Monday, September 29, 2014

Interview with Julie Poole.

Today we have a virtual 'sit down' with Julie Poole, Author of Angel On My Shoulder.
And in an interesting turn of events, I actually learned of a 'different' kind of publishing house I was previously unaware of!


Julie was born in Cardiff in 1963 and was brought up between Cardiff and Aberystwyth until her late-teens. She went to school in both areas as well as having a brief spell in boarding school in Shrewsbury. Julie spent her twenties in South Wales, her 30’s in Gloucester, Bristol and Hereford and her 40’s in Devon, Cornwall and Hertfordshire. She has three children; Tom, Christopher and Charlotte and currently lives in Cornwall with her daughter Charlotte. Julie began a degree in Psychology in 2013 and is currently studying at the University of Plymouth. She includes among her hobbies and interests reading, movies, walks by the sea, meditation, astrology, numerology and of course, writing. Her favourite fiction authors are Marian Keyes and Cecelia Ahern.

1. I see that you're with Titan Publishing House, a 'Vanity Press'. What made you decide to go this route in publishing?

I don’t consider Titan to be a Vanity publisher at all. I researched publishing when I first completed Angel On My Shoulder in 2011 and found that it’s an extremely difficult place to access. I tried for 3 years and applied to many publishing houses, following the submission guidelines for each one. I came close to a contract on two occasions but it didn’t happen. I also looked into Vanity publishing and decided it was not the way for me. Vanity publishers will take any book and you pay for everything. In return they take a small handling fee, usually 2-5% and publish it for you, at your own cost, but they do little else. In contrast, the big publishers pay you for your book and do everything for you. Titan are in the middle. They don’t pay you, but neither do they charge you. They do turn down books, charge for nothing except editing, and take 30%. They distribute, promote it and support you. They are an indie publishers and I consider them to be half way between the big publishers and the Vanity publishers.
After 3 years of trying to get published I decided to give it up and self-publish. In July this year, I looked for a professional editor as I was determined it would go out free of errors and found Titan, who offer an editing service. They offered to consider my book for publication with them and after reviewing it, offered me a contract. I paid for the editing but nothing else.

2. After signing with them, how much have they helped with promotions, distribution, etc.?

Titan have 39,000 distribution channels, which I find incredible. They have promoted it on every network site I have ever heard of. It’s on app stores, google mail, amazon, available in 133 countries, and in both e-book and paperback. It takes a while to filter down through all the distributors but a few days ago after just 2 weeks my book was available in Waterstones, the largest book store in the UK and shortly will be in WH Smith, another very large national chain.


3. Are you seeing a return on your 'investment'?

Not yet. It’s been out for just under 3 weeks and it will take some time for me to recover the editing cost. I also paid someone to set up my website so have invested some into this but I do expect to break even this year.

4. Do you still maintain the rights to your 'baby', and how much creative control have you retained?

Yes. I have signed contracts with Titan. The text is copyright to me, the published book to them. But, they have confirmed that should I be offered a contract by a large publication house they would release me without charge to enable me to accept it. (Penguin? Harper Collins? You listening? ) As for creative control, I have had a free hand. I was not asked to change any content of the book, just the layout and grammar within editing. I was also able to have the typesetting changed after it was done as I was not happy with the page count. At my request the format was re-done, and was tightened to have the page count reduced and thereby make it more affordable to the reader. As for the book cover, I had a very clear image in my mind of it and the style, which was Vector. Titan do not offer the style I wanted for the cover but put me in touch with a vector artist and I worked with her directly until I had what I wanted. I am delighted with the result.

5. Your debut novel, Angel On My Shoulder, features, of course, Angels. Out of the plethora of Angels currently out in 'Book Land', what makes yours different from the rest?

