I've sorta kicked around the idea of doing a book for a few years now but never fully committed to it. Since I posted my 5/31/85 outbreak article the other day, I've heard from a bunch of people asking me to turn it into a book, so I figured I should at least look into it. I've been involved in editing/ghostwriting a few things before but never the publishing process, so.. anyone here done it? Specifically a print book - I know going the ebook route is easier and cheaper, but most of the people I've heard from are a lot more interested in having the physical object.
I have a friend who published a book a number of years ago (it only occurred to me just now that I should reach out to her, because apparently I'm a little slow.. anyway) and I think it ended up costing her like $3-4,000 altogether, which seems like way too much to spend on something I'm not sure more than a few dozen people might actually buy lol. I guess some kind of crowdfunding thing is also an option? I dunno.
Anyway, interested in hearing if anyone's got any experiences or info or whatever!
I went through this when getting books together on cats and Decade Volcanoes (the latter of which I'm rewriting now, since I've grown as a writer somewhat -- always tackle something impossibly big but interesting, in my case the Precambrian eon).
I couldn't find any small publishers who fit my budget, and anyway, there are so many people trying to get into print that it's really really hard to break in.
You're wise to look for editors and proofers; I tried to do it all, and it showed, unfortunately.
I saved money, but I have spent SO much time in trial and error as well as in fixing goofs, or as I'm currently at work on, doing rewrites.
Found
this British outfit (they take clients from all countries); haven't worked with them yet, but I'm seriously thinking about it for the project that has me wandering at the moment through Precambrian times.
If
Where Cats Come From does well when I self-publish it, or even halfway decently, I'll have the confidence to go looking for an agent.
From what I've seen, that seems to be the best route into the print publisher's office.
The Catch-22 is that agents reportedly only take on writers with a track record; can't confirm that yet because I haven't contacted one.
Instead, I went the eBook route, and you should know that this does
not rule out print. Here's a
blog post from one of my eBook outlets about print on demand. It is part of Amazon's e-publishing, too; I'm not sure about Google Play.
On reading your post about the 1985 event, I knew it would make an excellent book.
Are you sure you want to rule out eBook publishing completely? It has its advantages.
Nothing is perfect, but you have already got excellent and well-deserved word-of-mouth publicity -- yeah, it sounds commercial, and is, but one has to think of such things.
That support will buoy you up no matter what route you take.
Do it, please, print, eBook, or both - it would make a great book. Just remember: PG Wodehouse was right, for nonfiction, too, when he wrote, "It has been well said that an author who expects results from a first novel is in a position similar to that of a man who drops a rose petal down the Grand Canyon of Arizona and listens for the echo.”