You have an agent: why self-publish? The hybrid writer

Charles Dickens self-published sometimes. And he sat on chairs the wrong way round (thank you Smabs Sputzer)
Writer Laura Pauling dropped by one of my recent posts and asked this rather interesting question:
I'm curious about your decision to self-publish as I believed you had an agent?
Yes, I have an agent. Not just one, actually; two. Jane Conway-Gordon for my adult fiction and Piers Blofeld of Sheil Land for my MG/YA work. Agented up to my eyeballs and beyond, in fact. And yet I'm self-publishing My Memories of a Future Life. What gives?
Well, My Memories of a Future Life is one of those awkward novels that agents love, editors love – but it's not what publishers are buying as breakout novels at the moment. It's come back from editors with notes that said 'we loved it but was too unconventional'.
It's a matter of timing. My Memories of a Future Life has a speculative element and would have done fine if I'd been submitting it at the same time as David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas or Iain Banks's The Bridge. But a lot has changed since they came out (particularly The Bridge, which was published in 1986).
So what's a girl to do?
Even six months ago there would have been a stigma if a professional author self-published a work of fiction. But some books fit the high-volume needs of the publishing industry and some are better as a slow-burn cult discovery.
This doesn't mean we don't need publishers. Far from it. But it does mean that professional authors are developing a hybrid approach. Alina Tugend wrote in The New York Times this week that many traditionally published authors are now choosing to self-publish some of their work. The Bookseller recently featured a group of established writers from all genres who are bringing their own projects to Kindle with their own ebook site – Kindle Authors UK.
Writers are creative people. From time to time, what we create doesn't sit within well-established genre boundaries. But that doesn't mean people don't want to read it (I refer you to paragraph 4…)
And we're only following in the footsteps of other industries. Buffy creator Joss Whedon made Dr Horrible's Sing-Along Blog himself, rather than take it to a network. But he hasn't turned his back on mainstream film and TV.
And I'm not turning my back on conventional publishing. Just because My Memories Of A Future Life doesn't fit the industry's needs doesn't mean my other books won't. Indeed, my MG/YA novel, Life Form 3, is on editors' desks right now. Because writers today can do both.
Should you self-publish too?
If your novel is solidly in the middle of a high-selling genre and isn't getting a sale, perhaps you still have work to do. But if you've got a book that's earned its spurs by securing an agent, has had good feedback but hasn't made it through the marketing department, maybe you should think about self-publishing too. (In fact I talked about this a while ago in this post here… and a lot of you had plenty to say…)
Laura has also asked how I'll be promoting the novel, as I usually blog only about writing. It deserves a post of its own, so I'll deal with that tomorrow!
In the meantime, tell me your thoughts on the changing nature of writers' careers. Personally I love the hybrid approach – some of my books will be right for mainstream and some will be better as indies. It gives us all more freedom to have fulfilling and viable writing careers. It brings readers a wider breadth of work. It keeps the artform fresh. What do you think?







