By Heather Day Gilbert
In June, 2012, I wrote a guest post for Suite T
entitled "Getting
Past our Writing What-Ifs," in which I talked about sticking to your
passion in writing. I truly appreciated all your encouraging comments on my
attempts to get my Viking historical novel in the door with traditional
publishers.
Yet, the novel I discussed in that post was out on
submission for not just one year, but for over a year and a half. If one thing will crush your hopes and dreams as a writer, waiting a
year and a half will. About halfway through the wait time, I yelled "Uncle!" and proceeded to write
another book, in a totally different period and genre (Contemporary Appalachian
Mystery--shout-out to Southerners!).
I determined I wanted to be traditionally published first. After all, I couldn't market my
own book, could I? I couldn't figure out all the techie stuff required to
self-publish!
Turns out, all that time out on submission helped me
more than I anticipated. In that year and half, I built a solid author
platform. I got line-edited on my next novel, learning some new tricks of the writing
trade. I received heartening feedback from CBA editors, who liked the story,
liked the writing...but felt they couldn't market Vikings.
I realized the book was ready, but the CBA market
was not. There was one very shiny
option out there for my Viking novel--self-publish.
Get it out to the masses while Vikings are hot (Thor II releasing in November, Vikings
miniseries on History Channel, How to
Train your Dragon 2 coming out next year). I'd be an idiot to miss this
opportunity to get the word out on a real Viking woman who sailed with her
husband to North America.
I knew I didn't want to strike out my first time out
of the gate. So I determined to have cover art that looked professional and
made people want to read my book--even on my very limited budget. Thankfully,
my brother is a computer guy and helped materialize my vision. You can see our finished cover art for God's Daughter by clicking on the title.
I also worked out an intense marketing strategy,
trying to leave no stone unturned. This involved everything from asking lots of
author friends to be early readers (in hopes they would influence for or
endorse my novel) to building early interest with pinnable quotes from my novel
(link here
for the gallery).
Now I've become a hybrid author, meaning I
have an agent and I'm out on submission with traditional publishers; yet in the
meantime, I have self-published a novel. I truly believe this is the wave of
the future. With the sweep of e-books,
authors have more control than at any time in history.
It's both terrifying and encouraging--terrifying in that we have to get all our ducks in a row if we want to shine, yet encouraging in that we no longer have to wait for the gatekeepers to deem our subject matter/genre/time period "marketable."
In this brave new world of publishing, I'm so
thankful to finally get my novel, God's Daughter, into readers' hands.
You can find it here on Amazon.
I would love to hear your stories of traditional publishing or self-publishing in the
comments. And let's make the most of this wide-open publishing world!
_____________________________________________________________________
Heather
enjoys writing stories about authentic, believable marriages. Sixteen years of
marriage to her sweet Yankee husband have given her some perspective, as well
as ten years spent homeschooling her three children. Heather is the ACFW West
Virginia Area Coordinator. You can find Heather at her website, Heather Day Gilbert--Author, and at
her Facebook
Author Page, as well as Twitter,
Pinterest, YouTube, and Goodreads.
Look for her Viking novel, God's Daughter, on Amazon, today!
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