News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #27…

#153: Last gasp for relevance or a really neat idea?  Esquire Magazine recently announced that it will start publishing eBooks devoted to “men’s fiction.”  Besides the question in my subtitle, there are two other questions that jump to my mind here:  (1) Why in the world would an author want to (a) bury his struggle for name recognition in the shrouds of an irrelevant magazine and (b) let them rake off the profits to earn the measly royalty percentages that big publishers pay?  (2) What the hell is men’s fiction?

First, the question in the subtitle.  I don’t know if Esquire has an eZine edition (call it eSquire?).  Since it has a tradition of glossy fluff appropriate for doctors’ waiting rooms, heavy on the graphics and light on content, I don’t know if an eZine edition is appropriate.  I just know I wouldn’t buy an eBook just because it’s produced by Esquire.  Yes, I know they have a fiction tradition (notably the Napkin Fiction Project of 2007), but I still can’t get past the gloss.

If I had an Amazon Fire or a B&N Nook, couldn’t read very well (why then the Fire or Nook?), and graduated straight from comic books and Playboy to People’s Magazine and other mindless supermarket fare, I might go for eSquire, especially if they revive the Napkin Fiction Project.  Still, if the subtitle question were multiple choice, I’d have to go for the last gasp option (yeah!  I took SATs!).

(1) is rhetorical, of course.  If you’re an indie author, the answer is obvious.  If you’re an author that is not indie, I congratulate you for reading this newsletter.  (Or, maybe you’re just spying on enemy forces, planning your next attack on the indie world?)

(2) is interesting.  It opens up that whole can of worms about genres and subgenres and how meaningful or meaningless they might be.  Esquire is for men, of course, so they couldn’t very well call it women’s fiction, but I don’t even know what the latter is either.  Stuff like the Fifty Shades series I write off as mommy porn or suburban erotica.  Now that soaps are on the way out, desperate soccer moms need a substitute.  (Since I don’t need to court women’s votes as a political candidate, I can be a bit acerbic.  I’m not disparaging these women’s lives of sacrifice, by the way—just what they read.)

The problem is that men’s fiction can run the gamut from steamy porn to GI Joe shoot’m-ups to my own genre of sci-fi thrillers, with testosterone-driven alpha-male types being the common denominator.  In my own case, I’d like to think that both men and women enjoy my stories.  I know I have both men and women readers.  I also have strong female characters, some who will do a good job of kicking men’s butts if the need arises.  I guess that means that my opus is not a candidate for Esquire.  I’m not shedding any tears.

#154: Pushing the eBook envelop?  One thing I haven’t explored in this new eBook self-pubbing universe is multimedia.  One reason is that not all eReaders are multimedia compatible, of course.  Another is that people who have turned to eReaders have already made a big leap of faith by leaving their comfort zone of that physical page turning behind (I’m in that class myself).

My few multimedia efforts are not really my own, either.  Brilliant Donna Carrick, of Carrick Publishing, a wonderful author in her own right, has sagely added URLs for my website and all my novels in every eBook.  In some sense, that’s maximizing the multimedia, because it takes you to that wonderful invention by physicists, the worldwide web.  (Unfortunately, physicists also invented most of those fancy financial packages responsible for the 2008 Wall Street implosion and allowing Jamie Dimon et al to get into trouble still—but that’s another story.)  Howeverm, my books aren’t coffee table ones—no fancy graphics—and while some theme like Darth Vader’s might be appropriate for my arch-villain Vladimir Kalinin, I don’t have the money to pay John Williams for a sound track.

Nevertheless, many people have turned to audio and other multimedia things.  Book trailers abound.  You can certainly read your own book or make your own trailer.  I don’t recommend it, though.  Most of the homemade versions look…well, homemade.  Let’s face it.  Most indie authors need help with this stuff but obviously don’t have the financial resources that a NY Times bestselling author has (of course, it’s one of the Big Six publishers that have the money, not him).

