Anesa Miller

The Hybrid Legacy

A guest post by Paula Marie Coomer.

When Anesa Miller asked me to write about book publication—specifically hybrid presses vs. traditional publication/self-publishing—I realized that somewhere along the line I had begun to think this way. That is to say, I consider hybrid presses (I have recently learned that this is also called “third-way” publishing) to be the one and only road to publication and have lumped traditional presses and self-publishing in the same bucket: the one marked “Things I Don’t Want to Do.” In the case of traditional publishing, small presses are so overwhelmed by submissions that you can spend up a year sitting on your thumbs waiting for a response to queries and submissions. And it seems you have to be a blueblood to get noticed in New York. As for self-publishing, first of all, who has the money? And secondly—no. Just, no. Not for me. Might have been fine for Hank Thoreau and Jimmy Joyce, but I’m simply not that organized.

I was lucky enough to find Booktrope—or Booktrope found me; it’s still pretty magical, the way that all happened—at just the moment I had given up on finding a publisher for my novel Dove Creek. That poor book had been through the mill. Depending on how you counted it, 10+ years and 14 drafts. Forty-six rejections by agents and small presses. Tossed to the back of the closet in the early light of the 21st century only to be extracted in 2007, when a local indie-radio producer asked whether I had anything of book length that might work for serialized broadcast. In that form, Dove Creek had already had a nice run by the time I met up with Ken Shear and Booktrope, with thousands of episodes downloaded and no sign of stopping.

A ready-made audience.

Ken had this new thing going, this idea about how books should be published. It involved merging old traditions with new technology. Manuscripts carefully vetted for craft and storytelling. Agents welcome but not necessary. No capital outlay from the author. Other tasks accomplished via independent contractors—and only the best and the brightest—for editing, design, and marketing. Making good use of print-on-demand to keep overhead down.   Meanwhile, supporting authors to go out and do what they do perhaps second best—because the writing is always first—meeting the public, by offering brick and mortar stores decent discounts and providing authors deep discounts so that signings and readings are affordable.

What sets Booktrope’s community aside, however, is that it is a community. There are hundreds of us—authors, editors, artists, designers, marketing folks—all full of the belief that books still matter, that good stories are meant to be shared, and that you change the world one syllable at a time. Thanks to technology, the Internet, we come together in a rather large central web space called Teamtrope, the techno-equivalent of someone’s back patio, where book deals are made and work plans tweaked and where we hold our collective breath while waiting for that first glimpse of a book’s cover. There are places to chat with other authors when you feel the need for support, places where you can see how your book is selling, rooms for training for all the production folks, for tracking that production, and all of it transparent and visible to the author. Books are created by equally-invested teams which means, except for a few paid employees, compensation comes primarily in the form of royalty shares—which means it’s in everyone’s best interest to take part in promoting books they’ve been involved with, but it also means divvying up the loot with people who matter to you when your book makes it big.

All this aside, perhaps Booktrope’s defining characteristic is their commitment to marketing and their heavy online presence. When Dove Creek came out (Booktrope’s first literary novel), all titles were available for reading in an online library. Ken’s theory was that people would read the first few pages of a book and then make the decision to buy. His theory was backed by such well-known authors as Neil Gaiman, whose video attesting to the advantages of giving away your work is featured on Booktrope’s website. All this turned out to be true. People sampled books and then bought them. With nearly three hundred books on the market, Booktrope no longer maintains its reading library, but this philosophy of giving first is ingrained in all of us as we are reminded not to hawk our books, but to give of ourselves by reaching out to people first, making our work available on free-reader sites such as Wattpad, keeping up with our own websites where we write about our lives and daily insights, in short, making shared humanity our first mission. “Book sales will come,” they tell us. And they do. Quite a number of Booktrope books have won awards or reached bestseller status, mine included.

In the end, selling books is also about making money—everybody has to pay rent—and since making money in our world is deeply connected to image, Booktrope is also deeply devoted to their image as a publisher committed to fine craft and the furtherance of their belief that readers don’t want Pablum, don’t want their prose diluted. From chick lit to sci-fi to erotica to literary prose to poetry, quality of writing and storytelling comes first. Most Booktrope authors are professional people, schooled at the graduate level and beyond. Many are academics. And you only have to cruise through the catalog to see that just in case a Booktrope book is ever judged by its cover that cover is going to make an unforgettable first impression.

Do I regret the fact that I somehow, after twenty years of trying, missed the boat to New York publishing? Not really, even if I did once envision myself as the next Irma Bombeck. In fact, a number of Booktrope authors have previously been published by the big dogs, and they all have the same thing to say: publishing with Booktrope is a much better experience; the support for authordom is invaluable; books never go out of print, and they are never remaindered—you’ll never see yourself in the ninety percent off bin. Not to mention the fact that New York seems to be asleep. None of us really knows what that crowd is thinking—or up to. To my experience, they are about the business of stealing postage, since none of my SASE’s ever come back.

