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Category Archives: Self-publishing

The recording studio

12 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by wyndes in Audiobooks

≈ 7 Comments

So my big task this week is the final proofread of A Lonely Magic. I usually spend about two days reading a book aloud as my final proof. With Time, I wound up starting and stopping about three times before I was done. If any major revisions get made–by which I mean complete paragraphs–I reread at least those chapters a second time, so when I start to find lots of things I want to change, sometimes I need to stop and start over.

With ALM, I’ve already read it aloud once, done a fair number of revisions since then, proofed the whole thing once (in not read-aloud mode) and am now set for the last pass. But this time I’m also recording the audio book at the same time. I thought it would be efficient that way–two birds with one stone. But wow, recording an audio book is tedious. This, however, is my highly efficient recording studio. I’m actually kind of proud of it. Reorganizing the closet was a huge task. Was it worth it? I guess time will tell!

My highly efficient recording studio

My highly efficient recording studio

Malaysian Cup of Coffee

29 Thursday May 2014

Posted by wyndes in Self-publishing

≈ 1 Comment

A while back, I decided to add Google Play to the sites where my books were available. I spent an incredibly tedious several hours trying to make it work, finally got A Gift of Ghosts live on the site, and then pretty much said, ‘the hell with it.’ Well, no–I said, “I’ll do the others tomorrow,” and when tomorrow rolled around, I thought, “ugh, I can’t go through that again,” and that lasted for a few tomorrows in a row and finally I stopped thinking about it.

But because of my BookBub promotion last week, I found out that some copies had been downloaded on Google Play. When I looked at the numbers, someone from Malaysia had downloaded Ghosts. Malaysia! I don’t know why that was so exciting, but it was. A couple days later, I checked the numbers again and Ghosts had been downloaded in Malaysia four times. Four times! I don’t have a great mental image of Malaysia–it sort of blends with Thailand in my imagination, I think–but I pictured some tourist/college student at a hostel saying, ‘hey, you should check out this book I downloaded’ to an acquaintance from another country. Or a student practicing their English?

Anyway, it motivated me to post the other books to Google Play, because if someone wants to read my ghost stories in Malaysia, I am willing to help them do so, enough to brave the incredibly awful interface that Google thinks passes for acceptable. But I wish I could set the currency properly. All of the international sites do literal conversion: $3.99 translated to the equivalent in British pounds or Euros or Brazilian reals (got my first sale in Brazil this month!) or Indian rupees (ditto India!). But I want the conversion to be emotional instead. I want the exchange rate to equate values, so that every reader, anywhere in the world, is buying me a cup of their local coffee when they pay for my book, and buying themselves a small pleasure of about the same rate. I wish I knew how to make that happen.

But it would be incredibly complicated and unfortunately, Amazon’s algorithmic bots would probably price match and I’d wind up selling all the books, everywhere, for the price of a cup of coffee in Brazil, which would not buy me many coffees in Florida. Alas.

Funnily enough, though, when I went searching for information about the prices of coffee, I found this: Malaysian Starbucks prices. Turns out that in Malaysia, specifically, my books actually are priced about the same as Starbucks.

In other news, I’m working on three things at once, which is always bad for me. But Fen is due back from the editor on Sunday, so soon, very soon, I’ll be focused on her again for a few weeks. I can’t wait! Well, I can, but it’s hard.

Eenie-meenie-minie-mo

19 Monday May 2014

Posted by wyndes in A Lonely Magic, Cover design, Self-publishing

≈ 7 Comments

A Lonely Magic's darker cover

A Lonely Magic’s darker cover

A Lonely Magic's lighter cover

A Lonely Magic’s lighter cover

Looking at them side-by-side definitely makes me think that I should keep trying to tweak that background wavy-box. I don’t really have any good design tools, which makes it hard to do anything clever and creative, but I could keep trying. I’m not sure it’s a worthwhile use of my time, though! Anyway, opinions welcome, please.

Also, the current blurb:

WTF? What did she ever do to him?

When a gorgeous guy gives her an unthinkable choice – death by drug overdose or gunshot – he plunges 21-year-old Fen into a sea of trouble. Although she’s rescued in the nick of time by a teenage boy, Luke, and his sexy older brother, Kaio, escaping from her would-be killer won’t be so easy. Her brush with death is only the beginning of her wild journey.