This is why I was interested to see a note about a new company called Atavist, an idea spawned by three geek journalists with nothing else to talk about over beers.  Their product:  Multimedia story-telling for digital devices, which includes Nook and Fire, I suppose—certainly iPad and maybe even smart phones.  Is this the future of publishing?  I hope not.  I can see my life becoming very complicated as an indie author.

I’d have to learn about sound effects and visual effects, including fractal landscaping and model design.  I’d have to buy a synthesizer so I could produce my own soundtracks.  Or, I’d have to contract all that out.  In any case, I see the need for investing a lot of money I don’t have.  Maybe this is just a conspiracy by the Big Six, another attack on indie authors and indie publishing?  It doesn’t matter, of course—they are doomed.

#155:  Speaking of Nook….  I did my due diligence.  I gave away Evil Agenda as part of my 90-day exclusivity experiment with Amazon’s KDP Select.  I thank all readers who downloaded their free copy of that book as well as the free copy of Angels Need Not Apply.  I rationalized the give-away as an investment in name recognition.  Since I don’t have money for marketing and publicity, it was a cheap way for a few more readers to become acquainted with my writing.

Unfortunately, I have this idea that many readers who participated in the give-away already knew my name.  Maybe not.  It’s interesting, though, that the numbers correlated strongly with the number of regular visitors to my blog.  Coincidence?

I still believe that word-of-mouth is the best form of marketing.  It’s amplified considerably by the internet, of course—those words can go a lot further.  If you have read one of my books and liked it, read more, and pass the good word onto your friends.  I don’t care if you or they even borrow my eBooks from the local public library.  If you’ve read my bio on my website, you know my goal is to entertain.  I don’t expect to make a lot of money writing—the competition is too ferocious.

However, there is something that doesn’t make sense.  I noticed returns on my $0.99 young adult novel.  Come on!  That’s just being cheap.  Of course, if you’re a kid, I guess I can understand—you need a bigger allowance.  Time to pressure your parents for an increase due to inflation.  Put it that way and they can’t refuse!

OK, I’ll finally get to the point.  Starting June 1, Evil Agenda will again be available on Smashwords.  Since the latter distributes to B&N, Sony, Apple, etc (most everyone except Amazon), people with other eReaders can enjoy the complete “Clones and Mutants Series.”  (Silent fanfare of trumpets ensues.)  I try to entertain everyone.  If I have left pBooks in favor of eBooks, please know that it’s just because I can’t afford to self-publish those pBooks anymore.  However, artistic grants to do so would be gratefully accepted.

#156: FaceBook future?  I’m expecting bad things to start happening to FaceBook.  In some sense, they already have (new fan page format, timelines, all those ads running down the right-hand side).  Their move to NASDAQ fell flat on its $38 face.  There will be a frenzied push in those graffiti decorated halls of Zuckerberg and his little rascals to come up with a real business model, i.e. one that makes money.  I have a fan page on FaceBook.  I’m expecting pressure to shell out money for all sorts of gimmicks and gizmos that I don’t like.  GM pulled out its ads, saying they weren’t generating revenue.  Why shouldn’t I follow suit?  Procrastination wins for a while, but maybe not for long.

In libris libertas….

 

5 Responses to “News and Notices from the Writing Trenches #27…”

  1. Scott Says:

    Hi, Steve,
    I downloaded FULL MEDICAL when it was free, but I didn’t get the others that way…Will be downloading more when I get through a couple of books. (Currently trying to read DROOD by Dan Simmons. It’s a really cool concept, I think, but it’s hard to read (for me, at least) because Simmons is trying to write in a style mimicking that of Dickens and his contemporaries. Fortunately, Simmons is such a good storyteller that I’m still into it…but it’s a little slow going…)

    Also, I have tried to find your fan page on Facebook but haven’t come across it yet. Is it under something other than simply your name? Can you post what to search for? Thanks!

