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Posts Tagged ‘ebooks’

Did You Get an E-Reader For Christmas?

Tuesday, December 27th, 2011

If you received an e-reader for Christmas and are looking for titles to fill it up, why don’t you check out my stories?

Kindle:

Through a Crimson Veil (Crimson City 3)
Dark Awakening (A novella originally published in Shards of Crimson)
The Troll Bridge (A short story set on Jarved Nine)
Blood Feud (A short story)

Nook:

Through a Crimson Veil (Crimson City 3)
Dark Awakening (A novella originally published in Shards of Crimson)
The Troll Bridge (A short story set on Jarved Nine)
Blood Feud (A short story)

Other E-Readers:

Through a Crimson Veil (Crimson City 3)
Dark Awakening (A novella originally published in Shards of Crimson)
The Troll Bridge (A short story set on Jarved Nine)
Blood Feud (A short story)

To check out my other books in electronic format, please visit my website.

More Ebooks Please

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

For a variety of reasons, I’ve been looking for some of my favorite books in e-format. Specifically for Kindle since that’s the e-reader I use. To my great disappointment, the results have been less than stellar.

One of the books I wanted was available, but priced ridiculously high. I blogged about that last week, I think. The other titles I’m looking for don’t seem to be out as an ebook anywhere. I assumed that because these were older books and out of print that the authors had their rights back. I found out with one author that this wasn’t the case–she hadn’t been able to get her rights back from what I read online. I don’t know about the third one.

It’s not that I’m going to get rid of my paper copies of these books–I’m not–but I would like them in e-format, too. I guess I have an interesting perspective on things because I know so many authors who do have their rights back and who are getting them out there as ebooks. It honestly shocks me when I can’t find what I’m looking for on Amazon for my Kindle. Although, after the past week and all the books I can’t get, maybe I shouldn’t be so stunned anymore, huh?

I guess my plea is to all the authors who have their rights back and aren’t doing anything with them, please, get these books formatted for the different readers and available for sale. At a reasonable price. You don’t know who is out there, waiting to buy it. Like me.

And readers, I do have the rights back to my first four books and I am working to get them out there in e-format. It’s just taking longer than I’d hoped. My goal is before Christmas. I can do this. I hope.

Authors, Ebook Backlists, and the Sweet Spot

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

On Twitter this weekend we were talking about books and the conversation had me mentioning a couple of mystery series written by a romance writer. There are romances in both of the series, but they’re a subplot, not the main plot. Thinking about these books made me wonder if they were in ebook format yet or not. I went over to take a look.

And there was the first book for my favorite of the two series. Yea! Except it was priced at $8.99. Huh?

This surprised me. The series was old enough that I thought it would cost a lot less, even with agency pricing. Especially since it ended after only four books. I would have liked the title on my Kindle, but I wasn’t paying that much when I had a paper copy on my shelves. (A paperback, BTW, that cost $5.99 and then I probably had a discount on it, too.) I thought the price was ridiculous. There wasn’t a disclaimer from Amazon saying that the price had been set by the publisher, so I scrolled down. The publisher listed was one I’d never heard of before and definitely not who put it out originally.

This got me curious. I Googled them and checked out the website that came up. It was a literary agent who started e-publishing authors’ backlists in 2001. I think that’s the date they listed on their site.

All I could think was wow.

First of all, they only give the author 50% until a certain sales threshold is met, then it goes to 60%. The 60% is okay if they’re providing other services besides just formatting the books and uploading them. I’m sorry, but it’s not that hard to format and the author could hire that out at a flat rate if she wasn’t tech savvy. (And to my dismay, many authors are most definitely not tech savvy.) The cover put on the book was lame enough that I could have done it myself, another huge strike. That’s my quality measure when it comes to graphics–if I can do it, it’s not good enough.

My second thought was this agency is grossly mismanaging the ebook publishing endeavor, and not only with the poor cover art. Okay, at least they’re mismanaging with this one book by this one author. I didn’t check out the other books they handle, but I’m assuming they’re doing the same thing with everyone else, too. The pricing is ridiculous.