The brothers aren’t ordinary men, and Fen’s rescue and her supposedly safe retreat have unnerving layers. How did they find her? What do they want with her? Who can she trust? And why was she targeted for murder in the first place?

As Fen and Luke are forced to run for their lives, Luke spirits Fen away, into an enchanting underwater city. But every enchantment has its dark edges. Fen must face an otherworldly plot that threatens not only her life but those of millions of human beings…and she must look deep within herself to find the strength and courage she’ll need to get out of this strange new world alive.

Submerge yourself in the latest gripping novel from Sarah Wynde, author of the Tassamara series. You won’t want to come up for air before the final enthralling page of A Lonely Magic.

*****
I think I want a new headline, so I’m still working on that, but otherwise, for those of you who haven’t read it, does it sound interesting? And for those of you who have, does it sound right? Any suggestions for changes?

Thanks for your help!

Updated: tweaked blurb

Mother’s Day

12 Monday May 2014

Posted by wyndes in Food, Personal, Randomness, Self-publishing

≈ 2 Comments

Mother’s Day is hard when you’ve lost your mom and your sole chick is the entire distance of the country away. I should have bought myself flowers. But I made a lovely dinner. This steelhead trout is the first recipe I think I have ever invented completely from scratch and it was just as good the second time as it was the first. Food that comes with a “you thought this up” badge makes me happy. And I ate strawberries that were delicious, so yay!

I spent this morning cleaning out my RSS feed. Obviously, I did this because I have about 20 more useful things to do, including fold the laundry, call the insurance agent, clean out the paper files, organize some tax paperwork, start writing my next book, and so on… but I was glad I did it when I was done. My RSS reader had gotten so full of sites that I’d stopped reading most of it. The slimmed-down version is going to be a lot more usable.

But it made me think about blogging and how it’s changed. So many sites are dead now. And so many sites have turned into simple announcement pages. People who used to tell stories about their lives in their blogs now just announce their books or post book covers. I suppose I understand it, but I still feel like my blog is more of a scrapbook for me–a very long-running easy-to-use journal, maybe. It might be an unprofessional decision, but I suspect I’ll keep posting my random thoughts here. Maybe I’ll make the link in the books link to the business site instead, and that can be the place that I post non-conversational announcements and such. Maybe.

Ran my first paid ad over the weekend. Thirty dollars and… well, I may or may not earn it back. It definitely didn’t cause any great swing in sales. I’m running another–the big one, Bookbub–next Monday. It cost $130, so it’ll be interesting to see if that one’s worth it. Thirty dollars requires some thought, but break into the hundreds and I spend endless mental hours debating.

Hmm, I feel like I’m rambling. I think I’ll go eat some lunch and then get some exercise. Maybe it’ll motivate me to start writing this afternoon. Or at least call the insurance company!

Active reviewers list

10 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by wyndes in Marketing and promotion, Self-publishing

≈ 4 Comments

As part of my new marketing initiatives, I’ve decided to establish an active reviewers mailing list.

Reviews are a weird ethical area for a lot of authors and there’s much controversy about what’s okay and what’s not. Some authors have paid for reviews. That can mean hiring people on fiverr to post reviews on Amazon–a violation of Amazon’s terms of service and not okay, IMO–or spending hundreds of dollars for coverage in publications like Publisher’s Weekly or Kirkus Indies. I don’t think that there’s anything unethical (or at least no different than publishing business as usual) in the latter, but it’s basically buying an ad that you don’t control. I’m not excited about spending my money that way.

But publishers have always given away books for free to people that they thought were potential reviewers. When I worked in publishing, our marketing department had lists of people who got books for free when they released. As my own marketing department, I need to create that list–my own list of active reviewers.

The hard way would be to flog my books to every book reviewer I can find: send messages to active reviewers on Amazon, send emails to book bloggers, search for reader-reviewers on Goodreads and Library Thing and Shelfari, etc. That would be a lot of work. I’d basically be trying to sort through a huge pool of potential reviewers to find the ones who might be interested in me so that they can get a free copy of my book for promotional purposes.

I’m too lazy for that.

Instead, I’m going for opt-in reviewing. When I updated the book covers, I added this note to the back of all the books:

If you’re an active reviewer and want a free review copy of either the next book in the series or the next book I release, please send an email to reviews@sarahwynde.com with a link to a review you’ve written about one of my books, and let me know which title you’d like to receive and in what format (epub, mobi, or pdf). The review can be on any site, including a retailer, Goodreads, LibraryThing, Shelfari, your personal blog or a group blog, and it definitely doesn’t have to be nice. Be as critical as you like, but please write at least a few sentences—two-word reviews don’t count!

