When Jim McDevitt and I started writing about the works of Alfred Hitchcock way back in 2006, yeah, we talked about it becoming a book and people reading it and all the usual daydreaming. I'm not sure we imagined it would actually happen, though, or that it would do well enough to earn a paperback edition, or that we'd do 50 something episodes of a podcast based on the book, and that the podcast would get many hundreds of listeners, or a host of other things.
But we did. Two beer-drinking baseball fans decided to do something silly like write a book. It worked out. And that's cool.
So with all that mind, happy birthday to you, Jim. I'm proud to share a book spine with you.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Happy Birthday to my coauthor, Jim McDevitt
Labels:
A Year of Hitchcock,
Jim McDevitt
Monday, February 21, 2011
A Year of Hitchcock coming to paperback
Wasn't sure when I could safely announce this, but since our publisher has done so I guess that means I can do so, too. This fall, A Year of Hitchcock: 52 Weeks with the Master of Suspense, is coming to paperback!Our publisher, Scarecrow Press, is listing it on their website with an October 28 release date and, most exciting of all, a $19.95 price point. That's a damn nice price, and one likely to be even nicer once it hits online retailers like Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Even better, our editor informs us this edition will be targeting bookstores -- which means a wider market than the largely academic readership at which the hardcover edition was aimed.
Both my co-author, Jim McDevitt, and I are excited by this news. It means more people will have a chance to see our work. We're glad for that. It's been five years (!) since we started on this project, and it still takes up a lot of our time and energy. It's always exciting when others have an opportunity to enjoy the fruits of our labors.
Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Thinking about doing some self-publishing, part 2
Yesterday I posted about self-publishing a local history book. Niche works like that are ideal candidates for self-publishing. An author with the will and skill can more effectively reach his or her target audience than a publisher, even a specialty publisher, and be more financially successful with it in the process.
Yet that's not what prompted me to start yesterday's post, so let me pick up where I left off: I'm thinking of self-publishing some fiction. A short story collection or three. Digitally.
My thought is, why not? These days print outlets for short fiction are few and far between. Most are already digital, and many are fly-by-night. Short story collections are generally only viable for established authors. While I'll have a second book out this year and will be contributing to a third (which I cannot yet announce), that's neither fiction* nor does it make me "established." It just means my name is on a few books. Big whoop.
I'd like to get this stuff off my chest, though, but also don't want to merely drop it onto a website. It may be ego talking, but I feel like the work deserves more than that. Outlets like Amazon's Kindle publishing program would allow me to set a low 99-cent price point, to make distribution easy, and to reach people I otherwise wouldn't reach. Most of all, it would allow me to call this stuff "done" once and for all because once it's out there, that's it. It's done.
I'm realistic about the idea, mind you. And by "realistic" I mean "would be thankful if I moved even 50 copies."
And that's fine. I'd not be doing it for money. The truth is, many of these stories have been sitting around in my archives doing nothing. No one is reading them. They want to be read, though. I want people to read them. So why not?
I'd prefer traditional publishing. It was, is, and remains my goal. Excited as I am about the surge of self-publishing these days, yeah, I feel like being traditionally published is still ... well, as I said yesterday, that's another discussion so I'll leave that thought unexpressed.
The bottom line is, I'm considering putting some of my short fiction out there. Don't know if they'll be interest. Don't know if I'll have the will or energy to bother promoting it (and without some promotion it will die a quick death). But still, I'm thinking about it.
So we'll see.
*All three published or soon-to-be-published projects are nonfiction. Crossing into fiction is important to me. It's not enough for me to have little bits of brief fiction out there. I need a book. A real book. That's the goal.
Yet that's not what prompted me to start yesterday's post, so let me pick up where I left off: I'm thinking of self-publishing some fiction. A short story collection or three. Digitally.
My thought is, why not? These days print outlets for short fiction are few and far between. Most are already digital, and many are fly-by-night. Short story collections are generally only viable for established authors. While I'll have a second book out this year and will be contributing to a third (which I cannot yet announce), that's neither fiction* nor does it make me "established." It just means my name is on a few books. Big whoop.
I'd like to get this stuff off my chest, though, but also don't want to merely drop it onto a website. It may be ego talking, but I feel like the work deserves more than that. Outlets like Amazon's Kindle publishing program would allow me to set a low 99-cent price point, to make distribution easy, and to reach people I otherwise wouldn't reach. Most of all, it would allow me to call this stuff "done" once and for all because once it's out there, that's it. It's done.
I'm realistic about the idea, mind you. And by "realistic" I mean "would be thankful if I moved even 50 copies."
And that's fine. I'd not be doing it for money. The truth is, many of these stories have been sitting around in my archives doing nothing. No one is reading them. They want to be read, though. I want people to read them. So why not?
I'd prefer traditional publishing. It was, is, and remains my goal. Excited as I am about the surge of self-publishing these days, yeah, I feel like being traditionally published is still ... well, as I said yesterday, that's another discussion so I'll leave that thought unexpressed.
The bottom line is, I'm considering putting some of my short fiction out there. Don't know if they'll be interest. Don't know if I'll have the will or energy to bother promoting it (and without some promotion it will die a quick death). But still, I'm thinking about it.
So we'll see.
*All three published or soon-to-be-published projects are nonfiction. Crossing into fiction is important to me. It's not enough for me to have little bits of brief fiction out there. I need a book. A real book. That's the goal.
Labels:
eBooks,
self-publishing,
short stories,
Writing
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