Shawn L. Bird

Original poetry, commentary, and fiction. All copyrights reserved.

slow December 24, 2011

What I’ve learned about the publishing industry:

It’s slow.

Everything about it moves like a comatose tortoise. True, like the tortoise, sure and steady gets there eventually, but it can be ridiculously frustrating watching from the sidelines.

If an agent or publisher says they’ll get back to you in a week, s/he means a month. If they say it’ll be a month, expect to hear around four months later. Four seems to be the number to multiply by.

Ironically, I was also told that from completion of novel to publication the average book takes 4.5 years. Coincidence?

Is patience a virtue?

Perhaps. Electronic publishing speeds up many aspects of the process, but the most important one, the editing and proof-reading will still take just as long as ever.

I’m counting the days until Grace Awakening Power gets back from the editor, I can make the required changes, and it can be released by Lintusen to the world!  I was expecting it initially in November, four months after it went to the editor.  If my multiplication scenario holds, I will see it in 16 months, or perhaps 4 months after November, which puts arrival in March.

Patience.

The watch-word for the author waiting for a book.

It’s a slow process.

 

More e-pub vs trad pub info August 12, 2011

Filed under: Writing — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:22 am
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It’s official.  E-publishing is taking off.  Between Feb 2010 and 2011 e-book sales increased over 200%.  Here is an interesting look at the stats by Martin Taylor of Australia.  US Publisher upheaval ahead as print book sales see sharp decline. 

 

The end of the bookstore August 1, 2011

Filed under: Commentary,Writing — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:07 am
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I love bookstores.  I love wandering in them.  I love scanning titles.  I love the smell of ink and paper.  I love the graphics of gorgeous covers.  I love horses, too.   They’re majestic creatures.  Riding one is fun, but I prefer to go to Vancouver by car.

Times change.  It’s not a value judgment; it’s a fact.

Here is an excellent article by Dave Bricker about the changing publishing world.  He ruminates about the bankruptcy of Borders Bookstores and the future.  Hint: it’s ebooks!

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A World Without Borders – The End of the Bookstore