Thom Sibbitt's Blog, page 2
July 14, 2013
Bootstraps and International Strangers
Well, it is time to pull myself up by my bootstraps and get crackin. I may be the patron saint of over extending myself, but I am so damn close to having a print edition of this book, it is time to pull out the stops. As anybody who is going it alone knows, with work, family, projects, and holidays, the first thing to go on the shelf is the luxury of writing.
I am not sure if I am going squeeze in a trip to the east coast, but at the very least, I think I can arrange another reading here locally, for the print release. I paid the create space team for a final sweep from a professional editor and I have been sitting on the word doc for almost two months. The next steps are going through the manuscript to review changes, then format the manuscript to the create space print format. I will be using InDesign for the formatting.
Of course, I will release a 1.1 version of the ebook, with the changes and this fall, continue working on the audiobook, with the help of Mr. Sexytime (My vocal talent alter-ego). I also think I can send the book out to a few espresso book machine sites. The closet thing to Omaha is Kansas City. I think this is a groovy model though, and I am looking forward to figuring out how to get my book into those lovely indie book stores across America.
So yeah, independent publishing is officially a very low paying part time job. I am still selling a few ebooks a month, but things are petering off, to say the least. Time to re-engage and breathe some life into this project. My goal has been to achieve as much as I can in the first 12 months of publication. Best case scenario is securing a strong backlist position on Amazon.
Gotta believe and keep the momentum alive. Very grateful for my patron Abby, who works for Facebook and has been funding advertising for the FB page. So if you are a stranger out in the UK or Canada who is reading this blog for the first time, then welcome aboard:) There is a sample avialable for my novel. If you like sex and self-cannibilization, hallucinations and meditation, this might just be something you'll enjoy!
More soon. Perhaps naughty vignette? -Thom
I am not sure if I am going squeeze in a trip to the east coast, but at the very least, I think I can arrange another reading here locally, for the print release. I paid the create space team for a final sweep from a professional editor and I have been sitting on the word doc for almost two months. The next steps are going through the manuscript to review changes, then format the manuscript to the create space print format. I will be using InDesign for the formatting.
Of course, I will release a 1.1 version of the ebook, with the changes and this fall, continue working on the audiobook, with the help of Mr. Sexytime (My vocal talent alter-ego). I also think I can send the book out to a few espresso book machine sites. The closet thing to Omaha is Kansas City. I think this is a groovy model though, and I am looking forward to figuring out how to get my book into those lovely indie book stores across America.
So yeah, independent publishing is officially a very low paying part time job. I am still selling a few ebooks a month, but things are petering off, to say the least. Time to re-engage and breathe some life into this project. My goal has been to achieve as much as I can in the first 12 months of publication. Best case scenario is securing a strong backlist position on Amazon.
Gotta believe and keep the momentum alive. Very grateful for my patron Abby, who works for Facebook and has been funding advertising for the FB page. So if you are a stranger out in the UK or Canada who is reading this blog for the first time, then welcome aboard:) There is a sample avialable for my novel. If you like sex and self-cannibilization, hallucinations and meditation, this might just be something you'll enjoy!
More soon. Perhaps naughty vignette? -Thom
Published on July 14, 2013 16:26
May 22, 2013
"Be careful, they stone intellectuals in this town."
Tom Rudolf, of the Anitquarium Book Store said those words to me about 12 years ago after I purchased a copy of 'The Tropic of Cancer' from him and it has always stuck with me. In fact, I made a t-shirt of it and used to wear it when I worked at La Buvette. Hilarious, because it says "BE CAREFUL" on the front which sends the perfect message to patrons and the Buv. Proceed with caution, because these waiter bite!Today, I had the pleasure of spending a couple of hours with Tom in the relocated Antiquarium in Brownville NE. I am an absolute junky for his rare book collection, his beat writing collection and his literary journals. Heavenly.
Here is what I picked up, if you are looking for a Summer loaner!
Indian Journals Allen Ginsberg
Suppressed Books Alec Craig
A Passage to India E.M. Forster
The Devil Three Jerzy Kosinski
Women of the Beat Generation Brenda Knight
and! a 1924 printing of The Ballad of Reading Gaol Oscar Wilde
I didn't do too bad, I think:) On the indie-book track, I founder out there is an writers conference in Brownville this September. I will definitely be making an effort to attend that event. If the event is a drag, I can always spend my time basking in the shelves at the Antiquarium and shooting the philosophical shit with Tom.