I’ll be trying to grow that list as large as is feasible–since these are ebooks, I’d be perfectly happy to have it reach 1000 subscribers, maybe more–but I’d like to make sure that it includes the people who have already reviewed my books and will therefore never see that note. If, dear reader, that includes you, feel free to shoot the email my way. 🙂

Series Redesign

07 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by wyndes in Cover design, Self-publishing

≈ 7 Comments

a series re-design

a series re-design

So one of the things that I’ve been doing/worrying about/working on/driving myself insane over is the decision to take publishing more seriously.

Here’s the overall picture: I quit my job (editor) in 2011 to go to graduate school. I had everything carefully calculated. Enough savings to get my master’s degree and then spend several months job-searching while I made it to R’s high school graduation before I needed to find a job. After his high school graduation, I, of course, would be more or less free to move anywhere, so if counseling wasn’t working out, I could get myself a non-telecommuting job as an editor anywhere–maybe Berkeley, Indiana, New Jersey. Wherever the jobs were, there I could go. (As long as I could bring Zelda, of course.)

Doesn’t that sound well-planned? Self-publishing was irrelevant, just a fun little side deal. Unexpected, however, was that 2011-2012 would be the worst years of my life and I would drop out of graduate school and wallow in… nope, not being mean to myself. That I would drop out of graduate school and spend a rocky year struggling with bereavement-induced severe depression.

In June, R graduates high school. I will not have my master’s degree. Every sensible bone in my body tells me it’s time to start looking for a job as an editor and be ready to move where it takes me. All the less-sensible bones are stubbornly saying, no, no, no. Not going to do that. I like Florida. I like my house. I want to stay here. And I don’t want to edit anymore. I want to write.

So the completely crazy bones–they’re investing money that I don’t really have and time that I could be spending working on my resume into starting up a publishing business and thinking about actually marketing my books.

The first step was to hire a designer to make me the covers above.

Tell me you love them.

Tell me they’d make you more likely to buy my books (despite the fact that if you’re reading my blog, it’s kinda a sure thing that you already got at least one of them).

Tell that I haven’t wasted my money and that I don’t need to be spending my time polishing my resume instead of sending my cover designer emails that say, “okay, that’s nice but what if…”

Don’t tell me how you’d make them better, because that ship has sailed, these are the final designs. And yes, I could have done lots of rounds of looking for feedback and maybe I should have but when I’m in an insecure space, having lots of people tell me what I could be doing better is actually more likely to send me crawling under the covers for a day or two than be productive.

But if you have an editor job for me… well, we could talk.

Or if you want to say lovely things about those covers, well, that would work, too.

PS A Lonely Magic–still going well. I made myself cry today–always a good sign!

Covers

06 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by wyndes in Cover design, Writing

≈ 7 Comments

Miama

Miama

Great Vibes

Great Vibes

Aquafina

Aquafina

Thoughts?

Making marketing decisions

17 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by wyndes in Self-publishing

≈ 4 Comments

One month since I published A Gift of Time. I’ve sold about 100 copies and gotten 16 reviews on Amazon. I’ve got three free days left to use before I take it out of Kindle Select and start selling it other places, so I’d like to use them wisely. That means for the first time I’m considering spending money on some advertising, therefore doing some reading about indie book promotion, and oh, it’s just overwhelming.

There seems to be pretty much unanimous consent that 16 reviews is not enough. That says I should keep waiting for more reviews, but I have only two months left in which to use my free days, and scheduling days isn’t easy. Another thing I read said “don’t waste your money advertising a later book in a series, people won’t buy it.”

Ugh, you know, even writing this much — putting this twenty minutes of thought into it — has made my brain want to shut off. I’m going to have to get less resistant to this idea, but maybe that will happen for some later book. Like, much later. I think I’m going to go write some more of Akira’s honeymoon right now instead. But if you haven’t reviewed Time and feel inclined to help me out, a review would be useful.

And if you haven’t entered my Goodreads giveaway, you should! I’d really like the books to go to people who want them.

