When
I decided to have a crack at publishing my latest book myself rather than
through an established publishing house I had no idea of the many and various
pitfalls I would come up against. I obviously took advice from friends in the
industry who had also taken the plunge and indeed met with my erstwhile
publishers Tim Whiting
and Alan Samson at Little Brown and Orion
respectively. That said, some of the things that frustrate you cannot be
catered for, and in my case the biggest obstacle was to find a printer that
could actually deal with books of the magnitude of the A to Z series. And I am
not arrogant enough to mean the importance of my books when I use the term
magnitude I literally mean the actual size of the book!
Various
well-intentioned printers attempted mock-ups of the A to Z of almost Everything but alas none of them could produce a
finished article that would hold the binding of the book. Try as they may by
reducing font size and page display all attempts failed so I decided to try CPI Clowes ,
the printer that produced the 5th edition of my best-selling book.
Clowes offered me a competitive quote and are now handling both the physical
book and also the E-book. Mine will be one of the few quality books available
thus far as an E-book. That is not to disparage the existing electronic
reference market but the truth is the established so called quality popular
reference books such as mine have not been reproduced as it is felt it would
eat into their physical market too much. This might be so but my way of
thinking is that it is great for the reading public to have a choice and I know
full well that some people buy my books because they look good on the shelf,
other readers are diehard fans of the physical book, some staunch quizplayers
will no doubt purchase both formats (at least I hope they will). But even if
the E-market supersedes the physical, so what, surely the reader demand should
be catered for and not segregated against. As a former accountant I understand
the need to discriminate the sales markets but not the need to discriminate
against the buying public!
I’m
very excited at the prospect of negotiating with retailers and libraries as I
haven’t a clue if anyone will want to buy the book in without the backing of an
established publishing house. And of course the marketing of my books has
always been done very efficiently by Little Brown, the sales team placing it in
all sorts of unusual markets, the best of which was undoubtedly Readers Digest, who sold almost 10,000
on their very first ad and it became their best-ever selling book. And then
there is the promotion of the book, the home team have always packed me off to
the BBC for a week of half-hour slots on BBC Radio stations around the UK and Ireland . Will I have the same
facility on my own? It is all uncertain and even today when I thought the book
was in the can and all I now need to do was to set up some sort of payment
system on my dedicated website for advance sales I overlooked the small
question of ISBN numbers. I had assumed the printer would sort this one out but
was horrified to find out that it was down to me! The usual method is to
purchase an ISBN via a UK agent and the process takes about 10 days which would
have meant I was struggling to get the book out before my intended target of the
middle of June (as I have a short holiday planned with a Christian group in
Studland, close to where my father lives). I might still struggle as other
unforeseen circumstances arise but fortunately a quick phone call to Little
Brown seems to have solved this particular problem as they have promised to
send me a few numbers before the end of the day which is jolly decent of them
considering I am not publishing the book with them.
One
of the prime reasons why I have not sought out a publisher for this work and do
not intend to for future works (although once I have failed miserably I will
undoubtedly bash down the doors of all and sundry with tail firmly planted
betwixt my legs) is to keep the costs down and thereby sell my books a little
cheaper than at present. Of course I cannot dictate to any retailer and now my
books have been increased to £30 it might be difficult to persuade them to
lower the price but that is the idea, and I will certainly offer retailers the
product as close to cost as possible in my quest to contain the price. Advance
sales should be £20 as long as there aren’t too many to cope with and I’ll do
my utmost to keep as close to this price has humanly possible, at least for the
forthcoming pop culture book and the Sports book which was originally planned
to be published via Orion but if all is well I shall now publish myself too.
And
what does The A to Z of British (and
Irish) Popular Culture actually contain you might ask? Well here is a brief
synopsis of what is between the covers. There is a promo video floating around
somewhere on Facebook or Youtube (Not sure about the website) but in a nutshell
Television and Radio
In-depth
details of more than 2,000 TV and Radio shows
Including
comprehensive cast lists past and present
Biographies
of well-known presenters
And
all the various reality show winners
Cinema
In-depth
details of more than 2,000 films stretching back to the days of silent movies
Including
comprehensive cast lists and plot synopsis
Biographies
of more than 1,000 film stars
Plus
all the famous British institutions, Bond, Potter, Doctor, Confessions
What
a Carry On!
Pop Music
In-depth
chart history of hundreds of bands and solo artists
Including
dates and chart positions of singles and albums
Biographies
of pop stars past and present
Plus
every UK
Top 10 listing since the dawn of the charts
Comedy
In-depth
coverage of stage, screen and radio comedy
Including
Music Hall, Double Acts, Ventriloquists and Stand-ups
Biographies
of hundreds of comedians past and present
Plus
catchphrases, routines, novelty records and films
Miscellaneous Section
In-depth
coverage of those quirky British Institutions
Including
Beauty Pageants, Celebrity Mums…..and Dads, Pipesmokers and Rears of the year
Biographies
of hundreds of models, presenters, soap, reality and sports stars
Plus
Comics and Cartoon Strips
And
for the ladies – Magazines!
And
for the gents – Classic Cars and Motorbikes
I
hope you like it
1 comment:
Looks good!
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