Whether to
self publish or vie for traditional publishing is a question brought to the
forefront because of the direction publishing is moving today. Ultimately, the author
must make the final decision.
With fewer traditional publishers, more books written, and fewer readers reading books, many traditional houses aren’t willing to work with unknown authors, or don’t have a following.
Authors need
a platform with followers, a book marketing plan, and more laid upon the
shoulders of authors, many authors feel that self-publishing is the way to get
their book into the hands of readers.
If you self publish your book, how will traditional publishers look upon your book if you decide to vie for a traditional publishing house in the future is a question only the publishing house can answer.
Experiences
from some writers is that self-published books are akin to what we call vanity press books, pay and they will
publish anything as Amazon found out with blatant plagiarism of many titles
that Amazon published, and then had had to remove when they finally found out
what some so-called authors were doing just to make sales. Amazon’s reputation
was hurt, and rightly so.
Why have
reviewers been complaining about the quality of self-published books? The
complaints range from editing to grammar, and poor quality.
Publishing houses once employed editors to clean up these problems for authors; this is no longer the case. Self-published book editing is now the purview of the author; and authors need professional editing. Don’t rely on software like spellcheckers and grammar checkers to find the errors because they will not find subtle errors. Grammar checkers will vary depending on the individual program.
A literary
agent may cost writers thousands to have their book shopped to publishers. Many
authors can’t afford these costs, and opt for self-publishing.
Ultimately,
it is up to the individual author how to publish their baby. First, is to hire
an editor that has no interest in the book other than making sure that they
edit for typos, grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, redundancies, over use of words like “and”, “or”, and
“but”. Editors will notice these because they have no stake in the book other
than making it the best book for the reader.
If authors
such as James Paterson, David Baldacci, or Orson Scott Card want to publish a book
with a traditional house, most houses will take a chance, but they are probably
not willing to take a chance on previously self-published authors, or
unpublished writers. Authors need to find creative ways to convince publishing
houses to take a chance. One creative way is to create a well-written,
well-edited book. Don’t forget a well-crafted proposal.
Robert Medak
Freelance
Writer, Blogger, Editor, Proofreader, Reviewer, Marketer