Published on May 22, 2013 18:37
May 15, 2013
Where do you write?
Here is a little snapshot of my writing desk. This is the second location of my desk. It used to be in a little office and I almost never went in there. There was something way too pompish about the office, so I moved the desk into my dining room, in hopes of re-energizing the spot.
Fail.
My house is soon to be transitioning, again. Moving back into a larger bedroom and I am moving my desk with me. Not sure what I am trying to force here. Habit? discipline? Progress? I have a firm idea, or at a least setting of where my next writing project will take place. Hoping this Summer will be fruitful creatively and I can transition somewhat from my flaccid self-promotion campaign and finally start working on the next project.
Writing is strange though. I definitely carve writing-time out of the desiccated husk of my 'free time'. Usually, I find myself in the kitchen, or at the dining room table, a coffee shop... basically any other space then the one I set out to write in. I like my desk. I like my stuff. Its all pretty welcoming. Don't write there.
Perhaps the struggle is less about a writing desk, and more about where I feel home. Home has been dense and difficult for me to navigate the last several years. I am trying to put the best foot forward, but only clouds ahead. Which is to say, low visibility.
Where do you write I wonder? Do you have a special pen? A journal? I've written in a dozen different forms and formats and have developed no stuck behavior. No special objects. I guess there is no thing, no magic to summon the words. They just build themselves in a little house of cards and come tumbling down when they're ready. Who am I to go flinging marbles into things?
Published on May 15, 2013 16:16
May 5, 2013
Enders Gay
Going off topic this post to meditate on Orson Scott Card's recent press. So Ender's Game is pretty awesome. I was two books into the series and enjoying the heck out of it when I heard the news: O.S.C is a libertine (no big deal. annoying. whatever) and then... he is openly and actively and quite outspoken against Gay Marriage. Hmm, that sucks. DC recently dropped him, as the writer of a new superman series. Ender's Game is coming to the big screen in November....what am I going to do?
AHHH! A dork in crisis! I love all of these books and movies and characters. To make matters worse, I am the worst kind of moral relativist. Name someones' shitty behavior and I will find some rationalization for them. Although, I am totally against violent crime and war, I will most likely find a way to understand what led this person or nation to this act and even if I can understand why, extend them compassion and even try to forgive them.
Perhaps this is because I am such a messed up and confused, contradictory and hypocritical monkey. I just figure everyone is messed up, cause we are human, and it is not for me to judge how anyone else copes with the daily pain of living.
So, how does O.S.C write something as awesome and winning as Ender's Game end up a homophobe? Well, it is strangely all there. I just bit the bullet and read the 3rd book (Speaker for the Dead) in the ender series and sure enough, there is a world view, secretly guiding the reader... and is all crackerjacks. This is male-gaze happening, to me, in real time. Damn it.
The proof of this is in the fact that 3000 years has passed and every human settlement still acts like earth. The setting is sci-fi, but the characters and story are all 1950's america propaganda, which is pretty good stuff (MADMEN anybody?) but come on. We are already post sex = babies. Post gender. Post gender-necessitated reproduction. O.S.C is a great writer, but he is no visionary. William Gibson writes sic-fi, as in the Future, not a Retrospective that completely ignores that science is making all these issues mute over the next 50 years, much less the next 3000.
AND! there is a bunch of homo-erotiscm! The Piggies and Ender are having a huge touchy love fest by the end and don't tell me it is pure and innocent machismo man-love. Don't tell me you haven't read the Illiad O.S.C and don't tell me those men weren't having hard-core, emotionally available man sex.
Helen may have launched 10 thousand ships but Patroclus catalyzed the murder and burning of Troy. Consummated Man Love.
In conclusion:
O.S.C doesn't even know that his narrator is gay. I said it. Ender Wiggin is Gay. Which, per usual, (see michaelangelo, wilde etc...) means that the greatest Man of his age was Gay.
Now, myself... I don't actually think gay is that useful of a term. I think it is a linguistic function used to control people, by giving them a simple identity that can be understood and controlled. There is nothing simple about being a human. Nothing simple about sexuality, religion, family, self, war, hate, life. So, catch a clue O.S.C. I am glad you are not writing Superman. Because some great men I know are Gay AND they come from Kypton and you would probably just write them out of the story. Lame on you, but I still like your books, if only because you couldn't stop writing gay characters if you tried. Novihina and Ender happily married...? Wow, that was convenient.