I’m not a proponent of selling books in eformat for $2.99, not even backlist. I think that’s too low and devalues the incredibly hard work it takes to write a full-length novel, but at the same time, there’s no way I’m paying $8.99 either–not even for a new release. It made me wonder how many other people would have bought the ebook if the price had been less. If it had been $5.99 or lower, I know I would have picked up the book in electronic format because it’s just easier to have it accessible on my Kindle.

So from where I’m standing, the author got a bad cover and she’s getting only 50% royalties unless she passed whatever threshold amount was set, which I doubt because they’re pricing her out of sales. This doesn’t sound like a good deal to me or a smart way to handle backlist.

Why So Happy?

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

Lately around the interwebs, I’ve seen people gleefully proclaiming that ebooks have killed off paper. I don’t understand this attitude.

Before I go any farther, let me explain that I do own an e-reader (mine’s a Kindle 2 and I bought it when it was still incredibly expensive) and I buy most of my fiction in e-format. I like having the book I want arrive instantly. I like the convenience of having hundreds of books with me. If I change my mind on what I feel like reading, I’m not stuck with the story I thought I wanted to read. I also like the fact that ebooks don’t take up room in my house.

On the other side of the coin, I’ve e-published my short stories from the two Mammoth book collections I was part of and I’ll be publishing my backlist titles in e-format, too. I’ve written two Harlequin Nocturne Bites which only come out in electronic format.

This is my way of explaining that yes, I like ebooks, and yes, I read ebooks, and yes, I’ve been published in electronic format. I have nothing against ebooks, nor am I a champion of paper books.

When I see these paper books are dead posts, it’s the tone that irritates me. Why are these people so happy about this? Personally, I don’t feel strongly one way or the other. If I were sharing the statistics on the percentage of books sold in e-format, I would do it with a newsy approach. An oh, isn’t this interesting attitude. So when I see people ready to dance a jig on the grave of mass market paperback, I wonder–why?

For authors, it’s usually pretty easy to come up with an answer, but it’s the readers who are so elated that have me scratching my head. Are these early adopters who feel vindicated that the format is finally gaining traction? Is that why they’re so happy? Because they’ve been “proven right?”

While I’m happy ebooks are doing well, I don’t pop around the internet singing ding, dong the witch is dead, which old witch? The paperback witch. It’s a format. It’s a technology. In twenty years, maybe we’ll have something completely different.

If you’re reading pixels or if you’re reading the printed word or if having the book inserted into your brain via nanoprobe doesn’t make any difference. The only thing that does matter is the story.

So yeah, why do some people feel so much joy when one format overtakes another? It’s like rooting for MP3 over CDs and I’ve never seen music fans doing this. They might debate sound quality in various formats, but that’s tangible. And in books, as long as the ebook is formatting correctly, there really is no quality difference, just preferences for the reader.

My guess is I’ll be puzzling over this for a while. No answers are occurring to me.

Pubbing My Short Stories

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

When I sold my two short stories to Mammoth Book collections, I retained the ebook rights. The offer I received for them was far too low and I held on to them. Thus began the great self-publishing experiment.

I knew I wanted to make these stories available to readers who simply wanted my stories, not the entire collection. It took me longer than I planned, but I found step by step instructions for Kindle that were clear and easy to follow. Amazon also made the process of uploading painless and it didn’t take long for me to get the stories up in that format.

Around the same time, Barnes & Noble came out with their PubIt program for self-publishing on their Nook. I dragged my feet on this one because so many other authors were having trouble, but when I was nudged and finally sat down and did it, this was painless as well. A mere one click in Calibre to convert the Kindle version to the Nook EPUB version.

I thought I was done since other readers do EPUB and I didn’t select DRM, so it should all be good. Only I found out it wasn’t. BN Nookifies their files. I promised I’d get the stories up so everyone could read them.

So last night I tackled Smashwords.

I’d read their instructions at the same time I was working on the Kindle version, but what they said for formatting made my head hurt. That was why I was hoping to stop at Amazon and BN, but someone posted clear directions that were clear on a loop I’m on and I decided now was the time to give it another shot.