As a therapist and teacher of spiritual consciousness for some 12 years, my understanding of angels and our relationship with them is both broad and deep. I have used both aspects in this book - my spiritual knowledge and my therapist’s knowledge. Clarabelle, Sarah’s Guardian Angel is both angelic and a therapist to her, helping her to sort her life out – a little like I do with my clients. I have also brought humour into the story, with the angels getting things wrong, getting stressed and frustrated, having their own issues with each other – for example Clarabelle falls out with her own angelic brother over her crush on Arch Angel Michael. This is a different take on angels. For a start they don’t do stress and they certainly don’t do crush’s!
In regards to Sarah, there are many books that tackle relationship break ups, even more on self-growth and self-help. I have combined it all into a book which comes from a different angle; shows you how to sort your life out as well as the impact and work of angels, but does it in a humorous way. I use magic, miracles, angelic inter-angelcy-meetings, co-incidences, serendipity and more. As you read about the character’s life and how it improves my hope is that the reader will relate to it. It is not aimed at the spiritually conscious, or those on a mission for self-help; any kind of ‘eureka moment’ is more of a bi-product. I realised that through the characters in the book I could help people to perhaps know a little more on how to deal with life’s ups and downs and I wanted to inspire at the same time. I felt that just about anyone who has ever been through a bad breakup, ever had their confidence shattered, could relate to the characters in the book and I wanted to give them hope.
As for belief in angels, even those who would not consider themselves to be spiritual in any way like the thought of having a guardian angel, so I made the ‘teacher/therapist’ an angel, helping show Sarah, the main character, how to sort her life out. Some will say that our ‘angel’ is our inner selves, others will say it is our subconscious, or our instincts, others will say it is God or angels – it doesn’t matter who or what you think that voice is, there is a voice outside of our noisy head that will guide us, if we will listen, and if we will let it!

6. Since Angel On My Shoulder is considered 'Chick Lit' or Romance, is there any other Genre you'd like to take a swing at? Something your readers would never expect?

Yes. Angel will be part of a series, probably 3 or 4 and then I will move on. I am a hypnotherapist and will be writing books around this, how it works, with case studies and evidence to prove its use and benefits. I am currently in the middle of a degree in psychology and will be doing something like this for my dissertation and my masters. The outcome of that, I will develop into a book. I also am a qualified past life regression specialist. I see books on this too in the future, with stories of past life experiences. A third area I want to write about is sexual abuse. As a therapist, I specialise with trauma, sexual abuse, PTSD and I want to develop a book to help victims and families of victims, to understand it better and therefore be able to move past it. So in the future there will be non-fiction books as well as fiction. The final area will be spiritual books. Possibly on the cosmos, the way the universe works, manifestation, positive thinking, I’m not sure yet. It will just unfold when the time is right.

7. Is there a Genre you'd like to see gone forever?
No. Everyone has their own tastes and interests and no one should be denied what inspires them.

8. Being from 'across the pond', have you noticed a difference in how authors are from North America?

Not yet. I have noticed a huge difference in language and word use. My book has been reviewed by a couple of Americans and some of the British words I use are not the same meaning in the states, so it can be a barrier. For example I refer to a frying pan and make a joke out of it, which the Brits got straight away. My American reader did not understand the joke as you don’t have ‘frying pans’ and she asked me what it was.

9. Other than the 'Angel' series, do you have any other stories in the works?
Not at the moment.

10. Have you received any unkind 'critiques', and if so, how did, or would you handle them?

Not yet. I am sure I will as you can’t please all of the people all of the time. Constructive criticism is a very good thing. It helps us grow and develop, so any negative critique I would look at and examine how I can use it to benefit me as a writer, how I can improve and be able to see a different angle.
 
You can visit Julie's Website and purchase books here:

Monday, September 22, 2014

Author Interview with Michael Hammor.

Before we begin, a short introduction to todays Interviewee:

Michael Hammor.

Michael Hammor is a homeless vet living in an RV with his famliy. They live somewhere is the desert near Bisbee and Sierra Vista. MH was laid off from a DOD contract job at the local military base.
MH has chosen to support his famliy by writing the sick little stories in his head. Previously, MH has been a Janitor, a soldier, a photographer, and a Military Intelligence Instructor. MH has trained over 600 soldiers, how to find, fix, and finish, the Enemy.
 

