What’s a writer to do?

By Ray Rhamey  |  November 19, 2009  | 

It’s a conundrum—for most publishers, a writer needs an agent to market a novel manuscript. But today’s market makes even connecting with an agent damned difficult. Here’s what agent Kristin Nelson said on her blog, Pub Rants:

“I’m passing on really good novels because currently I believe that really good might not be good enough in today’s market.”

I’ve run into that response consistently with a novel of mine, The Vampire Kitty-cat Chronicles. Several top agents have asked for partials, and here’s their reaction:

“I love vampire kitty, I just don’t know what to do with it.”
“This is unique, voicey and hilarious–and not quite right for me. Gah!!!”
“I laughed out loud and thoroughly enjoyed the feline perspective on vampirism. Still, I worried that it’s the kind of project that many editors would love but wouldn’t necessarily be able to buy.”
“I think it’s original and very cute. Unfortunately, I don’t think I can sell it.”

Okay, so it’s an agent’s job to sell—or, perhaps more accurately, find a willing editor. I understand that.

On the other hand, plenty of beta readers, perfect strangers who encountered my kitty-cat novel on Authonomy, reacted this way:

“Oh, hell, how funny is this?????”
“Patch, the vampire kitty, has risen to the ranks of one of my all-time favorite heroes.”
“Bravo. I was looking for laughs and I got them. What a pleasant escape from the daily grind of life.”
“This is a cat I want to know. I love this character.”
“Pure comic genius.”
“The best vampire book I’ve ever read. Delightfully funny!”
“I wanted you to know that I adore Patch.”

And yet I can’t get this beast represented. As one agent said, “Gah!!”

So what’s a writer to do?

Here’s what I’m going to do, and you can help.

You saw this coming—I’m going to publish this myself. Time is a factor: the vampire craze will simmer down soon or later (especially now that zombies are the new vampire); I have a fresh twist on the vampire myth that just might cut through; and a star character. Here’s a rundown of the steps I’m taking:

1. I’m going to launch with a POD trade paperback, a bunch of e-book formats, a free podcast and, if I can get it listed on Audible.com, the gatekeeper for the iTunes store, an audiobook.

2. I’m putting up a website at vampirekittycat.com (it’s not live yet). It includes special promotional features such as:

• I donate a percentage of each sale to the ASPCA. The ASPCA is willing to consider the book for placement in their online store.
• There are two cat “social” features: a photo gallery to post a pic of a Cat You Love; and a “tell me a story about your cat” section.

3. I’m doing a video book trailer with the help of a designer friend, no charge.

4. I’ve hired a copyeditor to do his thing with the manuscript.

5. I’ve bought an ISBN number, and been assigned a Library of Congress control number.

6. For the POD book, I’ve

• Designed a cover and the interior
• Created an account with Lightning Source, the biggest print-on-demand printer around, I think, and a partner with Ingram, the biggest distributor around. I’m signed up for distribution, too. Lightning Source doesn’t offer the kind of complete service that Lulu.com or Create Space does—you have to provide your own press-ready material.

7. I’ve written to 17 published authors to ask for a blurb—so far, 4 have said they’d take a look. I made sure to disclose that this is a self-published book. I also gave them the agent comments above and this little snippet from the first page:

Just after dark, death grabbed me by the tail. The moon was full, and cool September breezes were scented with earthy hints that fall was coming. I trotted over a mound of fresh dirt, not an uncommon thing in a graveyard, my mind on a svelte little Siamese who was coming into heat―and a hand shot up and grabbed my rear extremity.

I twisted and went for it with my claws, but another hand burst out and seized the scruff of my neck―I went limp, just like when I was a kitten and my mom picked me up. The hands snapped my body straight, and then a woman’s face poked out of the ground. She sat up, holding me in front of her. I figured I was about to kiss my furry butt goodbye, and I was right.

Sort of.