For more fascinating thoughts and observations about O.S.C for you now-ashamed Ender's Game fans...
http://www.salon.com/2013/03/07/end_game_for_orson_scott_card_partner/
AHHH! A dork in crisis! I love all of these books and movies and characters. To make matters worse, I am the worst kind of moral relativist. Name someones' shitty behavior and I will find some rationalization for them. Although, I am totally against violent crime and war, I will most likely find a way to understand what led this person or nation to this act and even if I can understand why, extend them compassion and even try to forgive them.
Perhaps this is because I am such a messed up and confused, contradictory and hypocritical monkey. I just figure everyone is messed up, cause we are human, and it is not for me to judge how anyone else copes with the daily pain of living.
So, how does O.S.C write something as awesome and winning as Ender's Game end up a homophobe? Well, it is strangely all there. I just bit the bullet and read the 3rd book (Speaker for the Dead) in the ender series and sure enough, there is a world view, secretly guiding the reader... and is all crackerjacks. This is male-gaze happening, to me, in real time. Damn it.
The proof of this is in the fact that 3000 years has passed and every human settlement still acts like earth. The setting is sci-fi, but the characters and story are all 1950's america propaganda, which is pretty good stuff (MADMEN anybody?) but come on. We are already post sex = babies. Post gender. Post gender-necessitated reproduction. O.S.C is a great writer, but he is no visionary. William Gibson writes sic-fi, as in the Future, not a Retrospective that completely ignores that science is making all these issues mute over the next 50 years, much less the next 3000.
AND! there is a bunch of homo-erotiscm! The Piggies and Ender are having a huge touchy love fest by the end and don't tell me it is pure and innocent machismo man-love. Don't tell me you haven't read the Illiad O.S.C and don't tell me those men weren't having hard-core, emotionally available man sex.
Helen may have launched 10 thousand ships but Patroclus catalyzed the murder and burning of Troy. Consummated Man Love.
In conclusion:
O.S.C doesn't even know that his narrator is gay. I said it. Ender Wiggin is Gay. Which, per usual, (see michaelangelo, wilde etc...) means that the greatest Man of his age was Gay.
Now, myself... I don't actually think gay is that useful of a term. I think it is a linguistic function used to control people, by giving them a simple identity that can be understood and controlled. There is nothing simple about being a human. Nothing simple about sexuality, religion, family, self, war, hate, life. So, catch a clue O.S.C. I am glad you are not writing Superman. Because some great men I know are Gay AND they come from Kypton and you would probably just write them out of the story. Lame on you, but I still like your books, if only because you couldn't stop writing gay characters if you tried. Novihina and Ender happily married...? Wow, that was convenient.
For more fascinating thoughts and observations about O.S.C for you now-ashamed Ender's Game fans...
http://www.salon.com/2013/03/07/end_game_for_orson_scott_card_partner/
Published on May 05, 2013 17:07
April 29, 2013
Smelly old Books
Okay, I am going for it! Everything is in place to release a print on demand version of the book. After figuring out how to format an ebook, this is a cake walk. I am using CreateSpace, an Amazon company. It is free to upload the book and royalties are based on a slightly lower rate, until I sell lots and lots of copies. Of course, it is cheaper per book, to print in bulk, so if (when) that happens the royalty goes up.
One thing that has sparked my curiosity is the espresso book machine. This is a print in demand machine that a lot of smaller bookstores are using to print books onsite from a database library. This will be my next print platform, but of course I have no idea what the business model is, or how easy it is to distribute the book to these lovely unknown bookstores out there in america. And to those little bookstores I haven't met, I love you. I want to snuggle your shelves and sprawl out on your weathered wood floors.
Expect a report on the EBM project! In the meantime, I am actually really excited to get my book in print. Primarily, it will enable me to purchase wholesale copies to sell or give to reviewers during book readings. And of course, readers can buy a print edition directly from amazon! Not sure there is an extensive book tour in my future, but I am very much hoping to do as many readings as possible in 2013.
The manuscript is going through a final professional copy edit before I finish formatting it for Print on Demand. This was another 500 smackers on my credit card, but hopefully money well spent. The CreateSpace copy editing price was the most reasonable my research produced. Of course, you can put a few thousand dollars into CreateSpace if you are able to upload the manuscript yourself and need additional help with book design and promotion. I recommend crunching the screen time and figuring it out yourself. You can do it and the cost is Free dollars, a bucket of your time worth of them.
