Posts Tagged ‘Kate Nash’

Saturday, February 4th, 2012

Adventures in e-publishing part six – interview with Kate Allan.

Kate Allan is the author of a number of romantic novels, including Krakow Waltz, Fateful Deception and The Smuggler Returns. Under her married name of Kate Nash, she is also a literary agent and a director at independent publisher Myrmidon Books. She has recently self-published for the first time; a novella, Snowbound on the Island, available as an e-book through Amazon.

 

Kate, you’re used to publishing and representing other authors. You’re used to having your own books published by other people. How does it feel to be doing it all yourself, for yourself?

I thought I’d find it liberating but in fact being in control of the entire process from the writing through to bringing to market has been terrifying. Being published by a traditional publisher means someone else out there thinks your work is good enough to invest in. Suddenly that decision was with me, the author, and that was surprisingly frightening. All the usual self-doubt that I get when I press ‘send’ on a submissions, and then some.

In fact Snowbound on the Island, the novella I’ve self-published, was accepted by a traditional publisher in America but after seeing the terms on offer I withdrew it. However, it still felt like a big decision to self-publish and be the person ultimately deciding my own book was good enough to be published.

Why the move to e-publishing? Can we expect more self-published e-books from you in the future?

Issuing Snowbound on the Island as an ebook was the right decision for that work. I looked at other publishers and options for the story including magazine serialisation, but I couldn’t see a natural fit anywhere. Yet I knew that fans of romantic fiction would enjoy it and that the short length made sense as a potential ebook. Because I’ve got a track record now with My Weekly Pocket Novels and these go into Tescos, WH Smiths and other outlets denied to self-publishers, it still makes more financial sense to continue to write my shorter novels for that line. However, if sales of Snowbound on the Island go well I’ll look into self-publishing for a couple of my backlist novels that are now out of print and also for a novel I wrote a few years ago. I’d not been able to sell to a mainstream publisher because the industry view was that I’d missed the boat for that genre. It’s still a good story though and I believe in it.

Can you make money out of it? Is that the point? How does it compare to other ways of scraping a literary living?

It’s too early for me to take a view on the money side of things but despite a growing market, with so much being self-published now, I think it will get harder and harder to break through and make riches. In general though I’ve not done too badly from my ebooks. My primary US publisher for my ebooks pays quarterly and as some of those have been out for three years now, when you add up what they have sold in total, even with the rubbish exchange rate it’s a few hundred pounds which isn’t too bad. The majority of my writing income still comes from print, however. So of course it is possible to make some money from ebooks but I doubt there are many authors making a living from ebooks alone. I seem to remember a survey that said only around a fifth of authors make their living from writing alone, and most authors have other forms of income like a part time job or supplement their income through teaching or appearances. I’m a literary agent for a small stable of authors and I’m surprised more authors don’t do this. Publishers love the fact I’m also an author as they know when they get a manuscript from my literary agency, it’ll be an excellent read.

As an agent and a publisher, as well as an author, do you have any sense of the kind of books that do well as e-books?

The answer to this one is actually very simple in my mind. It’s the kinds of books that readers want to read. There’s been an explosion in self-published chick-lit for example, which is the genre that mainstream publishers and our main national book chain have neglected in recent years. I think the key thing is to make sure your ebook offer looks as good and is as professionally produced as a mainstream paper book. Be very, very clear about the genre it fits into and have a catchy blurb, cover and title. For example I’ve put “contemporary romance” in brackets at the end of the title Snowbound on the Island, so romantic fiction fans know it’s a story for them and not a thriller or some kind of Robinson Crusoe type adventure. The cover is also full of romantic fiction cues from the font used to the couple together in the background on the shoreline. The airplane gives a hint that there’s a bit of drama in the story, and then the rest of the cover echoes the title having a plant peeping out from under fresh snow.

As both an author and a publisher, I imagine you must have mixed feelings about e-publishing?

As an author and a publisher I haven’t got mixed feelings about epublishing at all. There are virtually no downsides and everything for the book industry to gain from the explosion of ebooks. I think the industry needs to make sure to maintain quality and not devalue the book as a product by too much downward pressure on prices. I think publishers in general do recognise and appreciate that readers perceive that ebook prices should be cheaper than the physical product but we need a state where ebooks are typically priced in pounds and only on deep price cuts for short term promotions.