8. I’m going to send an ARC (advance review copy) to

• Authors for blurbs
• About 20 vampire websites
• As many cat websites as I can find—surprisingly, there aren’t many
• The makers of Vampire Wine (I have a bottle, to be opened on publication day)
• The makers of top cat food brands to try and sell advertising space and product placement in the book and on the website—hey, this is a business, right?

9. The e-books I can do for free on Smashwords, and earn a healthy percentage of the sales. They even do the Kindle format. I can also list it with Amazon for the Kindle—I need to see what the return is.

10. The free podcast, taking a page from fellow WU contributor J.C. Hutchins, will be performed by me. A nice plus—there’s a song by the Grateful Dead, Dire Wolf, in which the chorus says “please don’t murder me.” It’s my character’s favorite song. I’ve secured permission, subject to seeing the book, to use an excerpt of that song for the intro and outro on the podcasts and the audiobook. I’m going to credit the song everywhere I can, and they’re not charging anything for the right to use it.

11. Through Lightning Source, distribution will be open at Ingram, Amazon, Baker & Taylor, and other national distributors and book marketers.

12. Oh, and I’m going to send an ARC and my marketing plan to a couple of likely publishers on the extremely unlikely chance that they’ll partner with me on the production of the paperback, which would give it the advantage of being available in bookstores. If they like the book, my design work, and the promotional plans, their production costs will be quite low.

13. I’ve designed graphics for t-shirts and coffee cups to sell on Printfection.

14. And I’ll put ads on my Flogging the Quill blog.

Whew!

Want to help, just a little?

First, if you think of a marketing or promotion angle that you don’t see above, please suggest it in the comments or in an e-mail to ray at ftqpress dot com

Second, if you are a published author and might be interested in taking a look at the book with blurbing in mind, please contact me at that e-mail address with your information and a mailing address.

I’ve ordered the first proof of the book, and hope to be making the ARCs soon.

What’s all this cost?

Like many folks, I don’t happen to have a whole lot of money these days. So cost is a factor. Here’s what I’m looking at:

• Paperback book: $75 for setup at Lightning Source, $30 for the first proof, $4.12 per book for the ARC copies, plus shipping. After than, no out-of-pocket costs.
• ISBN number: $125
• Audiobook/podcast: microphone and other equipment, $200
• T-shirts, etc.: no cost to produce, they do it all and take a cut.
• E-books: no cost
• Copyeditor: don’t know yet, estimate $200
• 30 ARCs: estimate $150

Total anticipated investment: about $800 bucks, not including the website at about $8 per month.

What do you think? Have any ideas? I’ll keep you posted as things develop.

Cross-posted today at Flogging the Quill.

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16 Comments

  1. Jennifer Bailey on November 19, 2009 at 10:45 am

    You’ve covered so much ground–a lot of which would never have occured to me. I’m new to the self-publishing concept–the components involved are a very vague shadow in my mind. Thank you for covering what you’ve done. It will no doubt come in very handy for me.

    By the way, I have every intention of finding Patch and his Vampire Kitty-Cat Chronicles.



  2. Kristan on November 19, 2009 at 11:30 am

    WOW your efforts are impressive! I’d love to hear an update in a few weeks or months and see how they worked out for you. Thanks for sharing, ’cause I’m sure a lot of us may be considering steps like these in the future.
    .-= Kristan´s last blog ..Frustration vs. discouragement =-.



  3. Jordan Summers on November 19, 2009 at 12:07 pm

    You have a great plan, but you may want to up the expense of the copy-editor. A good one costs a LOT more than that. Good luck!
    .-= Jordan Summers´s last blog ..Computer Decisions and Follow Ups =-.



  4. Holly on November 19, 2009 at 1:33 pm

    Jordan’s right. A good editor is much more expensive unless it’s a friend or relative who’s giving you a big discount. Good luck! I hope you post again when the book is available. I’m looking forward to reading it.



  5. Arthaey on November 19, 2009 at 3:27 pm

    What price will you sell the ebook version? I’d seriously consider buying a copy if I could read it on my iPhone.



  6. Kathleen Bolton on November 19, 2009 at 3:35 pm

    I’m getting a tee-shirt too. I think that type of merchandising is genius.