Maybe a month before the first spine is broke on a copy of The Turnpike, by yours truly. I hope it smells funky;)
One thing that has sparked my curiosity is the espresso book machine. This is a print in demand machine that a lot of smaller bookstores are using to print books onsite from a database library. This will be my next print platform, but of course I have no idea what the business model is, or how easy it is to distribute the book to these lovely unknown bookstores out there in america. And to those little bookstores I haven't met, I love you. I want to snuggle your shelves and sprawl out on your weathered wood floors.
Expect a report on the EBM project! In the meantime, I am actually really excited to get my book in print. Primarily, it will enable me to purchase wholesale copies to sell or give to reviewers during book readings. And of course, readers can buy a print edition directly from amazon! Not sure there is an extensive book tour in my future, but I am very much hoping to do as many readings as possible in 2013.
The manuscript is going through a final professional copy edit before I finish formatting it for Print on Demand. This was another 500 smackers on my credit card, but hopefully money well spent. The CreateSpace copy editing price was the most reasonable my research produced. Of course, you can put a few thousand dollars into CreateSpace if you are able to upload the manuscript yourself and need additional help with book design and promotion. I recommend crunching the screen time and figuring it out yourself. You can do it and the cost is Free dollars, a bucket of your time worth of them.
Maybe a month before the first spine is broke on a copy of The Turnpike, by yours truly. I hope it smells funky;)
Published on April 29, 2013 12:35
April 18, 2013
The Turnpike by Thom Sibbitt: POD - Please order Direct
The Turnpike by Thom Sibbitt: POD - Please order Direct: Is this another Part-time job? It would seem so. The good news is, you are working for yourself, which is an absolute pleasure. Every time I...
Published on April 18, 2013 09:16
POD - Please order Direct
Is this another Part-time job? It would seem so. The good news is, you are working for yourself, which is an absolute pleasure. Every time I sit down to work on this self-pubishing/promoting machine, it feels like I have just made myself a great dinner.
By way of a little check in, the ebook is published and for sale on the major book seller sites. I have submitted the title to a few ebook contests. One of which, I will hear back from this week. Website, FB, Goodreads, bloggy-blog, CHECK! And... My sales have plummeted this month. I have sold a single copy of iTunes, which tells me I have just about spun out my local network. Now the hard work begins.
I still am working local venues to book another reading, but I have moved on to researching my print options. I am trying to keep my overhead low and retain my autonomy. I am pricing a final copy edit, before I send it to print. So far my options are Amazon Print on Demand, through createspace and I company called BookMasters.
BookMasters is a pay for service independent book distributor. It seems like a good company and promises to get my book on the shelves, but it costs money and their are upkeep costs. It would be great to hear from someone who has used their services and could give me some user feedback. Still chewing on that.
Now, kudos for Amazon for making it easy. You can pay for any service you want from them. You can send them a tattered manuscript and a fist full of cash and they will edit, design you cover, and layout your manuscript for print on demand service. Or, you can do it all by yourself. I am pricing the edit, but I am considering doing all the additional work myself. There are templates and easy to follow guidelines. Frankly, Amazon has made it idiot-proof. Once your book is formatted correctly and uploaded, it is free. The cost of printing the book is built into the price, which you are free to set.
With a print-on-demand edition, you can send hard copies to reviews, purchase cheep promotional copies, set up local distribution and have some books on hand to sell during any book readings you can organize. So, that is the rough plan. Continue to work local, create a little buzz and hopeful keep the momentum going.
In conclusion... this is hard work. You really have to be prepared to stay the course if you intend on being even mildly successful independently. The good news is, my book is getting great user reviews. They come in one at a time, each review a revelation.
Murakimi couldn't have been more right. Keep your feet moving, no matter what. Dance dance dance.
By way of a little check in, the ebook is published and for sale on the major book seller sites. I have submitted the title to a few ebook contests. One of which, I will hear back from this week. Website, FB, Goodreads, bloggy-blog, CHECK! And... My sales have plummeted this month. I have sold a single copy of iTunes, which tells me I have just about spun out my local network. Now the hard work begins.
I still am working local venues to book another reading, but I have moved on to researching my print options. I am trying to keep my overhead low and retain my autonomy. I am pricing a final copy edit, before I send it to print. So far my options are Amazon Print on Demand, through createspace and I company called BookMasters.
