Speaking of which - what are you guys' views on self-publishing vs. standard publishing? Do you think it's a good idea or not?
I have to be honest here. My last novel was the first I bothered to send to literary agents. I might have given up too quickly, but after about five queries I figured no one would want it. Instead, I set up a print-on-demand version with Lulu.com. Since then I've been nothing but embarrassed that I did it. No one has bought it there or on Amazon, either (although I didn't really expect anyone to do so). When someone I know personally asks about my writing, I will tell them that I tossed my book into a POD outfit and then explain what that means. When my girlfriend tells people about my book, which I try to prevent, it's like I add a huge asterisk to the end of whatever she says:
She said:
Oh, yeah, he published a book.*
I said:
* Not really. Self-published. Practically vanity-published.
I'm ashamed to think of it most of the time.
Maybe others here see it more positively. I had no illusions when I started querying the book, so I'm not really disappointed that . I just think I should have left it as an e-book and made it available for download directly from my web site. I feel like a poser and an idiot: I started researching publishing more than ten years ago and feel like any other vanity-published writer. Most people can claim ignorance, but I deliberately chose this path.
My personal feelings aside, if you are expecting much, or maybe any, money through self-publishing, you have a long road ahead of you. Depending on what you're publishing and what you mean by "self-publishing," you might actually end up in the hole. Self-publishing originally meant doing everything (or delegating everything) yourself: cover, layout, typography, editing, marketing, etc. You'd make arrangements with a printer and have them print an offset. This type of publishing works best, so I've read, with nonfiction books. Nowadays, you have POD outfits, like Lulu, who do the printing for you, but it's not an offset run. It's one copy at a time. Now, too, there is the option of doing ebooks with Amazon, Lulu, and so on. I have no experience there, and maybe there's money in it. Someone else might be able to tell you about that.
Final word: stay away from scams. Never pay to have your book published. This includes places like America Star (formerly Publish America), who will mislead you until your wallet is empty. If you really start looking into commercial publishing, do me three favors. First, research your market and whether it's better to submit to agents than directly to publishers. Also find good definitions of "commercial publishing," "vanity publishing," "subsidy publishing," and "self-publishing." Knowing the difference at all will help. Second, join the
Absolute Write forums. They are filled with wisdom, and there are tons of published authors who can advise you. Third, if all else fails, search Google for "XYZ scam" (e.g. "America Star books scam") for prospective agents/publishers. This will save you a lot of grief.