It’s funny. Booktrope set out to do something legacy publishing (another way of saying traditional publishing) has never done—except in a very few cases—and that is to nurture authors in such a way as to promote creativity and productivity. So, the more books an author has on Booktrope’s list, the better. In this way, they are making authors into “legacies.” From what I was always told, the only thing harder than getting a first book published is getting a second book published. The hybrid philosophy is just the opposite. You also never hear the words, “We don’t know how we’d market it.” Instead you hear, “What are all the ways we can market this book?” The philosophy as I have experienced it with my “hybrid” press has been as much a merging of principles as processes, and unequivocal: give thrice as much as you ask for, and never seek a final answer; rather, always be working in anticipation of a new question, which is, invariably, “What will you be writing next?”


 

Paula Marie Coomer, the daughter of many generations of Kentucky mountain people, lived most of her childhood in the industrial Ohio River town of New Albany, Indiana, dreaming of New York City and the glamour of the creative—art, literature, the theatre. A vision gleaned from the pages of magazines and catalogs. What she chose instead was a Westward-bound, vagabond life of part-time jobs and rootlessness until, in her early 20s, she began craving an education and made her way to a community college in Oregon, ostensibly to study writing. It took nearly 20 more years and a career in nursing before all the built-up stories and poems began making their way to the page. Those stories have appeared in many journals, anthologies, and publications, including Gargoyle, Knock, and the acclaimed Northwest Edge series from Portland’s Chiasmus Press. Ms. Coomer has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize, was the 2006 Writer-in-Residence for Fishtrap, Oregon’s much-loved advocacy program for literature in the West, and is the author of an array of books including Blue Moon Vegetarian, Dove Creek, and Nurses Who Love English. Ms. Coomer lives near the mouth of Hell’s Canyon in southeast Washington State and teaches English at Washington State University. www.paulamariecoomer.com

7 thoughts on “The Hybrid Legacy”

  1. Interesting article
    I’m just getting started with Booktrope and am impressed. with their business model and staff.

    1. I really appreciate your feedback, Judith! After my own self-publishing ventures, a “third way” between SP and TP sounds very promising. Many thanks for stopping by the blog.

  2. At the Boston writing conference, The Muse, in May, I attended a talk given by an author and her agent on “Partner-Publishing,” which seems to be another third way. It requires working with a publisher who is open to the arrangement, who chooses the books, and who works with a standard distributer. The author pays for as much editing and promotion as he/she wants, works with the cover designer, and owns the book — and receives more than half the money the book earns. The author who spoke writes fiction, and her agent and publishing house also works only with fiction, so I tried posting questions about this on LinkedIn writing sites. Almost everyone thought I was talking about vanity publishing. I just hope this newer type of publishing becomes a more common option, since it seems to have many advantages.
    .
    I will look into Booktrope, too, however. Thanks so much for the wonderful description and congratulations on your book’s success!

    1. Delighted to hear from you, Elizabeth! I agree–it gets frustrating when people assume that any new way of organizing the process is just another version of the old vanity press. I have an “Author Beware” guest post here on my blog where everyone was sounding off on the hazards of poor editing, etc. Indeed, those unscrupulous presses are to be avoided, but we can’t make progress if we never try a more creative approach.
      .
      I really appreciate your feedback on this important topic. Hope you’ll visit again and share more of your perspectives.

    2. Paula Marie Coomer

      Elizabeth–Thank you so much for writing. Booktrope is not related to vanity presses or to self-publishing in any way. They do not accept all submissions–in fact, they do not accept manuscripts from anyone who has not previously published a book–nor do authors make any sort of financial outlay. I don’t believe in paying for publication or promotion, as my article hopefully makes clear.
      .
      Good luck in your quest, and DON’T GIVE UP!

  3. Nigel Lesmoir-Gordon

    I found this blog very informative and will certainly look into Booktrope. I have self-published my first novel ‘Nothing and Everywhere’ and have just completed my second ‘Life is Just’ and was wondering how to proceed. My website is: http://www.gordonbooks.co.uk

    1. Many thanks for your visit and comments, Nigel. I would be very interested in your experience of self-publishing your first novel and how it happens that you now may consider another route. Were you disappointed? Exhausted? Just looking for a different option in order to compare results? These are the types of questions I especially like to discuss here on the blog. Sometimes, people (like Paula Coomer above) even write guest posts about their experience — hint, hint!
      .
      I hope you’ll visit again soon.

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