BookMasters is a pay for service independent book distributor. It seems like a good company and promises to get my book on the shelves, but it costs money and their are upkeep costs. It would be great to hear from someone who has used their services and could give me some user feedback. Still chewing on that.
Now, kudos for Amazon for making it easy. You can pay for any service you want from them. You can send them a tattered manuscript and a fist full of cash and they will edit, design you cover, and layout your manuscript for print on demand service. Or, you can do it all by yourself. I am pricing the edit, but I am considering doing all the additional work myself. There are templates and easy to follow guidelines. Frankly, Amazon has made it idiot-proof. Once your book is formatted correctly and uploaded, it is free. The cost of printing the book is built into the price, which you are free to set.
With a print-on-demand edition, you can send hard copies to reviews, purchase cheep promotional copies, set up local distribution and have some books on hand to sell during any book readings you can organize. So, that is the rough plan. Continue to work local, create a little buzz and hopeful keep the momentum going.
In conclusion... this is hard work. You really have to be prepared to stay the course if you intend on being even mildly successful independently. The good news is, my book is getting great user reviews. They come in one at a time, each review a revelation.
Murakimi couldn't have been more right. Keep your feet moving, no matter what. Dance dance dance.
Published on April 18, 2013 09:12
March 27, 2013
The Turnpike by Thom Sibbitt: Umm... Will you tell me a little about me?
The Turnpike by Thom Sibbitt: Umm... Will you tell me a little about me?: So how do you ask someone to give you a review? AKWARD! Self promotion is the WORST. Give me a boat full of strangers and 15 minutes with ea...
Published on March 27, 2013 21:02
Umm... Will you tell me a little about me?
So how do you ask someone to give you a review? AKWARD! Self promotion is the WORST. Give me a boat full of strangers and 15 minutes with each person and I will hit the streets to get each of them a job, an apartment, an elected position, whatever they need. That is is the hard part of this, working for yourself. I would really prefer to do anything rather then work for my own self interest.
Perhaps you, like me, want one thing badly enough to face this monster, this self loathing, this fear of self... you want people to read your book. Even better, it would be nice for amazon or iTunes or anyone, a reviewer, a publisher whatever to read it, and even like it... and the end of the day it boils down to the same outcome, people reading your book.
Yes, I am still plugging away, reading blogs and newsletters, anything I can get my hands on. Indie publishing is a puzzle everyone is trying to fix. This simple fact kind of levels the playing field and that is a consolation.
So, one thing at a time! User reviews. From where I am sitting, this is the single most important thing you can do in the first six months. Establishing a strong user review base is what any future momentum is going to be built on. Eat the mustard, look one ring outside of your inner circle and do everything in your power to leverage reviews. This is where I feel it is most useful to give your book away from free.
I am working hard on getting a print release of my book so I can do this more effectively. Because I don't have a print edition, I haven't been able to send my novel to local reviewers. Getting this local review is really important but I believe with the user reviews, all the potential traffic directed to your book will have that extra push.
And that is my two wheat pennies for the evening.
Perhaps you, like me, want one thing badly enough to face this monster, this self loathing, this fear of self... you want people to read your book. Even better, it would be nice for amazon or iTunes or anyone, a reviewer, a publisher whatever to read it, and even like it... and the end of the day it boils down to the same outcome, people reading your book.
Yes, I am still plugging away, reading blogs and newsletters, anything I can get my hands on. Indie publishing is a puzzle everyone is trying to fix. This simple fact kind of levels the playing field and that is a consolation.
So, one thing at a time! User reviews. From where I am sitting, this is the single most important thing you can do in the first six months. Establishing a strong user review base is what any future momentum is going to be built on. Eat the mustard, look one ring outside of your inner circle and do everything in your power to leverage reviews. This is where I feel it is most useful to give your book away from free.
I am working hard on getting a print release of my book so I can do this more effectively. Because I don't have a print edition, I haven't been able to send my novel to local reviewers. Getting this local review is really important but I believe with the user reviews, all the potential traffic directed to your book will have that extra push.
And that is my two wheat pennies for the evening.
Published on March 27, 2013 20:54
March 17, 2013
The Turnpike by Thom Sibbitt: Retreat
The Turnpike by Thom Sibbitt: Retreat: On a crane watching sojourn in Eustis, NE with a small group of performance collaborators. We found a little cabin/family home that was a ch...
Published on March 17, 2013 12:31