    My kids are out of school soon (next Friday, actually) and today ends the Battle of the Books for my older one. He’s been concentrating a lot of his reading on that and on his class assignment of reading THE HOBBIT. (Which, btw, I think is totally cool! I never got to read THE HOBBIT in 6th grade!!!) But he tells me that he’s going to resume his read of THE SECRET LAB after today. I’ll let you know what he thinks…

  2. steve Says:

    Hi Scott,
    First, thanks for downloading any of my opus. Many people downloaded Full Medical and Angels Need Not Apply when they were free. That’s all right–it was a promotion and I do consider it an investment towards name recognition (I can’t pay marketing and publicity experts–this didn’t cost me anything). I don’t know if I’ll ever do it again, though. My goal is to entertain, but I still need to recover costs.
    There are two Dickens. The one was concise and to the point and we all know and love him in Tale of Two Cities and The Christmas Carol. The other was a bit verbose and very British, so very tough going for anyone, I imagine (e.g. Oliver Twist and so forth). Hopefully Simmons is mimicking the first? I have the same trouble with Ian Rankin. There’s a good mystery there–I just have problems pushing aside the curtains of verbosity. I’m a minimalist writer and try to emulate Child, Land, and other thriller writers (not so much Eisler–he gets carried away with his place and action descriptions sometimes, although they’re easier to take than Rankin).
    Ah, The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings! These allegorical Christian fantasies set the bar for all fantasy fiction that followed. C. S. Lewis almost measured up, but not quite. I dare say the only thing that has come close in modern times is the Harry Potter series and even that was more towards the end of the series (the beginning was a bit juvenile, even for YA).
    Ease up on your kids. It’s wonderful that they’re even reading. When I see kids reading and writing (active pursuits) instead of watching TV or playing Grand Theft Auto (passive pursuits or ones that don’t assume any imagination), I think there’s hope for the human race. Of course, when I see them with a book on group theory or quantum mechanics, I know there is. 😉
    Enjoy your weekend,
    Steve
    PD. My FaceBook fan page can be found at facebook.com/authorStevenMMoore (there are many Steven M Moores but so far I’m the only author). The full title of the fan page is “Steve Moore’s Thrillers & Sci-Fi Novels.” I was never very impressed with FaceBook and as the timeline progresses I become less and less impressed (and wary–re comments above).

  3. Scott Says:

    Oh, they love to read! When I find something that I think they’ll like, I try to give them a little push into reading it. I think THE SECRET LAB will fire up his imagination even more. As you say, better than video games. He has some pretty good ideas for stories, too. He’s a much better writer at 11 going on 12 than I was at that age, well maybe not technically, but he’s way more creative and original.

    DROOD by Simmons is actually about Charles Dickens, supposedly written by Wilkie Collins, and is sort of a mystery but also a horror story. It’s about the events after Dickens was involved in a terrible train crash that he and his companions survived, but many were killed. In this story Dickens meets this shadowy figure calling himself Drood, and becomes obscessed with the character, involving Collins in his search for the man. It’s good but as I say, sort of slow going. Hopefully it will kick into gear for me at some point.

  4. Donna Carrick Says:

    Hi, Steve,

    Thank you for the wonderful mention. Have I told you lately you are a brilliant writer? Not to mention delightfully “acerbic”!

    Great article. You clearly have a handle on this industry!

    Donna

  5. steve Says:

    Hi Donna,
    Thanks for your praise. Acerbic, maybe, but brilliant, no way! Just an old Irishman trying to tell a few tales. 🙂
    Writers today must try to understand the publishing industry, its past, present, and future. It’s a matter of survival in a very competitive world. You and Alex understand it as well as anyone. I have learned from people like you and, I’ll admit it, put my proper twist on things.
    On the other hand, this is the Golden Age for readers! So much to choose from, so many new ideas to digest! It’s a world of riches for all avid readers.
    So, when are we going to be able to enjoy a sequel to The First Excellence? Or something entirely new? I’m sure I’m not the only one with these questions!
    All the best,
    Steve
    PD. Besides offering editing and formatting services to help indie authors, Donna and husband Alex have written many entertaining novels, novellas, and short stories. Click on their website link found in the text to peruse their opus.