I've released two books. One is non-fiction and the other is fiction.
The first "Life Elements," I released back in 2008. It's done well, and
I periodically still do workshops and other marketing to boost sales.
What hadn't I done until yesterday? For whatever reason, I waited and
waited and waited until more than five years later to release it as an
official Kindle version. How ridiculous is that?
For
this book, I do have a good reason. Some of the things I needed a Kindle
edition to be able to do (links, etc.) was not terribly possible when I
started. I needed the book to be interactive. There is an assessment to
take in the print version of the book that was impossible to convert to
Kindle. So, I waited. And I was biding my time to see if/when it would
be possible. I developed (with help) a version of the assessments that
are up on the book's website and that people who get the ebook can get
to via links instead of having the assessment in the ebook like it is in
the print edition. It was just not practical to try and build something
like it with the tech the way it was. Yesterday, I grabbed it all by
the short and curlies and just did it. Links and all, it's finally up.
Who knows what it will bring in terms of sales, but it was way better
than not having the book up at all.
For the second book, "The Fiddler's Talisman,"
I had absolutely no excuse not to get the book up and out and doing its
thing along the internet superhighway. I had it stuck in a little
hidden cul de sac and it was doing a beautiful job of going round and
round but not getting anywhere. I knew I needed to make some changes to
it. I knew the cover was skewing too young for the content matter of the
darn thing. I knew, I knew, I knew. And I also knew it was darn
important for me to get the book out there in the Kindle format. People
are purchasing ebooks more than ever before (and the vast majority of
them buy ebooks on amazon) so if you are an author and you don't publish
your book on Kindle, you are taking a hammer to your foot.
And
yet, I hesitated. Oh, I had lots of excuses. The whole DRM and Kindle
Select issues made me squeamish. Redesigning the cover also did a number
on me. Plus, I admit it. I was just afraid. I love the book I wrote.
I'm proud of it. It's so important to me to tell this story because I do
believe in the power of music to heal and to make magic. Plus, this is
the first book in the series and I have many more stories to tell in
this wacky universe I've created. Heck, each of the Fairy Godparents
could have their own tale. And yet, I think because it was so important
to me, I waited. And waited. And waited.
This whole
experience made me come to the obvious conclusion. When it's important, I
get it done. When it's really, really, super duper important? I'll sit
on it like a mother bird on a golden egg, and some part of me will be
too scared to let it hatch, breathe, and live. I'm so glad a bigger part
of me wanted to release Evie Songbottom on a larger part of the
unsuspecting world. Despite the fear, I had to do it anyway. Yes, it
might jump out of the nest and fall to its death below. Or, it might
leap and fly. In the end, I have to find out which it will be.
Regardless,
I'll keep writing the tales of Evie, Joanna, Daniel, Zeke, Mar, and the
rest. They've taken on their own lives now and they will be pissed at
me if I ignore them like this again.
See you on the Writing Road.