Goodreads Giveaway

02 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by wyndes in Self-publishing

≈ Comments Off on Goodreads Giveaway

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Goodreads Book Giveaway

A Gift of Time by Sarah Wynde

A Gift of Time

by Sarah Wynde

Giveaway ends February 02, 2014.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win

https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/widget/77093

So the print edition of A Gift of Time is gorgeous. I might be biased, of course, but I don’t think so. I thought the print editions of my other books were nice enough, but I didn’t madly love them. Time, though–it’s just so pretty! I used a drop-cap on the back cover, ornamental fonts on the chapter openers and the photo on the cover is just… well, gorgeous. I love it. So much so that I want at least a few other people to see it and so I’m doing a Goodreads giveaway. If you’d like a chance at a paper copy of the book (signed, of course!) and you live in the US, do go ahead and enter. (I’m sorry, non-US people, but I was a little too worried about postage costs to open it up. I’ll try to plan ahead better next time.)

Life choices

18 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by wyndes in A Gift of Time, Marketing and promotion, Randomness, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

I dreamed a few nights ago that the first three Amazon reviews of A Gift of Time were all one-star reviews, written by the same person. She hated the book so much that giving it one star wasn’t enough, she had to rate it again and again, one star every time, and then show up at my house to tell me everything that was wrong with it. It was a weird dream. Definitely a nightmare. And in the dream, I decided to quit writing. That was the moment that woke me up.

The good news: I’m not going to quit writing. It really annoyed me that in my dream I’d decided to do so. For the next ten minutes, I was huffing and puffing at my dream self. What a wimp! What an idiot! You don’t give up something fun just because someone else comes to rain on your parade. You are a nerd, in the wonderful Wil Wheaton sense of the word, where you get to love what you love and damn the naysayers. Yes, I was lecturing myself. My dream self even. I sort of feel embarrassed.

But it sent me into a good spiral of thinking about writing and about what the last two years have meant to me.

Unless you’re a writer, you won’t care about this, but there are crowd scenes in A Gift of Time. Scenes where five characters or more are present and active. The first book I wrote (the one that no one has ever seen) had a scene with six characters and it was agonizing to write. So hard to manage all those characters. So hard to balance them. So hard to keep them all in the room, all active, all talking. In Ghosts, I can remember ruthlessly cutting characters out of scenes because I couldn’t handle having a fourth person present. That was too hard to make work. In Time, there are crowds. Literal crowds. Rose, Max, Meredith, Grace, Akira, Colin, Carla, Travis, and Emma–plus a bunch of nameless others–all in one room at one time–and I never even thought about it being hard to write.

With Thought, I decided I needed to learn to write action scenes. I love Ghosts, of course, but it’s all conversation. It could be a stage play if it needed to be. Hmm, actually, it would make sort of a great play–the actress who got to play Akira when she turned into Zane’s mom would have so much fun. So in Thought, there’s action, and it was hard work. Oh, the research that went into that parking lot scene. The careful mapping out of character’s motions. The reading about self-defense, the calculating of weights, the plotting out of positions. In Time, I just wrote the fight. I didn’t agonize over it at all. I did do some fun research–the whole Golgi organ reflex thing was super-cool–but the writing was just a map; grab here, push there.

In a sense, two years of writing have gotten me nothing. Time has sold about as many copies in its first week as Ghosts did, and I’m no more likely to earn a living by writing than I was two years ago.

But I’m pretty sure I’m a better writer than I was two years ago. And that’s something. And I’m absolutely sure that I’m not going to quit writing, no matter how many 1-star reviews Time gets. And that’s a lot.

Onward and upward–I’m going to finish writing Reckless, my last unfinished Eureka story, then turn my attention to Ghosts of Belize and Akira’s honeymoon. Probably around Feb, I’ll start my next project. It will either be Grace’s story or something entirely new–either a crystal-sensitive mermaid or a sarcastic, Sherlock-inspired princess.

If you haven’t reviewed Time… nag, nag, nag. Reviews matter. And I hate writing them, too, so I sympathize. But if you’re reading this and you’ve read Time, there is literally no better way to support me than to write a review for Amazon or Goodreads.

As always, my brain sidetracks on literally. You could just give me lots of money. That would be a better way to support me. Or you could pay off my mortgage, so that I didn’t have to worry about it–that would help. Or you could tell all your friends or buy an ad or get your local librarian excited about my books–OKAY, so maybe there might *literally* be some other ways to support me. But writing a review is by far the easiest.

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