-Living in the Arizona desert must have played a key part in building the world you've created with Bedtime Tales From The Apocalypse, where did the idea for the actual story come from?
 
 Where did the inspiration for my current series come from? I was deployed to Iraq in 2008-2009. I left behind my 11 month old daughter and my chronically ill wife. I was gone for a little more than a year. I had the same worries as every soldier; what will happen to my family after I die. Since I am paranoid, I amplified that question with “What will happen to my family if the world ends and I can’t get home because infrastructure has collapsed?”
 The nucleus of the story was formed. The Girl is my daughter, basically. Rather, the monster she was forced to become through circumstances and my not being there to protect her.
 The Arizona desert did play a large role. There is no tougher environment to attempt to survive in than the desert. Other locales have it easy; plenty of water, good soil, and plentiful game. The desert is no joke.

 

 -Out of all the Post Apocalyptic stories out there, what separates yours from the rest?
 
What separates my work from the multitude of other apocalyptic fiction? I have found one other indie author, Katie Salidas, which writes anything remotely like my series. I spent a decade in Military intelligence developing realistic scenarios to predict enemy behavior. I used this experience to develop the universe I placed my characters in. I added a splash of the paranormal because the wife and I are Supernatural Junkies, and I grew up on horror, paranormal, and fantasy books.
 In my current series the world ended in slow slide into anarchy. The Veils between worlds thinned and supernatural and metaphysical beings crossed into my character’s reality, as I am sure some normal humans accidently found themselves transported to a strange reality in which their normality was suddenly supernatural.
 Basically my current series is The Road meets Supernatural. Katie Salidas’ work is set 200 years after the end of the world, mine is set less than twenty years after the fall of man.

 

-Since you're releasing these stories as a 'serial', any plans to put them all together in a single book once the story is finished?
 
That is the plan, Justin. Once I finish the sixth and final book in this phase of the series, I will bundle the books together and rewrite them into a novel with some expanded content. It will be entitled, Daughter of the Apocalypse. I have plans for two more novels released as serials to fully complete the series.

 

-If Bedtime Tales From The Apocalypse were to be adapted to film or TV, who would you pick to direct?
 

That is a tough question, Justin. I like the directing in the Walking Dead, Battle Star Galactica, and the humor in Firefly. The most important thing is that the spirit and message of my work is preserved. One more thing, I won’t allow them to cast some raven haired fox as the Girl. The story is set in a society in ruin. Thigh high boots and a pair of Desert Eagles are way out of character. The Girl is a vagrant, she is always dirty, she probably stinks, and she clothes herself in cast off or salvaged clothing. She is petite, so the clothes are almost always too big. She’s plainly attractive, not hot.
I write this series as if you are watching it on screen. I don’t include a ton of fluff. My writing is direct and to the point.
 My biggest fantasy is having this series picked up for a tv show or movie. That would solve my financial issues and be massively cool.

 

-Do you have any other stories demanding to be told in the works?
 

I am currently working on a Sci-fi stand alone novella about a clunky, obsolete spaceship and her gritty, jaded, cynical captain. It’s sort of a homage to Han Solo and the Millennium Falcon, but more realistic. I was dissatisfied with Star Wars, so I am putting my own spin on it.
 I am also working on a collaboration with Stacey Welsh. It’s a thriller series (Novellas) featuring a young mother forced into doing the unthinkable to save herself. As it turns out, by the second book, she’s good at it.
 I also write shorts for a magazine, Far Horizons. I published a prologue to my current series, and an unrelated apocalyptic short entitled, The Lottery.

 

-Giving your current 'living situation', has it been difficult funding your writing career (editing, covers, marketing, etc.)?
 

