NewsBites: News from the Indieverse

NewsBitesFriends, neighbors, fans, and fellow writers, it is time once again to gather ’round the smoldering tire-fire of Indieland whilst I regale you with tales of derring-do, tom-foolery, and other doings of note.

Tonight’s NewsBites contains SNARKβ„’, a non-nutritive truth varnish used in the news distilling process to enhance the crunchiness and flavor of information. Now, from around the corner and across the globe, here is some stuff that happened:

Author Lynne Shepherd says J.K. Rowling should quit writing adult fiction. Evidently, Lynne thinks if Ms. Rowling would only stop taking up shelf space, the public would squander its hard earned money on her books instead, giving her the long-deserved praise and reverence she so richly deserves. Sigh. It just doesn’t work that way. This argument is another variation of the one we in the indie community usually hear: if only there wasn’t so much crap out there, people would buy my book. The same flawed logic applies to both statements. The success or failure of another person does not attach to you in any way. There is room at the top and there is room at the bottom and middle. If you don’t like where you are, do what you need to do to change it, but don’t cast about for villains and mysterious market forces arrayed against your success. Whether you think Ms. Rowling deserves the success she has is irrelevant. Whether you deserve more success than you have is irrelevant. Success is not a meritocracy.

That said, even though I disagree with Ms. Shepherd, I do think she has a right to her opinion. Others felt her comments deserved a little more punishment than a mere calling-out and decided to one-star her books. That seems beyond the pale to me. I do not like the idea of conflating the author with the book. I hope Amazon sorts it out. Swarm reviews on a book in response to something the author said or did outside the book are meant to silence or cow people. Is that how we want to do business?

The other recent big stir had to do with an article published by self-effacing indie hero Hugh Howey on author earnings. Our own Lynne Cantwell interviewed Hugh Howey about the author earnings project.Β  According to Hugh’s data, indies are gnawing away at the profits of big ink publishing to a far greater degree than the good old boys are willing to admit. As Lynne pointed out, big ink and co. came out swinging, disputing Hugh’s data and casting aspersions on the idea of so many charts using the color periwinkle.

Personally, I wish Hugh would quit making charts. Maybe then, my charts would get some of the attention they deserve. Here’s one I made which shows the organizational hierarchy of the New World Order after I take over:

org chartAccording to Publishers Weekly, BookExpo America is expanding its offering to indie authors. I am not sure exactly what that means and I don’t ever go to these things. My spidey-senses tell me that big conferences where lots of little indies gather are apt to turn into hunting grounds for predatory sorts. I don’t know about you, but I find this bit unsettling:

BEA show manager Steve Rosato remarked: “The addition of the Author Hub to our program will connect this community to mainstream publishing, providing access to promotion and discovery that was previously unavailable to this universe.”

I run the other way when someone offers me access to promotion and discovery that was previously unavailable. But, that’s me. I also don’t open mail that says I might already be a winner.

The most humongous news is that the recipients for the first annual Indies Unlimited Excellence Awards have been named. Congrats to the category winners: Big Al’s Books and Pals, The Passive Voice, and Writer Beware – and to all the finalists.

Finally, it looks as though books sailing under the flag of Amazon’s imprints are no longer dominating the bestseller lists. Hmmm… I wonder if that’s because they started using Kindle Countdown. Nah. Probably just a coincidence.

That’s all for now. Tune in next time, when I ask Lynne Shepherd to quit writing articles for the Huffington Post so my articles have a chance.

Author: Stephen Hise

Stephen Hise is the Evil Mastermind and founder of Indies Unlimited. Hise is an independent author and an avid supporter of the indie author movement. Learn more about Stephen at his website or his Amazon author page.

19 thoughts on “NewsBites: News from the Indieverse”

  1. Nice chart. *ahem*
    Where do I get in line for the public to squander its hard earned money on my books? Please tell me there’s not a fee for that.

    Great post. I especially enjoyed your last line.

    1. I thought I was in line, but when I got to the front, I ended up just getting my driver license renewed. Now I have to start all over. Thanks Kat. πŸ˜‰

  2. Steve, just wanted you to know that I have made an enlarged copy of your chart and have it framed on my wall. I did change the color to periwinkle, though. πŸ˜‰

  3. I expect Lynne will give your plea to stop writing for the Huffpost as much consideration as JK gave Lynne’s request. πŸ™‚

    Thanks for the update. Hadn’t heard about Amazon books falling from favor. Don’t know what it means for publishing and bestseller lists, but it’s certainly interesting.

  4. You can’t beat a bit of snark, EM, but I noticed that you made a new verb in this post: “to one-star” – cool! (Is it a new verb or have missed a lot of other stuff?)

  5. Excellent organizational chart, EM. I want one for my wall, too. On BEA opening up to Indies…could this be in opportunistic response to the many, many visitors congregating around the booth manned by Hugh Howey and several other bestselling indie authors during the 2013 conference? Hmm… I’ve been to several of these conferences to scarf up swag…I mean, meet important industry titans I can interview and beg to buy my books… and yes, if you’re not careful, you could lose your shirt. And not just because it gets really, really hot inside the Javits Center.

    1. All writers should have one of those organizational charts, at least when writing. That way, we can quickly refer to it to see if the person interrupting us is important enough to do so. πŸ˜‰

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