I
have frequently written on this blog about my non-fiction publications. But I
have also written a huge amount of fiction. My fiction would be very hard to
sell to commercial publishers, because I have so much religion in them. Commercial
publishers think no one would want to read a novel about God and the meaning of
life. Nobody, that is, except people like you who are reading this blog. You
can learn a lot about the Bible by reading my novels. Commercial fiction publishers
don’t like books that teach people things, especially about the Bible.
I
am no amateur in fiction writing. I have been writing fiction for decades,
often rewriting the same story or novel over and over until I get it as good as
it can be. In the process, I have removed whole chunks of text that I originally
thought were really good but which I admitted would not advance the plot and
might, however well written, cause the reader to give up.
But
I have almost no fiction publications—just in a couple of minor literary
journals that no longer exist. I have earned a grand total of $25, which I sent
to a writer and environmentalist who, unlike me, had no steady employment. So
the question arose, decades ago, how should I publish my fiction?
The
days of submitting manuscripts “over the transom” ended decades ago. Now, to
approach an editor of even a small press, you have to be represented by an
agent. When I started writing fiction, agents were actual people, and they sent
me personal responses. But now, the prospective fiction writer seldom gets any
response whatsoever, and if so, it is a form letter. I now have the suspicion,
in the modern age of artificial intelligence, that agents almost never read
submissions, because they already know what they are going to send to
publishers: the works written by their friends, themselves under a different
name, or by an AI program they have installed. They claim to be looking for new
talent, but I simply do not believe it. In fact, agents may actually themselves
be artificial intelligences. They may have their photos on the agency website,
but they may not be actual people. An agency can leave the entire
process—choosing which manuscripts, if any, to represent, and then sending them
to editors—to artificial intelligence. I have encountered a grand total of
about five agents out of hundreds who have given personal responses that
indicate that they are human. An AI bot can write fiction that is as marketable
as that written by most human authors. I guess what I am saying is that getting
a fiction agent for a commercial publisher is practically impossible. I have
been told this by many authors—you know, the ones that spend their time and
money going to writers’ conferences.
For
many years, an attractive alternative has been to self-publish on Amazon. Gone
are the days of vanity presses, where the author pays for a few hundred copies
of the book to be printed, and then the author has to figure out what to do
with them. These are the days of Amazon, in two ways:
First,
no commercial publisher can afford to do “print-on-demand,” because there has
to be a minimum print run of at least a thousand books each day to justify the
costs of printing. But Amazon can do it, because they sell so many books. It
does not have to be a thousand copies of the same book. Print-on-demand is one
of the Amazon options. If just one person wants your book, they can get it.
Second,
e-books cost very little to produce. A Kindle book can be produced and sent to
customers with very little cost, except for maintaining the servers. Once
again, if just one person wants your e-book, they can get it.
Kindle
publishing is rather clumsy. If it is just text, as in most novels, it works
fine. But I have never seen a really satisfactory illustration in a Kindle
book. It usually ends up really small and illegible.
The
advantages of Kindle books are astonishing. The software, at least now, is
relatively simple. You provide a cover illustration (just the front cover), a
document with the whole book in it, financial information, the jacket blurb
(which will show up on the Amazon site), etc. You can do it all yourself. If
you mess something up, you will get an email telling you what to fix. The best
part might be that the author gets to keep 70 percent of the money. In
contrast, a commercial publisher offers 10 percent, which must be split with an
agent. This would mean an author gets 8 percent. A hundred books (@$5.00)
generates $500, of which the author gets to keep $350. From a commercial
publisher, you would get $40.
Now,
for the ecology of book publishing. It is like a tree or bush
disseminating its seeds. There are lots of ways of doing this. A tree could
produce a few, large seeds, inside of fruits that animals want to eat; or a lot
of small seeds, that blow away in the wind. Wild plant species use both
options, just like a writer could use the agent/publisher option or the Amazon
option. There is, in the world of publishing just as in seed dispersal, no
single correct way of doing it. I spent decades on the agent/publisher route, and
am now ready to try the Kindle route. My first Kindle novel just came out
today.
What
you don’t want to do is to publish online and then ignore all publicity. Fruits
and seeds dispersed by animals put a lot of expenditure into publicity—that is,
into attracting animals to disperse them. Publicity—that’s what the next essays
are about.