Sci-Fi, fantasy and speculative Indie Authors Review discussion

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Spacetug Copenhagen
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Write differently knowing you won't get a publisher?
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Richard
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Sep 02, 2015 10:59AM

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I can't really say that I'd do anything differently. I wrote my first book with the intention of shopping it around,but after a very brief look at how the market had changed considerably in the decade since I'd last published, I went straight to indie and didn't look back. My next book was written with this knowledge and no, nothing changed.
Now, I will argue that my writing may have changed a bit in the last three years, but that has more to do with the natural changes from book one to two, three, etc.
Now, I will argue that my writing may have changed a bit in the last three years, but that has more to do with the natural changes from book one to two, three, etc.

In my first books I had more action, a more distinct story arc. The 'steps to space' series are much more saga-like. The problem the characters solve is to get off Earth, to the Moon, etc. No real bad-guys.

The first book I wrote I did try to shop around and it was very different from what I've written since, but it wasn't written as well. That was just inexperience. It also happened to be a lot more ambitious than most of my stuff since then. All that was matter of changes inside me, not in reaction to perceived external audiences.


Before I wrote my first novel, I attended a series of writer's conferences and spoke to many novelists who had written their first book. Many were so discouraged after sending out dozens to hundreds of query letters to traditional publishers without a positive result that they were either considering abandoning their first work as "not good enough" or giving up writing altogether.
I made two resolutions from these observations: (1) I will write the books that I would like to have read (but no one else bothered to write them yet) and (2) No matter what else happens, I will get my books into the hands of readers (as opposed to acquisition editors who have an eye on reading trends and making enough money to support their company's business).
I am not at all opposed to traditional publishing, but in my humble opinion, chasing a traditional publisher can be a black hole of a time-waster. In addition, I think the very process of sending query letters invariably causes the writer to align their writing with the perceived expectations of acquisition editors.

Publishers can try to push people into pigeonholes, or get them to effectively rewrite a version of the latest best seller.
But on the other hand Publishers aren't idiots. If they know that a certain genre does well between 60K and 200K words, they might suggest that you write your 600K epic so it falls naturally into three parts. In this case taking the advice of a publisher would make perfect sense and could reasonably produce a change

Richard wrote: "A lot of that information is out on the web, too, Jim. If one is prepared to do a bit of searching and to accept what one finds. Length, the more 'genre' you are, and less 'literary,' the more you ..."
Well there you go. I would never give two figs about whether the book I'm writing is the "correct" length for my genre, so I guess it's best I'm not writing to please a publisher.
Well there you go. I would never give two figs about whether the book I'm writing is the "correct" length for my genre, so I guess it's best I'm not writing to please a publisher.



I was too until I got the feedback that I'd have to change over half the book. (And, I'd warned them going into negotiations about the issue, too!) At that point, I knew self-publishing was the only way to go.
It's been a slow slog, but I'm also not complaining. With school, and all the homework that entails, I'm quite content for things to be moving slowly. Lets me keep my focus where it should be, while keeping the story at bay and letting me sleep.
Since then, books 2 and 3 have been a bit different. However, that's more because of the change in the story itself, not in my writing style. I write the way that feels natural. If someone out there likes what they read, and wants to help push it further into public notice - great! Otherwise, I'll keep working on it. Doors are starting to open for the indie published books that didn't used to be there, or were only for traditional books. It may mean a few extra hoops to jump through, but I don't see what benefit putting someone else between what I write and the readers provides to either side of that equation.





That said, we didn't know Kindle's big self-published sellers are often short and serialised. That would've affected how we wrote it and we'd have a very different story as a result.

And on other threads and on other forums I've heard a lot of people say how much they hate serialised books so you might have been wise to avoid it. ;-)
It could be the serial format has been overdone

I wish there was a more effective mechanism for people who've read my books to contact me. I've been disappointed by the lack of feedback. Reviews are useful, but it would be nice to have some active discussion.

After all, if we've done the job properly we're the one person who hasn't intruded into their lives



"
DOOM!

Richard wrote: "tends not to buy from new authors if they have written series books, feeling that meant they were light-weight..."
I'm kind of the same way--although I did recently read Asimov's entire Foundation series. Definitely not lightweight.
I'm kind of the same way--although I did recently read Asimov's entire Foundation series. Definitely not lightweight.

Richard wrote: "So the old rule applies: you can't win, you can't even get even, and you can't get out of the game. "
The only way to win is not to play

You can get bad series by bad authors who would also write bad individual books :-)



Does anyone like multiple povs in the same paragraph?

I just did several critiques for Critters, and then decided to stop. There was some difficult stuff, but nothing that bad.
Can I challenge this group as well. In order to disarm the Traditional Publishers, Indies have to work twice as hard. I will do at least one review a month, probably more, but at least that...honest but kind. I challenge all Indie Authors to do the same and let us prove we can be just as good, if not better.


