I keep blogging (see?), commenting on others’ blogs, reviewing books, tweeting and reading; and of course, I’m working on my next work for NaNoWriMo. Doing that requires writing 1,700 words a day — not a huge amount, but making sure that I do it every single day is a challenge.

Then, there’s life to live: a family, events, and of course, work. Did I mention that this blog is not my day job?

Time to revise the old saw: an independent writer’s work is never done!

5 comments:

  1. Damn... that cover is drool worthy. I will be picking this up when it's available based exclusively off how frickin' cool the cover is.

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  2. Love your cover, even not knowing what your book is about I'm intrigued; your cover is doing its job!

    So true about all the work an Indie author must do, it's never ending. Between marketing, promoting, building a platform, it's sometimes a struggle to get time to, you know, do that writing thing! But what a thrilling ride at the same time isn't it? Congrats on your soon to be published book! I hope you've planned something to celebrate!

    Darian
    http://darianwilk.weebly.com/

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  3. Scott,

    What a great cover! It's really compelling.

    As far as promotion goes, it's good to see that you're coming out with a new title relatively soon after your last...

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  4. That cover is the bomb diggity, Scott!! Most compelling one I've seen in a while. Wishing you huge success, my dear!!

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  5. Wonderful cover. A real grabber! Congratulations and good luck with the launch!

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