The
indie writer had become caught in a web within the Web. Yes, self publishing has
created a revolution in the publishing world. Now anyone can publish their
books online. And this is great, because the reason most writers write is
because there are stories within the head vying for a way out. So the
writer writes, edits, conceives a blurb and designs a book cover. And once the
novel is complete, it is self published somewhere.
Getting Reviews isn't easy |
Chances
are, the book will be found on KDP Amazon, Smashwords, Createspace, GoodReads,
Lulu and other such places. Every writer wants their work to be read. Not to be
unread. Not being read is the writer’s nightmare. Not being read takes away the
point of writing. Writers like to be read. After all, writing is about
communication. Many writers even put their books out for free just to be read.
How
Not to Get Your Book Read
Now
what happens? Chances are, there will be a few or no sales because there are
millions of books out there and you will remain undiscovered. So the writer
surfs the Net for ways of getting readers. And customer reviews are gold.
Naturally,
the writer might peruse Amazon itself, looking for threads where readers
congregate, perhaps discussing books on a particular genre that matches yours. The
writer might contribute in the hope of piquing interest in his/her book. A
similar approach might be used for GoodReads and LibraryThing and other such
sites where readers congregate. But after a while, the readers get annoyed, saying,
butt-out, stop spamming us about your book. This thread is for readers, not for writers muscling in, trying to sell your sci-fi or erotica!
Where to Find Readers of Your Novel
And
what else happens? New threads are set up just for writers to congregate,
because they can’t annoy or spam each other, only offer advice about
writing, book cover design and perhaps lick each other’s
wounds if a negative review is posted.
The
result? There are sites and threads only for readers and sites/threads only for
writers. The two are separate.
The
writer cannot get easy access to readers, the very group the writing is aimed at.
And the readers remain oblivious to the writer’s existence.
This
has happened everywhere. Self published authors are at risk of being burned by
GoodReads, the Kindle Boards and discussion threads of Amazon. So the writer
keeps away in fear of reprisals, perhaps of getting bad reviews for the
behavior rather than the quality of the book itself. Having said that, GoodReads is great for keeping a log of books I have read, but do little in the way of promoting my books there.
Causes of Bad Book Reviews
But
this polarization of writers and readers is no doubt due to the bad behavior of
the few, giving the majority of self published authors a bad reputation. I have
learned the lesson by proxy, seeing other writers getting burned for over
promoting their work online.
With
this realization, the self pubbed writer gets caught on another web. Social
media. The writer cannot spam himself, so he sows the seeds around the Net
hoping to get noticed. Twitter, Facebook, GooglePlus, Linkdin, YouTube, Blogger
and more. And yes, I have created such accounts myself for the same reason.
Rather
than spending the time writing which is the writer’s prime passion, the writer
falls down the rabbit hole of social media. Yes, such-and-such loves writing crime
too and has favorited your comment. You have ten thousand followers. Perhaps you
will buy another ten thousand to look more popular.
But
where is the humble notebook and pen during all of this? In the drawer collecting dust along with your
creative juices.
The
self published writer is caught in a web on the Web where readers and writers are
polarized and the jaws of social media are waiting to consume all your time. Getting
noticed as a self published writer is now harder than ever. And here I am, blogging
and tweeting this post within the paradox.
But here is something the self published writer should always remember...
The off switch to the computer is just few a inches away. And that notebook and pen is still in the drawer.
But here is something the self published writer should always remember...
The off switch to the computer is just few a inches away. And that notebook and pen is still in the drawer.
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