For authors ebooks have been revolutionary in that they have tipped the balance of power away from publishers and back towards authors. I’ve always said that a publisher is only as good as its authors but I can see a future where publishers are going to have to work harder to woo authors and offer them more in terms of career development and marketing. This will be especially hard for smaller publishers who may lack marketing clout. I pulled Snowbound on the Island because I didn’t believe that the marketing support I would get would compensate for the poor terms of the offer. But if I’d not been thinking in the back of mind that I could easily self-publish instead, I might have just put up and shut up.

Index to Adventures in e-Publishing.

 


Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Adventures in e-publishing Part Five – The Bridge that Bunuel Built

All this week I’ve been looking at the rise of e-publishing. First there was a look at Michael Gregorio’s collection of satirical essays about living in Italy in the midst of a crisis. In the second of my ‘Adventures in e-Publishing’ I interviewed Lee Jackson, historical crime writer and the publisher of a series of interesting historical e-books. Next came an interview with successful self-publishing author Ian Hocking. And Yesterday I interviewed Kaye Lyall Grant, commissioning editor at Severn House/Creme de la Crime. I’ll be continuing the series with an interview with Kate Allan, who is not only a published author but also (as Kate Nash) a successful literary agent and publisher. It will be interesting to see her perspective!

Part of the reason I wanted to do this mini-series of posts is because I have myself put out an e-book, available through amazon for kindle or kindle-compatible readers. It’s called The Bridge That Buñuel Built.

To be honest, I’m not entirely sure why I have brought this book out at this particular time. Maybe just because I can. The whole thing is an experiment for me. Conventional wisdom from publishers is that you can’t sell short story collections, so I was fairly sure there wouldn’t be any interest in it from them. (I didn’t try.) The stories in the collection are themselves experiments. So it seemed right to publish this collection of experimental oddities in this experimental form. This is from my introduction:

“I don’t write short stories.” That’s what I tell people. And yet, somehow, here is a collection of short stories with my name on them.

Have I been lying all these years? I prefer to say I’ve been in denial. But why? My only excuse is the notorious difficulty of the short story form. To say I write short stories has always seemed too big a claim. Modesty forbids, and all that.

I don’t write short stories. I try things out, experiment, have a go. Take an idea and run with it. These are the results, sometimes playful, occasionally bizarre, invariably flawed.

The title story is a case in point. There was a Buñuel season on the TV at the time. I recorded several of the films and watched them back to back, Belle de Jour, followed by The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, followed by That Obscure Object of Desire. To be exposed to so much surrealism all at once obviously had an effect on me. It also coincided with a time in my life when my daily walk to the office took me past a sandwich bar called ‘Brunel’s’. It was named, I presumed, after the great civil engineer of the nineteenth century, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, designer amongst other things of the Clifton Suspension Bridge.

Now I have no idea why a sandwich bar had been named after an engineer. Perhaps Brunel had once been commissioned to create a new sandwich, having been confused with a chef of a similar name? I could only conjecture. As I pondered the mystery of that, I wondered whether a comparable confusion, in a parallel universe, might somehow have occurred between Brunel and Buñuel, whose names struck me as uncannily connected.

I must have been thinking a lot about Buñuel at the time, because every day I walked past the sandwich bar this thought occurred to me. I found that the only way I could release myself from this strange preoccupation was to write a story about it.

Whether this is the best way to go about writing a short story, I have no idea. But then again, I don’t write short stories.

 

 

Some stories in this collection have been published before. The bridge that Buñuel built first saw light on the Bloomsbury website; The Symptoms of his madness were as follows: originally appeared in Metropolitan magazine and subsequently in Abraxas; The Devil’s drum cropped up in Darkness Rising, Volume One and was turned into a one act opera by the composer Ed Hughes; Revenants won a competition run by Warpton Comics and so was published as a comic book with illustrations by Simon Mobbs; Stockshot City was published in Abraxas Unbound.

 

Index to Adventures in e-Publishing.

Start reading The Bridge That Buñuel Built now!

 

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Snowbound-Island-Contemporary-Romance-ebook/dp/B0073SSPLI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1328360855&sr=8-1


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