  7. Ray Rhamey on November 19, 2009 at 3:56 pm

    The copyeditor is a friend who might do it for free, but I do pay him a not-too-serious amount just to keep it professional.

    Don’t know the e-book price yet, I’ll be researching that on Smashwords. What would you be willing to pay?



  8. Therese Walsh on November 19, 2009 at 4:39 pm

    I look forward to meeting this cat, Ray. Best of luck!



  9. Danielle on November 19, 2009 at 8:11 pm

    This looks like a really good plan. Hope it works well! The only other thing I could think of to get the word out there would be to set up Twitter, Myspace and Facebook pages for Patch, and to use Cafepress.com to create merchandise.



  10. catie james on November 19, 2009 at 9:15 pm

    Don’t have any advice to add, just wanted to say I’ll definitely be purchasing my own copy of THE VAMPIRE KITTY CHRONICLES once it’s released. :)
    .-= catie james´s last blog ..nanowrimo 09: day fourteen – i never promised you updates* =-.



  11. Wendy Palmer on November 19, 2009 at 10:32 pm

    This is brilliant, you’ve thought of some great angles.

    Good work, too, on thinking of the audiobook path upfront – I too am releasing my current fantasy ebook as a podcast, but because I’m just using my computer’s microphone, the quality is not IMO good enough to sell as an audiobook (though decent for a podcast). Lesson learnt for next time round (too much of a time investment to re-record; better to make the money investment upfront…)



  12. June on November 19, 2009 at 11:26 pm

    Oh my goodness! As soon as I saw the title a bell went off. You submitted to the St. Martin’s Press contest for older young adults didn’t you?! Of the submissions, yours was one of about three out of 130 at that time, that I thought had real potential! I got excited when I saw the cover of your potential book. I soon as I read your submission, for St Martin’s, I was cracking up laughing and I don’t usually look for humorous books. I have two cats so the story immediately resonated with me. I wish I was published already so I could blurb you, but I could mention you on my blog. I look forward to “Kitty Cats” publication. All the best!
    June
    .-= June´s last blog ..Backspace Agent-Author Conference: Opening Pages =-.



  13. Jessica Scott on November 20, 2009 at 3:12 am

    As a cat lover and the owner of a cat who probably sees herself as Patch’s arch nemisis, I can’t wait to read this book. So, I’ve got a blog that gets a little shy of 2K hits per week and if there’s anything I can do to help pitch and promote, let me know.
    This book sounds like a blast! Good luck!



  14. Ray Rhamey on November 20, 2009 at 8:47 am

    Thanks, Jessica, you’ll hear from me when it’s coming out.



  15. prue batten on November 20, 2009 at 7:20 pm

    Wow! I am so impressed with your diligence and foresight. My first two novels, The Stumpwork Robe and its sequel The Last Stitch, have been published by an independent press, YouWriteOn.com in the UK, but marketing/advertising has been the author’s task. I had to set up a significant marketing-plan and it was nothing as varied as yours. And yet books have sold, ostensibly because of the weight of communication in things like Facebook and Twitter. So I agree with Danielle, you absolutely must have a leg in the door there, not just a profile page for you but one also for your book.

    In addition, the print and electronic media have their place. I have been interviewed for radio and for the newspapers and saw sales in the bookshops of my home town increase after this. In fact one prestigeous shop had the highest first-time new release sales since they opened the store a few years ago. And I am shortly to have an I/V in a global embroidery mag (my fantasy is about a master embroiderer).

    There are always competition angles and giveaways on relevant sites as well.

    If you are interested, I would be glad to review for you, but as I am not mainstream published, it may not be what you require. Best of luck on what will be the ride of your life.



  16. Heather on November 23, 2009 at 8:04 am

    Ray,
    Wow! Great marketing plan. Thank you for sharing it. I agree that Facebook and other social networking sites are a great resourse. I hope you’ll keep us posted on your sucess. I wish you the best of luck. Can’t wait to read it!:)