Updates for 2009-03-07

  • RT @rdonoghue … the true levels of skill are roughly: Tragically inept, Humorously inept, Competent, Noteworthy, Badass and That One Guy. #
  • For #followfriday: twitter fic-e-zine @thaumatrope. Great stuff. My favs? #DrGnome & #futurejer, serial fiction both like & unlike @finnras. #
  • Roger Ebert gives a spoiler-free Watchmen… review? No, let’s say “reaction”. http://is.gd/lQ7F #
  • Adrift: The route Mak and I take ends near the bazaar’s ceiling. From there, we low-g brachiate to .. http://tinyurl.com/agweag #
  • I dangle, unsure if I can survive the fall /or/ pull myself up with a hole in my shoulder. The gargoyle suggests I drop. #fiction #
  • Random Average: Missing a game, and not http://snipurl.com/da6wh #
  • Random Average: Running Watchmen with Spirit of the Century. Kinda. http://twurl.nl/yd7qm2 #
  • And yeah, I’m tweeting/posting a lot about Watchmen today – forgive me for getting swept up in the zeitgeist. it happens. #
  • Okay, I know that iPhone, iTouch, iDontcare is the new hotness, but can anyone direct me toward a die-roller for blackberry? I googlefail. #

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Updates for 2009-03-06

  • Retweet @mightymur Have much fear: today is #queryfail day. Follow agents (me: like @daphneun) and learn. #
  • Is @secrettweet schadenfreude or short fiction? Can’t decide, but weirdly fascinated. (Via @amandafrench) in reply to amandafrench #
  • Heh: RT @danielliterary: Refer to your work as a “fictional novel”? #queryfail (If I had a buck for every time @daphneun said this…) #
  • Charming Daughter begged my breakfast off me on the way to school. Stomach rumbling, and free donuts at work: no one’s will is that strong! #
  • RT @maureenjohnson: Seriously. If you want to know about publishing, search Twitter for #queryfail & @DaphneUn. This is like a live class. #
  • RT @lindseyleej: “Number one lesson I’m learning from #queryfail: don’t be a weirdo.” Preach it, sister. #
  • Our first date. I tell her /everyone/ has issues. I lost my fiancĂ© in a fire two years ago. Her? She’s been ordered to kill me. Oh. #fiction #
  • Via @neilhimself: A complete collection of Zelazny’s short fiction and poetry, in six hardcover volumes. http://bit.ly/15f9Ym #fanboy #
  • Today: Daddying, database, org mtg, flash fiction (x2), WBT dev & delivery, refi home, yoga, bowling, & midnight #Watchmen. I am LEGION. #
  • Adrift: As we slip out the back, Mak mentions that the last time I was here, I told him my crew /was/ my .. http://tinyurl.com/d2om4y #
  • Who watches the Watchmen? Me, in about 30 minutes. Yes, I have to work tomorrow. Been a long, cah-RAYzy day… #

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Updates for 2009-03-05

  • Getting caught up on Twitter. It’s a bit like taking part in a conversation you time-shifted on your DVR. #
  • Irony: on the subject of 140-character posts, I respond to a 1-word blog with a 2-page comment. “Different modes for different codes.” Word. #
  • Feeling very wordy today. Praps s’why I haven’t written today’s @finnras? Let’s find out… #
  • Adrift: Kaetlyn is family. Deirdre is crew, just like Yoren – just like Jon. Better if everyone remembers.. http://tinyurl.com/c7fpx7 #
  • Gaaaah! Can’t get logged into twitter.com. Remote-posting apps work fine (oh, wait… no they don’t. Grrr). #

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Updates for 2009-03-04

  • No one outside publishing cares how a book is published. “POD” is invisible to the consumer; they’re looking for a good story. The end. #
  • Woo. Quiet, intense morning. Time to hit [=] on publisher-musing, and [>] on actual writing (cart, meet horse). But first: Lunch! #
  • Dear Cult of Done: I think I’m in love. http://tinyurl.com/CultOfDone (How to incorporate this into my Time Management class?) #
  • Adrift: Hard to say yes… but not impossible. I’m going to find whatever Kaetlyn found, alone,.. http://tinyurl.com/am2b6f #
  • Okay, writing didn’t happen yet, due to other-job interruptions. Other Job is so needy sometimes, but also my sugarmomma. Sigh. Woe. ;) #
  • … and now I’m hungry. #
  • NBC/Heroes is SO BRAVE to tell the story of a power-drunk, paranoid government. Sure, it’s years late, but it’s EDGEY, right? No? No. #
  • Feeling very planny. Plannish. Full of plan. Current plan involves going to bed. Is a good plan. G’night all. #

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(Anticlimatic) attack of the POD people

Here’s a little story for you.

