NikkiBastion
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2011
- Posts
- 152
Are you a writer? Of course you are. So am I. Writers usually know it from an early age. We've all had one or both of these fantasies our entire lives: to be published, and/or to be a top selling author. Most of us, I would think, can't "not" write and the dreaded Block is to writers what an STD is to a slut, throwing a wrench into that hedonistic pleasure all around...
It's common to pursue being published and learning the trade and business, how to write proposals, finding agents, and then if and when a book deal happens, there would be advances and royalties and the feeling of accomplishment that comes with seeing your work in print, knowing people are buying it, enjoying it, and eager to get more of what you do. I'd imagine that's a heady, elated feeling.
But it's the 21st century and digital products and tools are swiftly evolving. POD books, LuLu, DIY ebooks - it's all now easily and freely available to anyone who is interested enough to use them to write up the work, edit it, eliminate the middle man, and put it out there...even undercutting publishing houses and making all the profits.
So why is self publishing still so frowned upon? Why is it if you say you self published your book suddenly it "doesn't count" or it's "not a real book" (especially if it's in a fully digital format). Is it just eons of a paradigm refusing to shift or is there really something inherently "unreal" about it if you do it yourself? Can you be entirely self published and hold your head up?
I've looked into this and find this stigma really fascinating, the way it's approached. It's awesome that with LuLu you can print out a book and show it to people and go "Look! I got my book published!" and everyone's impressed and dropping your name and they're all proud of you and envious that you made it...until you explain it was through LuLu, you just had a copy printed on demand and suddenly it's like the bottom drops out...the pride and awe seems to be replaced with a smirk, as if you cheated.
Is it really that required to be taken seriously to have a middle man intercept your work and decide for you whether or not it's worth publication? Is it a requirement that you have to go through a slew of rejections before you get cut a break only to have some show that you're dedicated and persistent enough, therefore you're finally allowed to play in the real author's hangout?
Where is this coming from?
How do you guys perceive self publishing as it regards your "success" as a published author?
Or is this all just some residual fear from an old way of doing things that is colliding with the world of digital products that anyone can embrace?
As for me, the one area in "getting" published that has always been a potential sore spot and something I'd almost surely balk at is the idea of an editor changing up your entire book, wanting this and that removed, changed, something else added - whatever, changing it and the risk of it turning into something else entirely that goes against what you were inspired to begin with to express. Second to that is the idea of rejection - not being rejected per se, but the idea of some stranger who doesn't know me, nothing about what I do, or the book deciding the work shouldn't be made available at all, as if they'd be speaking not only for the worth of my work but for the rest of humanity.
So, ego thing for sure but it'd been the place that always gave me pause from actually pursing the task of "getting" published. Granted, I don't want to put out something that's crap, and I would welcome an objective editor in that respect to make sure it read well...but I am a tremendous fan of the whole concept of self publishing, to be able to get it out there, see it in print, book form, even ebooks (I love my Kindle, so I'm over the "it's not a real book" phase). To me, doing it at all is something I'd consider an accomplishment and a success. If even one person shelled out a buck to read it, I'd be flattered by that for sure, and probably so tickled I'd give them their dollar back out of gratitude they were interested enough to purchase it
(Clearly I'm not in it for wealth...)
I'm in it for the publication, the distribution, and the very real experiment of seeing how anything I'd do in the wild would play out - to me, if I self published, put it out there, promoted it as if it's as real a book as anything else on the shelves, and people began to buy it, read it, share it, comment on it, and the community helped sales grow - that's my definition of success as a "top selling author" - not the opinion of a publisher somewhere deciding this or that isn't something anyone would be interested in because it's not what they do. Since I would weight my work's value on how well it was doing - whether via income or readership at all, I see no problem with the fact it'd be completely self published...to me, it's a book...so it counts.
Am I wrong here? Missing something?
What's your take? Are you a cheating self publisher or a "real" author?
It's common to pursue being published and learning the trade and business, how to write proposals, finding agents, and then if and when a book deal happens, there would be advances and royalties and the feeling of accomplishment that comes with seeing your work in print, knowing people are buying it, enjoying it, and eager to get more of what you do. I'd imagine that's a heady, elated feeling.
But it's the 21st century and digital products and tools are swiftly evolving. POD books, LuLu, DIY ebooks - it's all now easily and freely available to anyone who is interested enough to use them to write up the work, edit it, eliminate the middle man, and put it out there...even undercutting publishing houses and making all the profits.
So why is self publishing still so frowned upon? Why is it if you say you self published your book suddenly it "doesn't count" or it's "not a real book" (especially if it's in a fully digital format). Is it just eons of a paradigm refusing to shift or is there really something inherently "unreal" about it if you do it yourself? Can you be entirely self published and hold your head up?
I've looked into this and find this stigma really fascinating, the way it's approached. It's awesome that with LuLu you can print out a book and show it to people and go "Look! I got my book published!" and everyone's impressed and dropping your name and they're all proud of you and envious that you made it...until you explain it was through LuLu, you just had a copy printed on demand and suddenly it's like the bottom drops out...the pride and awe seems to be replaced with a smirk, as if you cheated.
Is it really that required to be taken seriously to have a middle man intercept your work and decide for you whether or not it's worth publication? Is it a requirement that you have to go through a slew of rejections before you get cut a break only to have some show that you're dedicated and persistent enough, therefore you're finally allowed to play in the real author's hangout?
Where is this coming from?
How do you guys perceive self publishing as it regards your "success" as a published author?
Or is this all just some residual fear from an old way of doing things that is colliding with the world of digital products that anyone can embrace?
As for me, the one area in "getting" published that has always been a potential sore spot and something I'd almost surely balk at is the idea of an editor changing up your entire book, wanting this and that removed, changed, something else added - whatever, changing it and the risk of it turning into something else entirely that goes against what you were inspired to begin with to express. Second to that is the idea of rejection - not being rejected per se, but the idea of some stranger who doesn't know me, nothing about what I do, or the book deciding the work shouldn't be made available at all, as if they'd be speaking not only for the worth of my work but for the rest of humanity.
So, ego thing for sure but it'd been the place that always gave me pause from actually pursing the task of "getting" published. Granted, I don't want to put out something that's crap, and I would welcome an objective editor in that respect to make sure it read well...but I am a tremendous fan of the whole concept of self publishing, to be able to get it out there, see it in print, book form, even ebooks (I love my Kindle, so I'm over the "it's not a real book" phase). To me, doing it at all is something I'd consider an accomplishment and a success. If even one person shelled out a buck to read it, I'd be flattered by that for sure, and probably so tickled I'd give them their dollar back out of gratitude they were interested enough to purchase it

(Clearly I'm not in it for wealth...)
I'm in it for the publication, the distribution, and the very real experiment of seeing how anything I'd do in the wild would play out - to me, if I self published, put it out there, promoted it as if it's as real a book as anything else on the shelves, and people began to buy it, read it, share it, comment on it, and the community helped sales grow - that's my definition of success as a "top selling author" - not the opinion of a publisher somewhere deciding this or that isn't something anyone would be interested in because it's not what they do. Since I would weight my work's value on how well it was doing - whether via income or readership at all, I see no problem with the fact it'd be completely self published...to me, it's a book...so it counts.
Am I wrong here? Missing something?
What's your take? Are you a cheating self publisher or a "real" author?

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