Justin, it has been very difficult funding my career. I am currently unemployed and living in a small town that is totally dependent on the local military base. The base continues to cut the civilian workforce and our town is slowly dying. I am not the only author in our town. Connie Roberts-Huth and Brenda J. Kurtz write fantasy and live nearby. We correspond regularly and I was even interviewed last month for Brenda’s blog. Connie helps with occasional editing.
 Since I have no budget, I do what I can using free services from various websites that promote indie authors for no cost. I advertise on face book and twitter. Occasionally I participate in live events. Connie hosts a vendor expo here in town twice a month.
 I used to be a photographer so I shoot all my own cover images. I do all my own photoshop work. The model for the Girl was a local young homeless woman. About the time I asked her to model for me she got pregnant! It was a few weeks before we could shoot. She had started to lose the gauntness I was looking for but I am still very satisfied with the results. She is now living in a house in Tucson with her boyfriend and they are expecting a little boy in a few months. 
 My editing is handled by a good friend of mine, Jeffrey Covert. I list him as Clandestine Publishing Services on my kindle listings. Once a friend of mine gets her publishing company off the ground I will publish my series through her company.

 

-Who has influenced your writing?
 

That is a long list. I grew up reading Stephan King, Piers Anthony, Mercedes, Lackey, Heinlein, Dick, Asimov, and others. I was a voracious reader. I have been reading more indie authors lately like Alexia Purdy, J. McCoy, and Katie Salidas. Tolkein has had the biggest influence. He created a whole world with religions and races and included mythos. An amazing amount of work went into that. I can’t imagine.

 

-To you, what are the pros and cons of 'Traditional Publishing' over 'Self-Publishing'?
 

There is a huge divide between Indies and “Real” authors. The Pros of traditional are: Larger exposure, bigger payouts, less self promotion. The cons are: Loss of creative freedom, the rarity of getting selected and published, and the constant rejection.
 The Pros of Indie publishing are: Freedom, creativity, and the satisfaction of knowing that you and only you are responsible for your success. The cons are: Lack of exposure, self promoting, and knowing that you and only you are responsible for your lack of success.
 Self promotion is the largest hurdle. I spend nearly a hundred hours writing and rewriting. I spend thousands of hours on promotions. Sometimes I promote for 8 hours in a day and reap only a single sale. This is not an easy trade.
 My biggest peeve is the amount of money that my vendors keep. They do nothing to promote my work. Nothing! So why do they think they get to keep 70% of every dollar I try to make? Sadly, readers pay attention to Amazon listings and rankings. Indie authors really don’t have another option, amazon owns a huge share of the market.
 I was solicited by a publisher a while back. I was talking to one of their new authors and they liked what I was saying. They asked me to submit my work and I never heard back from them. I emailed them a few times and get excuses back. They offered a $500 advance which would have paid a lot of bills.

 

-What was your reaction when people started reading and leaving reviews for your stories?
 

The first person to ever read a prototype of The Girl With No Name is now my editor. He works for free in exchange for being the first to read my books. It was his encouragement that drove me to publish. I love reviews. I do a little happy dance every time I get one. I love feedback, even negative feedback as long as its constructive. The two worst reviews you can ever get are ‘Its great!’ and ‘It sucks!’. Those tell a potential reader nothing about your work.

 

-What marketing tactics do you find to be the most productive?
 

The most productive tactic as far as sales go are promoting with book lists. There are eight that I use regularly. I make more sales in a single day with these lists than I do with any other method. I also participate in several facebook groups. People end up asking for my links and I sell books. I am also a member of several forums with 100k plus membership and I post my books there once in a while and I always see a huge bump in sales.
 
Here are the listings I use:
 
 
I also find that interviews help. Exposure always helps and an interview lets you express your personal side that many readers never get to see.

 

-What marketing tactics do you find the LEAST effective?
 

The marketing tactics I have found to be the least effective are spamming facebook groups and waiting for people to stumble upon your work. I know I basically ignore any book spam I see in a facebook group. For one, I have no money, and secondly, I can’t possibly read any more books than I am now. One of the benefits of being an author is that when you make friends with other authors, they all send you their books for free!
 Free promotions do not work, at least in my experience. Most authors have flooded the market with free books. There are just too many to choose from. I have 800 free books on my kindle account right now. I never buy the other books. That might be because I’m dirt poor, but part of it is that there are so many free books to enjoy that I don’t need to buy any.
 I haven’t had a lot of success with live events, either, but I will still keep doing them when I can.

