by Janis Patterson
There are times I think I might be crazy.
Then there are times I know it.
Like now.
I’ve been published in novel-length fiction since 1979 (am I
dating myself?) and while I never really worked at it as I should have (too
busy traveling the world and having fun); still I’ve amassed a fair backlog of
out-of-print books. Most are romances of one stripe or another written under my
Janis Susan May name, as that’s where I began. Most have been metaphorically
under the bed for a long time.
Fortunately, I managed to get most of the rights back before
the current trad-pub rights grab, and was able to get more back from a
publisher that some fear has been acting less than honestly. (Blogged about
this adventure back in January…) There are more I’m still working on, and some
I know that because of restrictive and wily contracts I will never ever get
back.
So, what to do now with the books I do have the rights to?
In this present climate, the obvious answer was republish them myself. I had
released a few with pretty but inexpensive pre-made covers as ebooks only last
year, and while they did okay there was no way The Husband and I could retire
on the proceeds. A couple of nice dinners out, perhaps, but anything more – no.
My late father always said “If you’re going to do something,
do it the best. Period.” I figured what could I lose besides some money, so I
tracked down a fabulous formatter and a spectacularly gifted cover artist.
Since the book had been published with a then-major house it didn’t need
editing, but I went over the manuscript with a fine tooth comb, tweaking and
smoothing and putting in front matter and back matter, making it ready for the
formatter. I got a fantastic cover and – a dream of mine – made it available in
paper as well as electronically. FAMILY OF STRANGERS, a traditional Gothic
romance, is now available and doing rather well.
However, it took over a month to get it ready to upload. I
wanted to get the rest of the books out faster, but being the Queen of
Procrastination, I fiddled around with them, doing something on this and
something else on the other… and getting nowhere.
Realizing that the best way to get things done was to
prioritize, organize and hit them straight on, I decided on a business plan and
made a schedule. I sent the schedule to my artist and formatter, and – after
their exclamations of shock – they agreed it could be done. My MasterCard began
to weep in sheer terror. I’ve tried to convince it that quality will pay off,
but it still shuddered every time I came near.
I made a spreadsheet of everything that has to be done –
it’s now at 26 separate steps for each book, which shocked me, but there’s no
way I can overlook anything. I made a checklist for what goes into an ebook
file and what goes into a print book. I’ve created Word and My Pictures files
for each book. I created a publishing name (Sefkhat-Awbi Books) and got a DBA
from the county.
And I work. Hard. The Husband has been very supportive,
taking us out to eat quite often and not saying a word when the laundry pile
reaches Matterhorn proportions or I spend the
evenings in my office working even after a full day at the computer. I haven’t
written a fresh word in several weeks, but my responsibilities to each book are
well ahead of schedule.
My poor MasterCard is almost on life support, but that will
change. I hope.
So what is this vaunted schedule and why am I crazy for
doing it? I plan on releasing a book both in paper and electronically every two
weeks between now (actually 30 June) and 30 October. And I think I can do it.
(Sound of fingers crossing.) Will keep everyone updated.
Commercial : PASSION’S CHOICE, a sensual romantic
time-travel to the dangerous, scandal-ridden court of the woman Pharaoh
Hatshepsut circa 1458 BC was the 30 June release. On 15 July I plan to release
THE FAIR AMAZON, a traditional Regency romance.
Caveat : Writing books is a lot more fun than publishing
them. Trust me.
7 comments:
Hi, Janis,
Congrats on your hard work paying off with publication of the new novel. Wishing you much success! Incidentally, I think the hardest part is marketing our writing and figuring out how to reach readers. The writing itself though hard work is also pleasure.
Congrats on regaining your rights--good for you!
Your plan (26 steps!) sounds like a perfect ebook waiting to be formatted and released. Could be a great revenue generator for you!
And if you didn't want to go the full ebook route you might consider offering it as a PDF to writers at a price that makes it affordable to them and makes money for you. (Your MasterCard might thank you!)
Best wishes, and let's plan a virtual celebration for the end of October!
Congratulations on your new and upcoming releases, Janis. I love seeing old books get a new chance in the market, and Passion's Choice sounds like a fun read.
wow. I've done a couple of reissues and know how much work it is. you go, lady. good luck with all of them
Best of luck--and hoping that all that hard work pays off in every way possible.
You are amazing! Even a spreadsheet! I should take a hint from you and be more organized. I usually just have a bunch of notes scattered around my computer, and then can't find the ones I need.
Having completed an Ironman Triathlon, I once wrote a blog called "Writing is an Endurance Sport." I'm working on self-pubbing my debut novel and I can attest that the publishing piece is itself a marathon. I'm exhausted thinking about all you have to do. I wish you the best possible success in your own personal marathon, Janis Susan.
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