A few years ago, I found out a friend of mine had written a book. A real-life book!

I was going to meet this person face to face, so I bought their book off Amazon, squirreled it away in my bookshelf, and when we met, I asked them to sign it.

The thing that was odd to me at the time was that this person seemed — almost embarrassed by my grinning enthusiasm. When I asked, they finally said “I just did it through a vanity press – it’s not from a real publisher.”, or words to that effect.

Now, to be fair, they work in publishing, so that sort of thing mattered significantly to them. (I shouldn’t use the past tense — I’m sure it still matters.) But me? I’m basically a consumer; I don’t know the publishing industry – I only know reading.

I’m closer to the publishing world than I used to be — married into it, you might say — but even so, I hardly ever hear the term ‘vanity press’ anymore, at least not in reference to reputable businesses like lulu.com. That’s partly because of the indie gaming industry and how it works, but also because I think people are starting to feel a shift coming in the traditional publishing world. Either way, I tend to look at the whole thing from the point of view of an outsider, and this is what I see with my outsider eyes:

Only people in publishing care how a book is published. The “POD” label is invisible to the consumer; they’re just looking for a good book.

This is a true statement. I know it, because I’ve been the consumer who bought a book and didn’t know (or care) that it was from a POD press until someone told me. It just doesn’t matter.

Is it a good or a bad book? That matters. Publishers, editors, and agents provide a filtration system that helps improve the quality of the products they (eventually) produce; it’s fair to say that the traditional publishing method filters out a lot of crap.

But it’s not the only way such things can happen.

Updates for 2009-03-03

  • Random Average: AP Report: In a Wicked Age: Genii, Mad Spirits, and Snakes (in your Pants) http://tinyurl.com/dg3xxs #
  • Via @rdonoghue: Amazon caves to mealymouthed, money-grubbing, luddite, AG: http://tinyurl.com/auv6pm #
  • ME: Tiny Twitter? TT: … ME: Buddy? *shakes phone gently* TT: UNCAUGHT EXCEPTION – APPLICATION TINYTWITTER NOT RESPON– ME: Noooooooo! #
  • Adrift: Jon asks if I’m really going to leave our 11-year old pilot alone with Yoren in the middle .. http://tinyurl.com/bwr95e #
  • Via @feliciaday: Proposed Twitter features: http://is.gd/lmyi [Good suggestions, but 3 and 6 show v.poor understanding of links/metadata.] #

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I think I know what indie book publishing is going to look like

Over on the Writers Digest website, someone named Jane writes a series called There Are No Rules.

Her most recent post is “My Big Rant on Self-Publishing”. It starts out like this:

I can’t tell you how tired I am of hearing people bash self-publishing. The things I hear usually fall into two categories:

  • Most self-published books aren’t quality
  • Some self-publishing services are unethical

If you agree with one of the above statements, let me lay it out real clear for you: The landscape is changing, and if you haven’t noticed, you’re behind the times.

Now, before you dismiss this as yet-another rant from yet-another scheming self-publishing ne’er-do-well, I should point out that this particular “Jane” is Jane Friedman. Jane Friedman was the President and Chief Executive Officer of HarperCollins Publishers Worldwide, one of the world’s leading English-language publishers, for eleven years. She came to HarperCollins from Random House, where she was the Executive Vice President of Random House, Inc., Executive Vice President of the Knopf Publishing Group, Publisher of Vintage Books, and founder and President of Random House Audio Publishing.

It’s fair to say she knows a few things about the publishing industry as it exists today. When someone like that talks about what’s true about publishing today, I feel fairly safe believing them.

In her post, she writes:

  • Distribution models are changing. With advancements in technology, and the power now within an average writer’s hands, it’s not necessary to have physical bookstore distribution to achieve success.
  • Traditional publishers now rely on authors to do the marketing and promotion.
  • Communities will decide what books are worthwhile.