 

-Other than your current genre, what other genres would you like to take a shot at?

I am currently writing a sci-fi novella as well as a thriller collaboration. I mentioned them before. I’d like to write some straight horror someday. Readers often ask me why I don’t write military themed books. The answer is simple, it’s too soon. I can’t face that part of my life in that much detail yet.
  am toying with the idea to co-write a children’s book with my daughter. She is drawing way above her level, utilizing perspective and composition. I am very proud. She comes from two very creative and talented parents.

 

-What genre would you never consider writing?

I could never write romance or erotica. I did write a short romance based in the world of my current series, but that is the exception. It’s for a breast cancer benefit anthology. Hopefully I will get some extra exposure. I also have a short story slated for a different anthology coming out in a few months.
I know I could make some fast money writing erotica but it lacks creativity. There is only so much you can do with sex. I suppose I could write a novel shell, change names, occupations, and hair color and release the same book over and over. Brett the cowboy becomes Brent the Pilot trying to woe Josephina the Latina Bartender who becomes Joanna the waitress. I also don’t want to explain to my daughter later where the money came from.

Michael's Website.



 

 

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Show yourself, sell yourself.

So, you've finished your book.
Yeah, it kinda feels just like this.
It's been formatted and edited to a fine sheen, it's nearly perfect. Your cover is a surefire attention grabber. All is well, and you're ready to promote the ever-loving hell out of it. It's time to Rock. And Roll. All night long.
But hold up just a minute there, kid. You're not quite done yet. There's work yet to do, and it's gonna be a hell of a lot harder than convincing people to read your book.
Every successful product needs a brand name to instill trust in the customer, and in the literary world, that brand name is YOU. The Author.
This picture pretty much sums up your reaction, I bet.
That's right, not only do you have to thrust your book into the spotlight, you gotta be in there too. And to many Authors, fresh or seasoned, this idea is as terrifying as anything Lovecraft could ever imagine.

Generally speaking, Authors are a shy bunch for a variety of reasons. You can test this theory by simply looking at some Author's Facebook Profile Pictures. Note how many use pictures of animals, celebrities, cartoon characters, damn near everything but their actual face?
Honestly, if you're doing this, just stop.
It doesn't matter how good it is, nobody wants to read a book written by a chicken.
If you want people to take you (and your work) seriously, you need to show them the 'real' you, warts and all. You may not feel you're photogenic enough, and you may be right, but how many of us are?
Unless you're Michael Ness, that is.
Hello Ladies.
Seriously, look at this guy. Ridiculously Photogenic Author Guy indeed. That's some daunting shit for most of us right there, but your face is your logo for your name brand. You need to show it, readers like a face to associate with the book.
Another point to consider is that if you're going to use your own picture, choose carefully. Not just any old picture will do. You'll want to choose an existing picture, or even take a new one that portrays you as a representative of whatever genre you write in. For instance, if you write Erotica, don't use something like this:

Hello? Ladies?
Probably not the image you're going for, is it? Get a razor, get rid of the camo, and clean it up. On the same page, if you write Horror, don't use a picture with you smiling in unbridled bliss at the beach.

So now you've chosen a good visual representation of yourself and your work, you're all done, right?
No. Sit back down, we're not done quite yet.
You may be familiar with the recent Chelsea Cain flustercluck. If not, here's a quick recap:
She recently went 'full retard', and lambasted her own fans for 'asking stupid questions'. She quickly recanted when she was spanked by her publisher for being an idiot, and went ahead and pretty much said the same thing again, but in a slightly different way. She lost a LOT of current fans, and alienated many more potential readers because of it.
Handy Hint? Don't EVER do anything like that. It's like shooting your writing career straight in the face.
Although at times it may be tough, but since you're the 'face' of your product, you have to maintain some sort of professional decorum pretty much at all times. I'm not saying you have to be a suck-up ass kisser to your fans, but damn it, don't be an asshole when fans want to interact with you and dare to ask questions you may feel are stupid. Logically if you treat them like unworthy crap you scrape off of your shoe, eventually no one will want to read the book you worked so hard to put out, and you'll end up wallowing in a pit of nothingness that you yourself dug. Without readers, an Author has no purpose. Always remember that.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

The Bad, The Trolls, and The Confusing. (Reviews.)

