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Jim Webster, (In On a Chance! )
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David
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Sep 02, 2014 01:25AM

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It's a gamble, we're flying totally blind.
I think the best route is
1) Have a big web presence, perhaps be known on various forums where there's a lot of fan fiction.
2) Write a book
3) Let other people on all these boards know you're writing a book
4) Start organising a blog tour
5) Publish the book

It's a tough gig, standing in front of customers, waving one book and saying : Hey, I've got a series!
(Trust me on that, I've done it... It's a lot easier after book 3 comes out)

There are various sites where you can advertise your free book and you do need to do that, and resubmit it from time to time, to get noticed and have downloads. The big one, BookBub, are fussy about who they accept, although the only two books I downloaded from them were actually great stories, shockingly badly told.
Also, I think it might be worth fluctuating the price so that it's not always free. It's a massive ballache though, so I haven't tried that thus far.
The review rate is very low, mostly it's friends or members of a book review circle I'm in the Rave Reviews Book Club - they charge an entry fee now but I joined when it was free. Anyone who does join, do mention my name won't you!
Um... yeh so reviews are normally mates which shows that you should use the forums as your watercooler. And blog. Blogging is good too.
Cheers
MTM

Good to hear from you.
Thanks for this info, its great to hear that others are having or have had the same problems as me.
I have just persuaded my publisher to reduce the cost of my first book, The Belgae Torc, (Kindle copy) to £2.99. He wouldn't go any lower, but we will keep an eye on feedback and respond when necessary.
Regards
Kevin

There's a thread somewhere for price drops, there's your author thread, stick it on facebook, hope other friends mention it as well

it raises you out of the horde of 99p authors and suggests that you value the work (plus it's one indication that you have a publisher behind you) highly, without being too costly for someone to have a punt on a new author.

Its all that wibbly wobbly timey wimey stuff.


Matt.
Although I don't think he invented it -- Tenant was certainly using it.

Actually I tend to look at all four books as one book, and they're a cracking read :-)

Actually I tend to look at all four books as one book, and they're a cracking read :-)"
Bless you! Thanks. I'm still very grateful.You're right about the one book in many respects it is one story which is divided up in three convenient places. And as an author it feels more as if I have my first book out after my fourth, because it's the first complete story arc, so to speak.
Cheers
MTM

http://www.wired.com/2013/06/digital-...



But I think we get people who read voraciously and they're the ones who will read a book a day and are really looking for the £1 e-books if only to keep the cost of their addiction down :-(

(which is probably why one of my recent reviews said "obviously written by a man." Ho hum. )



I think I could write a romance. I'd kind of like to, although in my own terms of romance, I think I probably already have. I suppose there'd have to be a bit less of the idealistic stuff and a few more scenes like the one with General Moteurs and Deirdre behind the door.
I have to confess, my Mum loves Georgette Heyer and I read one and enjoyed it too. But then, they are really well researched. Heyer did loads of research in to colloquial Regency speech to get her characters right. And it has frock coats and swords in it. I'm a sucker for a sword fight... and a frock coat... and a snog at the end. Mwha ahahargh!
If I wrote a romance, though, it would have to ring truer than the usual types (I've tried reading some) where two people who are obviously destined together fall out and spend a whole book arguing about nothing... and I'd probably go and set it in space.
Cheers
MTM

Cheers
MTM


I did write romance!
Stops as everybody goes quiet and turns to stare
It's one of the stories in Romantic Heroes
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00KWAO856
Someone here read my contribution. It made her day, she got the chance to use the phrase, "It's Romance Jim, but not as we know it."
That's an opportunity which doesn't come round all that often

That's an opportunity which doesn't come round all that often "
At least I could get close to that...

From the Hugo-winning "Blink": http://youtu.be/vY_Ry8J_jdw
"People assume that time is a strict progression of cause to effect, but actually, from a nonlinear, non-subjective viewpoint, it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey... stuff."
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