USSRGirl wrote:Well, I'm not giving up on getting published for real. So far as being taken seriously, wouldn't printing with Lulu really be the same or better than being a starving writer with a novel on my harddrive? Also, what do you mean by "give up first publishing rights"? Since Lulu is a vainity pub, it's not really the same as being published professionally. Correct me if I'm paranoid, but PODs DO allow you to retain your own copyrights as they say, riiiight?
Bobtheduck wrote:Well, Lulu actually does have a service to put your book in Amazon, borders, and Barnes and Nobles, and give it an ISBN... So... It doesn't market your book, but it does make it available to buy at retailers... Marketing would be up to you...
I was planning on doing my first run of my book on Lulu...
USSRGirl wrote:Jason - go make friends with Pascal. You two can create the world's longest most articulate message board post in history and drive poor newbs off CAA in fear of your 50-page long dissertations. XD
USSRGirl wrote:On a serious note, yeah I'm familiar with TOR though I haven't tried submitting to them yet. Last I checked they weren't taking unsolicited submissions.
USSRGirl wrote:I have actually switched from looking for pubs to looking for agents, as there seems to be a better chance of getting in through them than doing it on your own.
USSRGirl wrote:Writer's Edge, hmm... gonna google these folks and try it. Though... *cringes at horrible Tim Lahay style Christian writing* judging by their awkward shallow criteria I doubt I'd get in (...).
Mithrandir wrote:Don't forget, you don't HAVE to ever let anyone know you've published something through them. You can print a copy or 10 for yourself, and keep that on hand for otherthings you might want to "show off" or whatever. It'll give you a little experience, and you can always publish and mail a preview of the story to a publisher. If you tell them it's self-printed (not self-published), then it's just a "professional looking sample" and you only have to pay for whatever you send.
Mithrandir wrote:If you're curious, I've many times considered taking a project binder from a long-running project and using LULU to generate easy-to-store copies of things I want to reference. It looks VERY professional to have those on your shelf when a client comes in. You can non chelantly reach up, grab one of those, and tell the client, "This project sounds very much like this other project I worked on. Does this look something like what you are thinking about?"
mechana2015 wrote:12 point type is the standard for essays and word documents across the board, but it isnt the standard for novels (or any other mass distributed text where there is a lot of words such as magazines). In most cases 10 or 11 point is actually the way to go, and this can alter page count dramatically.
JasonPratt wrote:Yah, that's high for a 50 page book. (A 50 page book?? What's your wordcount??) Plasticoil binding, hm... No spine title then, and if it ever breaks (which to be fair isn't likely), your reader suddenly has um 50 pages to regather together. Okay, in a way that counts as 'not bad'. In a way. {g}
Now, here's the next fun question. Is $11.93 what they expect _you_ to pay _them_ for printing the book? Or is that their recommended cover price (what the end-reader will pay at most plus taxes, taxes not going to anyone but the gov't of course)?
JasonPratt wrote: Actually, I was sitting here thinking with my _other_ business cap, 'hm, 50 pages, $11.93 per copy, plasticoil biding, deal Lord I would gladly pay _twice_ that to not have to work up a company catalog every couple of months.' {scribbling mental note!}{g}
JasonPratt wrote:As to $11.93 being a lot or not--no, it isn't at all a lot, depending on what you're trying to do. But it's horribly cost-inefficient if you're trying to print a novel for any purposes other than just having a copy of your novel around (in which case Kinkos or some other place like that would work just as well as Lulu, or better.)
CoJ is going to be professionally hardbound with a full color jacket (and wraparound leaves), and foil stamping on the cover and spine of the actual hardback itself (which no one will ever see unless they take off or lose the jacket {g}), at just over 450 pages, and I'm going to be paying about $6.30 (roughly depending on planned expenses) per unit. That's dividing back in expenses for typesetting, cover design, marketing, etc., too. My next printing of the same book won't cost me so much per unit, because a significant amount of my cost (cover design, typesetting, some marketing) will have already been paid for.
Even so, I'm still paying a _lot_ more per unit made (not counting overhead) than I would be if I was financing 50,000 copies instead of only 5000. But 50,000 copies is what a major publisher is going to have to finance (plus overhead)]
Well, Kinkos only spiral binds, so Lulu is a bit more sophisticated. They give you a generic coverart and do hardback w/dust jacket, paperback, ect. (of course the sale price goes up with the hardback).
Believe it or not, I am one of those strange compulsive people who feel the need to peel the dust jacket off every book I buy just to see what the hardcover looks like. So yes, it does matter for weird individuals such as myself. Judging by those figures, it's no surprise why publishers don't want to risk it on an unheard of author. Having an agent pitch to them is sounding a lot better. It gives it a bit more credence, and there's a lower risk of getting stuck in a scam (unless the agent THEMSELF is a scammer...)JasonPratt wrote:I should probably add that I personally, even as the publisher (much less as the author), will see very little of the $25.00 the book is going to list for. As the author-and-publisher, I _might_ in some good situations personally see about $1.20 per unit sold. Could easily be more like $.30. If I was only the publisher, it would be a fraction of that range. If I was only the author, it would be a very much smaller fraction of that same range. {s}
Still, hey, $1500 to $6000 profit (after my own taxes and business expenses) is nothing to complain about! And there would be a substantially better potential return on the next printing.
But that only works if the books actually sell first. {lopsided g} There is a reasonably good chance I'm simply going to be out a hunk of money, as the publisher.
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