Today I want to talk about reviews, specifically BAD reviews. We all get them, EVERYBODY gets them, whether you're an Author or not. None are safe!
I can recall my first 'bad' review back when I was 5 years old or so. I had drawn a picture of a Chinese boat and showed it to my Ma. She looked it over and made a comment about 'Junk'.
I was devastated. Crushed. Hurt beyond words! I worked so hard on that picture, and the one whom I was trying to impress the most had called it 'Junk'!
I found out after my total meltdown, that Chinese boats were actually called 'Junks'
Oops.
It still hurt like a bitch though.
Bad reviews hurt, and they hurt real bad. Some are legitimate, some exist primarily to crush your spirit, and some are just downright confusing.
Wait...you admittedly don't like Vampires, but you read 'Vampire Beach Blanket Bonanza' anyway? The Hell?
Now, your first instinct will be to comment or reply to the reviewer to perhaps explain why they might have it 'wrong'. Ignore that instinct, don't say anything, it doesn't help and it kinda makes you look like a douche. If you're an Author, you DON'T want to look like a douche.
But not all bad reviews are 'bad', some can give legitimate critiques that you can learn from, to grow as an Author, to help you put a finer edge on your work. That's not to say that they still don't hurt, someone is still saying negative things about your 'baby'. Just treat these as advice from a concerned Grandparent.

"Oh Dear, your narrative prose is as dry as my Christmas turkey...you need some gravy."

Next, we'll cover the 'bogus' reviews, these are pretty easy to spot with a trained eye. These reviews are posted by someone who has nothing better to do than kick sand in your face. They'll eviscerate you mercilessly, and say horrible, horrible things. But you may notice that these reviews contain barely, if any, references to anything contained in your book. Goodreads is notorious for it's Troll Population. They allow 'reviewers' to do reviews without any confirmation that they actually read it, and the Trolls take full advantage of this.
Case In Point: Somewhere along the line, I must have REALLY upset 'Mike' (Imagine that.). He gave every single one of my releases One Star, even the ones no longer in print! Further investigation revealed that 'Mike' had only ever reviewed MY books. If you receive what you believe is a 'bogus' review, do some digging and you'll likely find it to be a personal attack for some reason or another. Dismiss these reviews, everybody else will. Seasoned Authors and Readers can spot these a mile away.

Artist's Rendition.

Now that we've discussed bad reviews and ways to deal with them, now we can shift gears and discuss a good way to (maybe) prevent them.

Editing.
Whether you're fortunate enough to be able to afford one, or like many of us, have to do it yourself. Editing is an absolute necessity. But it's not an absolute one-stop save-all though. I've caught a few errors in even Stephen King's books, and you can imagine what HIS editors must rake in.
If many of your bad reviews have to do with 'editing' issues, perhaps it's time to either A: Let someone else do it, or B: Get a better editor.
Recently, a certain pretentious douchebag that shall remain nameless...
^He kinda looks like this.

Stated that Editors changed the voice of the Author, thereby, making the finished work not entirely the Author's...
Just let the stupidity of that remark sink in for a moment.
Are you fully basted yet? Good. Carrying on.
That statement came from an 'Author' that proudly admitted that he's never used an Editor, and holy Hell does it shine through in his work.
Think of Editors as the 'Personal Trainers' of the literary world. The Authors do the bulk of the work, while the Editor is there to help you along, keep you motivated, and generally to 'tone you up'.
If your Editor starts doing the lifting for you, it's time to get another one.
Keep in mind that getting a good Editor doesn't guarantee that your finished product will be absolutely flawless, even the Great Ones put out 'flawed' work, despite their Editors being extremely well compensated.
So, the short and skinny of this ramble is learn from the 'critical' reviews and ignore the 'Troll' reviews.
As for the confusing ones? I wish I could help with that, I'm still trying to figure them out myself.