I decided to start with one story and see how it went. Since Blood Feud is shorter than Troll Bridge, I started with that one. I formatted and uploaded relatively quickly. And found myself 700 and something in queue. Gak! It was already after 9pm, so I went to bed.

This morning, I expected to have an error report on why my upload couldn’t be processed. I didn’t. Apparently it went through the meat grinder okay and is up for sale at Smashwords. I haven’t had time to review the file yet, but I will after I post this blog. I hope it looks as good after conversion here as it looks on Kindle and Nook.

If it does, I will work on Troll Bridge next. If it doesn’t, I’ll be reformatting and trying again. I’m also waiting approval to go in the premium catalog which would put my book up at Sony, Diesel, Kobo, and Apple among others. This is where my formatting will really be put to the test. Keep your fingers crossed.

BTW, I’ll share the links in a later post. I want to verify everything looks good before anyone buys a copy. Call me an anal perfectionist, but well, I am. This isn’t always a bad thing because as a reader, I hate poorly formatted ebooks. I don’t want to inflict them on any of you.

Brave New World

Friday, September 10th, 2010

Y’all know I wrote two short stories for Mammoth Books. I only contracted for non-exclusive print rights and have my electronic rights. I’ve decided to take the leap and self-publish the E version myself.

I’m having covers created as we speak. I’m writing the “back cover” copy that describes the book right now, too. This is forcing me to flex writing muscles that have mostly been unused since my college days when I was an advertising copywriting major. When I have these two things finished, I’ll have to work on getting the stories formatted correctly for upload. This is the part I’m concerned about.

My plan is to start with Kindle and then figure out what to do with the other formats. If other authors have done it, I can, too. Especially since I’m more tech savvy than most writers are. (Don’t even get me started on “I want an XP computer because Windows 7 is too different.”)

I know that I want to clearly label these stories as being short so that no one is surprised when they read one. I also want to label them as being previously published in Mammoth Book collections so no one gets a repeat when they expected something new. As a reader, I sure would want to know these things ahead of time.

I’m excited about getting these stories out there on their own. I know there are people who want The Troll Bridge (it’s a Jarved Nine tale), but who don’t want to buy the entire Mammoth Book collection to get it. Also, I want to get Blood Feud out on it’s own because it’s the first story set in the same world in which my Nocturne Bites take place.

When the covers are finished, I’ll share them here, of course. I’ll also post when the stories are available. If this goes awesome, I might try to slip a few more Jarved Nine short stories into my schedule. I’d love to do Flare, Gravedigger, and Z-Man’s stories. What would be most fun about it? They happen before Troll’s story so I’d get to see his character when he was younger than in Troll Bridge.

Two Dozen FREE eBooks!

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Free eBooks!

Tor.com is giving away about two dozen free ebooks! There are two paranormal romances and the rest are SF/F, but it’s a good opportunity to try new authors or to get copies of books you’ve already read in another format. I’m trying to figure out how to load them on my iPod because I don’t want to carry my laptop with me to read them. :-) They’re only available for a limited time, so if you’re interested, I wouldn’t wait too long to click over.

The Rest of the Blog

Now on to my usual stuff. I looked out of the window this afternoon and thought I saw flowers around my daffodils. I couldn’t be sure, though, from the distance I was at and I decided to take my camera down just in case. And wonder of all wonders, my new daffodils, the ones I planted back in like April or May, have little, tiny flowers on them! Pictures another day. I ran out of time to download them off the camera and crop one up.

I spent this afternoon trying to get all my snail mail items ready to go in the mail. I think I succeeded, too! That means I can cross one item off my lengthy To Do List. It took forever to get it all together and I think I have like half a dozen separate things that need to go, but it’s a huge relief to accomplish something. I haven’t done much of that since I turned my book in. :-) I was so excited, I even started to tackle my email backup, but I only answered one note before my laziness kicked in again and decided to do my blog instead.

My next goal for the day after I finish here is to get to bed early. You’d think that would be an easy one, but the Cubs are playing in Arizona and the games don’t start until 8:30 my time. Even staying up for just a few innings is too long when the alarm goes off at 4am for the Evil Day Job.


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