Don't Look Down On Me

In my interactions with other authors, I cannot help but notice a disturbing mindset many hold.

It would seem that there are a number of authors who view the shifting sands in publishing as a bad thing. I happen to vehemently disagree.

First off—so you understand where I am coming from—I am an indie author. And by that I mean, after writing for pleasure over a number of years, I decided to write a novel. I spent well over a year on my manuscript, and ultimately ended up hiring my own copyeditor and layout person. I made the conscious, informed decision to publish under my own press. I did not smack the keyboard, dub myself Tolkien, and hit the ‘Make Kewl Book Now’ button.

While I had interest from agents on my manuscript, all I heard back was “we like it, but it’s too long, the publishing world is in flux, we don’t want to take any risks.”

Fine.

Agents/publishers want sure things now. They are scared…I understand. Travel agents were scared, too, when people could start booking their own flights online.

I had made a few contacts (authors, other people in publishing) through various places and asked for feedback on the content of my work. The response was universally positive (I also received some invaluable criticism).

So, here I was: an unknown with a great, very-long story that had no chance of ever sniffing a traditional publishing house because of skittishness flittering about the industry.

Going the indie route was my intentional, professional choice. The reviews, accolades, and fans I have garnered tell me it was the right one. Had I not, Progeny (The Children of the White Lions, #1) would be sitting on my hard drive still, the nine short stories of the Terrene Chronicles (Merchant, Family, Rivals) would never have been written, and the manuscript I am editing for the second book in the series would have been non-existent.

For authors like me, these are exciting times. Doors are opening for us that would have remained closed for an indeterminate amount of time. I would have languished for at least as long as the publishing industry figures out what in the hell they are going to do now that they are not the sole gatekeepers.

I have heard some established authors lament that there is not some sort of way to thin the herd of the self-published ebooks flooding the market. To a big extent, I agree with them. It would be ideal if there were some sort of benchmark to identify the good from the bad. But what could that be? Would you be in favor of some sort of vetting process for indie authors? Perhaps like a sort of credit rating agency for writers?

However, is that not consolidating the power to ‘make or break’ authors in the hands of the very few? Just like it is today?

I understand there will be authors who have been in the industry for thirty years that look at us with heavy skepticism. It is natural. Luckily, I have found some kindred souls in this process—some are indies like me, others are multi-NYT bestsellers—who have been nothing but supportive and encouraging.

Yes, publishing is changing. But in my mind, this is a good thing.

Progeny (The Children of the White Lions, #1)  by R.T. Kaelin

Published in December of 2010, Progeny has reached the top 10 in Top Rated Epic Fantasy on Amazon.com.

Visit http://www.rtkaelin.com for more information on me and my work.

Best/easiest place to get book (Print or Kindle) is at Amazon where there are 23/26 five-star reviews.

It is however available for the Nook and other eReaders via Smashwords or iTunes.
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Published on July 21, 2011 18:18 Tags: fantasy, high-fantasy, indie, indie-author, publishing, self-publishing
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message 1: by Donna (new)

Donna Overall Bravo, Ryan! I'm so glad you forged your own path!


message 2: by Sarah Hans (new)

Sarah Hans Look at this, I created a Goodreads account JUST to comment on your post! (it was probably long overdue...)

Anyway, in general I agree with the people who say that there are too many vanity books on the market, and if you can't find a home for your book with a publisher then it probably has no business being in print. It's either not ready, or it's not marketable, or it's not very good.

But you're proving me wrong.

The fact is that there IS a vetting process for novels that are independently published. Amazon, goodreads, B&N all have rating systems. Twenty years ago, there was no way to identify which independently published novels were worth reading, because there was no rating system. Now, I can just hop on any one of these websites and immediately see whether the book is worth reading or whether it's a vanity project I should skip.

Some books won't appeal to major publishers for silly reasons--like length, or subject matter--but that doesn't mean they don't deserve to be published. And the proof is in the pudding; if a book is indie published and good, it will get excellent reviews, and it will sell. And your book has made a lot of pudding. Or, maybe it is the pudding, I don't really know where I'm going with this metaphor, but you get the idea. You went the indie route, and you're making it work. Your book is making it work! And you're changing the minds of people like me, who thought that a book had to be published by a major publishing house to be worthy of a read.


message 3: by Phaedra (new)

Phaedra Weldon That was a brilliant post. Now, go back and put in links to buy your work!

Phaedra


message 4: by R.T. (last edited Jul 22, 2011 10:08AM) (new)

R.T. Kaelin Sarah -

Glad you're here now. :) It's a good community to get involved with. And I'm glad that that you are openminded about this. Many are not.

Phaedra -

Yeah...oops. All fixed, now. I was sort of focused on the message, and not the need to wave my hand and say, 'Buy my book!' Bad me. ;)


message 5: by Laura (new)

Laura Great job Ryan - I am totally excited for all that you are doing. A long way from when we met at ICC 10 years ago :)


message 6: by R.T. (new)

R.T. Kaelin Laura wrote: "Great job Ryan - I am totally excited for all that you are doing. A long way from when we met at ICC 10 years ago :)"

Thanks, Laura. I have found something I love doing.


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