An Unexpected Sound






I wanted to sell fifty books. That had been my big goal.
In the Spring of 2007 I had finished writing Wintertide and no one showed any interest in reading it. No one. Not a soul had read a word of Emerald Storm even though that book had taken me almost two years to write (the process interrupted part way due to the move to DC,) and had been finished for six months. At the same time my first agent had stopped emailing me. Hadn’t heard a word on her search for a publisher in almost a year. My hope of getting published, which had seemed so possible a year and a half before (when I signed with the agent), was quickly fading.
All of that was deflating, but what put me into a depression was that even my wife hadn’t read the books. She’d stopped after Nyphron Rising two years before. She was working hard and just didn’t have the time.
I didn’t want to say anything. I saw it as supremely selfish. She was struggling to keep food on our table and a roof over our heads. Robin was stressed and I couldn’t complain that she didn’t read my stupid books. She noticed I was growing more and more miserable as spring came on and eventually coaxed out the truth.
Discovering that my agent had suspended her business due to personal problems and that traditional publishing had already rejected The Crown Conspiracy, my wife suggested we try self publishing. This was crazier than it seems.
Some new authors have complained how hard it is to become successful in self-publishing today as opposed to “the old days” like when I started. But in the summer of 2007 the Kindle didn’t exist. Ebooks were mostly unknown. Self published novels were knownto be the product of vanity presses, the foolish and egotistical result of talentless hacks. Success stories in self-publishing were insanely rare and usually restricted to non-fiction. This was the bottom—the place authors went to die.
We hired WendyJo Dymond, an editor we found on the Internet (who I was very pleased with.) I created a CGI cover of a dagger and a crown in a puddle of blood, and laid out the book for print. We even scrapped the cash together for a print run of 300 books that arrived right around Christmas time at the end of 2007 while I was busy writing Percepliquis. Robin was educating herself on how to get reviews, how to get the books into bookstores, and how to use social media to promote. There were no guides, no books, no websites on self publishing back then. We had to figure it out on our own and invent stuff. Then Robin asked me what our goal ought to be. How many books did she have to sell for me to feel I had achieved a level of success.
“Fifty,” I replied. I thought I was being ridiculous shooting for the moon, asking for the impossible, and just to be really mean I added. “Fifty to strangers, not family or friends.”
“I can do that,” she said smugly.
I wasn’t at all certain she could. Such was the state of self-publishing in 2007.
Those original 300 books are still in my closet because on January 1st 2008, we found the email from AMI saying they wanted to publish me and the notion of self-pubbing was abandoned. Instead Robin used her newly acquired wealth of knowledge to hold free seminars to help others taking that path.
Given my goal of selling fifty books, I was thrilled to sell out the first print run of 2200 Crownsthat AMI printed. This was success in my eyes—huge success. I was pretty content. And sales continued to rise as more of the series was published even after AMI was out of the picture and we finally did self-publish. I was so pleased I walked with a swagger. I had done it, I had achieved the impossible.
The thing is…I didn’t know what was possible.
I don’t think most new authors do.
When you write a book you hope to get published. You hope to sell several thousand copies. Ten thousand would be fantastic, because most books don’t sell that many. If you managed to achieve this, you figure that’s it, that’s all that can reasonably be expected. Sure there’s always the far-fetched dream of a movie deal, but that’s like winning the lottery. No sane person ever thinks someone will actually make a movie from their book. So if you sell several thousand copies, you’re done. Time to write the next and hope it does as well. That’s what I thought, but I was very ignorant as you’re about to discover.
The first surprise came from foreign sales. I had some overseas publishers approach me before I joined with Orbit. I didn’t think much about them. I’d heard that overseas publishers didn’t pay anywhere near what a US publisher did. And this is true. I think I got about $3,000 from my first deal. What I overlooked was that there’s a lot of foreign countries in the world. For some strange reason I never imagined how big that market was. Then of course there was the Orbit deal. Something else I never thought would happen.
So now that I landed Orbit and fourteen foreign overseas deals, I figured I had finally squeezed out the last bit of toothpaste from this tube. I was confident in my conclusion. I was also wrong.
Orbit got the audio rights when I signed with them. That is to say, they had the right to sell them to an audio publisher. Of all the venues, I figured audio was the weakest, so no big loss. I was concerned Orbit might not bother to even make an audio book, but I’d live with that. As it turned out they sold the rights to Recorded Books. Cool, I thought. So I have an audiobook for the twenty-five people in the world who would be willing to spend the $40 to buy it. I thought of it as a novelty, (is there a pun there?)
A few months ago I received a bonus check from Audible, who sells my audiobooks. Robin and I were pleasantly surprised to get anything. We did a little dance, because that’s just what you do at times like that.
Then this week something strange began to occur. My author rating on Amazon improved dramatically. Since the inception of the Author Rank (in October) I would fluctuate between 95 – 115 for FantasyAuthors (which meant I was off the top 100 often). Then yesterday I was in the 50’s and today in the 40’s. We couldn’t figure it out. Sure, it was Christmas time. Okay so people might be buying gifts. I had a podcast recently released. I was on a few yearend lists and a few most anticipated books of 2013, but I found it odd that any of this would take me from about 100 to 41. I was beating Neil Gaiman on the Action & Adventure list!
This morning my wife finally sleuthed the mystery: audio books.
Like most authors, I—well okay, my wife does the looking and reports to me—watch the Amazon lists for ebooks and print, and she also checks in on the audible lists. I’m always doing fairly well on each. There was a time during the lull in the summer when only the ebooks were still showing up on the Historical Fantasy Bestsellers list. Then as fall approached my print sales improved and both print and ebooks were there. Today all three of the audio books joined them, and the audio for Theft of Swordswas at #4! Now that is strange.
We had recently discovered that one of the editors selected Theft of Swords as their #1 Pick for 2012.  So that might have been the reason. But a little more digging showed that Theftalso made two other lists:
·         2012 The Best of Everything Top 20 5-Star Listens – Theft of Swords·         2012 Sci-Fi & Fantasy  Top 15 5-Star Listens – Theft of Swords
The first one is the real shocker. My book is listed along with titles by J.R.R. Tolkien, Stephen King, Nora Roberts, Vince Flynn, and Ken Follett. As it turns out we completely underestimated the audio market. Theft of Swords now has 200 reviews on Amazon. But—on Audible.com it has over 800 with an amazing 4.5 rating!
All I ever wanted was to sell fifty books. According to royalty statements, unit ledgers, and including my self-pubbed numbers, I’ve now sold over a quarter million. And that doesn’t include foreign language or…audiobooks.
Thank you Tim Gerald Reynolds (the narrator of my audio books), thank you readers, AND listeners, and thank you audible for making audio versions so popular. You’ve made this a very Merry Christmas.
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Published on December 20, 2012 08:51
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message 1: by Anne (new)

