Terri Giuliano Long
Self-Publishers: The New Generation of Cool Kids
“By self-publishing you beat the odds to get published,” says Steven Axelrod, a prominent literary agent, the first to negotiate a seven-figure deal for an indie author. In Axelrod’s experience, the traditional gatekeepers—agents and editors—frequently miss the mark. Read On
Kickstarter: Funding Publishing Dreams
With Kickstarter’s crowd-funding platform, authors and publishers can fund their project without going broke or borrowing money from investors. Artists and entrepreneurs maintain creative, managerial, and financial control of their project, and the financing comes with no strings attached, as both Kickstarter guidelines and current law forbid sharing profits with backers. Read On
Glen Craney: Self-Pubbing Pioneer
Had I known of all the pitfalls and challenges that lay ahead, I’m not sure I would have embarked on the journey. An entire industry has been spawned to profit off of fledgling writers who crave to see their name in bold letters. Read On
The Year Indies Finally Got On Top
Most difficult was enduring the stigma. Traditional publishers wrote the rules; no one—publishing houses, agents or mainstream media—would touch self-published authors, largely denigrated as hacks who couldn’t cut it in the traditional world. Read On
Self Publishing: Second Class No More?
Literary agent Steven Axelrod, who represents self-publishing rock star Amanda Hocking, credits readers for opening new opportunities for independent authors. Readers no longer see a huge difference between self- and traditionally published books, Axelrod says. Read On
Stop the GR Bullies:
Retaliation & Backlash
He [the critic] makes the work of art live for the spectator; he makes the spectator live for the work of art. Out of the process comes understanding, appreciation, intelligent enjoyment — and that is precisely what the artist tried to produce. – H.L. Mencken, Criticism of Criticism of Criticism Read On
Where Do Books Come From? The Many Ways to Birth a Book
Gone are the days when books either came from a traditional publishing house or a vanity press. These days there are lots more options. Read On
Why You Can’t Find Indies In Store
More than half the top 20 books on Amazon’s current Kindle “Movers and Shakers” list—hot books rising fastest up the Amazon sales ranks—are indie or small press published. Why then, given their popularity, are so few indie books available on bookstore shelves? Read On
The Down-Low on Exclusivity Clauses
Is Amazon’s new KDP Select program a game-changer for authors? Well, yes, no, and maybe. Read On
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