And I think “this sounds really familiar to me. Where have I seen this before?”

Oh yeah: the indie game industry.

Once upon a time, there were about a half-dozen major game companies who published their games, and about the only way you could ‘make it’ in the industry was by writing for those games and getting published by those companies. You might see the rare, rare bird out there — some guy who’d written his own game that got a little bit of play in his local cons and had some support, but that was damned uncommon, and the products that the guy turned out were obviously substandard to the quality of the products produced by the big boys.

Then came the internet. With it (and usenet) you had a flurry of homebrew games and creations that actually got farther than your home. Some of the early and long-time successes from that time were games like FUDGE (with a still-bustling community almost two decades after it showed up on usenet, and at least two major spinoff games that have themselves created spinoffs), RISUS, and Sorcerer (notable for not being in all-caps, I guess).

Still most of these internet-distributed games were just that – internet distributed. Nothing but bits and bytes. There was no final product; no book to hold in your hand.

Then the guy behind Sorcerer (who I believe had experience in publishing through his academic background) printed real live copies of the ‘final’ version of his game. High-quality copies. Copies that were easily as good as any other book you’d see in your local gaming store. That the game itself was good was more important, but the big deal was “holy crap, someone outside the Big Boys made a book, and sold it, and made it work, and has a big group of people playing it and reading it. HOW CAN WE DO THIS?

And the answer at the time was “well, you can’t – not easily – but it can be done, and until then, you can sell PDFs of your games for cheap.”

And then, very slowly (to the indie gaming industry, that is — where lifespans are measured in dog-years and evolution occurs at a rate not seen outside a mad scientist’s lab in the basement of a nuclear reactor), the self-publishing industry started to catch up to what the indie game designers wanted to do, and they could make their own games and print them and SELL THEM TO PEOPLE OH MY GOD.

There was a glut of publication, let me tell you.

Maybe one in every ten games that came out were good. The rest were crap and died a quick, possibly painful, and justified death. There was a lot of recrimination on the boards that supported the indie-game publishing effort (indie-rpgs.com and story-games.com), along the lines of “why did you release this when it wasn’t more than half-baked?” and “we need some quality control up in here, or we’re going to become a laughingstock”.

And that has happened, and the products you can get today are better and better – the crap-to-quality ratio moving into a favorable zone with every day.

Here’s what it looks like today:

  • Distribution models changed. Lulu.com and Indie Press Revolution has made publishing books financially and logistically possible for people who have Real Jobs, Real Lives, and Other Things to do.
  • Traditional publishers now rely on authors to do all the marketing and promotion. Pff. It’s not like there’s ever been much in the way of marketing in the gaming industry. RPGs only predate the internet by about a decade, so a huge amount of what the industry does in the way of ‘marketing’ is done via the internet — there is very little that the Big Boys can do in the way of marketing that *I* cannot likewise accomplish do. Google adsense is affordable, and reaches most people right where they live – their Inbox.
  • Communities will decide what books are worthwhile, and communities won’t have ego-filled judgments. I have seen this happen firsthand in the indie game design world. Story-games and Indie-rpgs.com are the crap-filter that Independent Fiction Publishing needs in order to thrive.Not a service. Not a business. A community of people who all want to accomplish pretty much the same thing, and are committed to making sure that the whole bloody thing doesn’t become a laughingstock.And they don’t do it for money. They do it for love of doing it — for love of reaching people and knowing they enjoyed their game.

That’s where indie publishing is going. That’s where (and how) it will succeed.

Does such a community already exist? Maybe. Publetariat has a forum. I plan to check it out. Maybe it already is what it needs to be.

Maybe it can evolve.

Updates for 2009-03-02

  • The grand plan for the day is bowling. Kaylee is excited – hurling a ball 1/4th your weight at pins 1/2 your size is guaranteed wacky fun. #
  • Adrift: I ask Mak where the other exits are. He says the answer depends on where I’m going. Jon say.. http://tinyurl.com/al359z #
  • My life, today: Dollhouse improves; Wanted comic shares little DNA with movie spinoff; bowling practice; and @DaphneUn joins the twitterati. #
  • Also, a word about bowling. My practice today verified to me that the problem is not me — it’s the vaseline-slick league-night lanes. Ugh. #

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