Anne Lyle That's awesome, Michael - interesting to hear that audiobooks are so popular. I did hear that they sell well to long-distance truckers in the US :)

Makes me wonder what my own audiobook figures will look like - the first one only came out in June, so it's early days yet...


message 2: by Soul (new)

Soul An inspiring story for each one of us.. Thanks for sharing.. :)


message 3: by SarahBeth (new)

SarahBeth I just downloaded Theft of Swords. Good pick for narrator. Can't wait to listen to it and figure out just how many names I've been pronouncing wrong.


message 4: by Christina (new)

Christina I am so, so glad you and Robin persisted with the challenges of getting published. I suggest your books each time a friend asks for suggestions for a fantasy novel. It's a small detail that I suggest the entire series, right? ;)

I picked up a physical copy of Theft of Swords earlier this year and instantly lost it to hubby. The next afternoon he purchased Rise of Empire and Heir of Novron as iBooks -- apparently waiting for me to go out to another B&N that evening was too far away. We now have multiple copies of your books and they are SO worth it.

We're very much looking forward to your Chronicles series coming out.


message 5: by Steven (new)

Steven Ede Well done Michael! I'll need to look up those Audio books .... i like to listen to books whilst (supposed to be) working. :-) Love the Series and can't wait till August (according to Amazon UK) when The Crown Tower is out.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and your family


message 6: by Michael (last edited Dec 30, 2012 09:50AM) (new)

Michael @Anne - I'm anxious to see then numbers on the audio as well - my audio contract only reports royalties once a year so it will show up in the statement I get in March.

@Soul - thanks

@Sarah - I agree Recorded Books picked a great narrator an haha about the pronouciations

@Christina - Thanks for recommending - and for the support of multiple copies - I'm also looking forwar to Chronicles.

@Steven - thanks I hope you had a good Xmas and it's nice seeing people excited about the new series.


message 7: by Eva (new)

Eva Minster Congratulations.


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