Blind Destiny…

Kindle

Prologue…(due out next month, I think)

The woman stood alone in a courtyard of blood.

The bodies that surrounded her looked more like meat than anything else.

The man watching her from the shadows had lived through enough slaughters to recognize the one before him now.

These people had been alive not that long ago. If he had only arrived sooner, he could have helped. It made no sense. Why was he here now?

Perhaps whoever had killed them would come back for the lone survivor.

She stood there, drenched in blood, her head bowed.

Frowning, he eased closer, uncaring of the blood and gore. Some would fear it would stain the pristine white garments he wore, but the clothes never stained. Never showed signs of wear or weather. The wonder of that no longer puzzled him, nor did he consider it a wonder. Just another observation in his long, wretched existence.

He stepped in a puddle of blood and not even a drop trailed behind him as he continued forward, his steps soundless on the earth.

He no longer completely moved in this world.

A fact he had yet to fully accept. A fact he’d never completely understand.

Who are you? He eyed her closely, almost willing her to lift her head, to take notice of him.

Who are you…who am I? Why am I here?

And that, if he were honest, was the question that bothered him the most.

Oh, he had a vague idea. He was here because something had led him here, to this isolated home, perched on a lovely mountainside. From a distance, it had been rather imposing, a sign of wealth and power.

Death and hell had waited within. Not too long ago, he never would have been able to sense the evils that had taken place inside here.

But not that long ago, he had been a dead man himself.

Not that long ago, he never would have seen what was about to happen.

It was a knowledge he hated, the way he saw it unfolding in his mind. As though he had split into two people, the part of him that still clung to his mortal coil was terrified and desperate to flee from this hell place. The other part watched was what to come—the way the woman went to her knees, her fingers sliding through the thick, red mess that was blood and earth.

Then both sides of his brain reconnected.

His mind did not understand what she held at first.

But then he saw the glint of the blade, and he knew.

He went to move—

No.

He could even hear the scream forming in his mind.

That was not the answer. No other knew that better than he.

But he could not move.

He physically could not move.

She has to take this step.

He shook his head, denying the voice that whispered to him from within.

Yes. Because once she does, once she is almost past hope, you can reach her. Then, you will offer her the choice.

As she plunged the blade into her chest, finally, he could scream. Their screams mingled as one and as the inexplicable bonds controlling him loosened, he rushed to her side.

He slid an arm beneath her and even as he touched her, he felt it. The buzz of something…more. He did not know how to describe what it was, but he knew it was powerful.

And as her gaze held his, he saw everything…

Everything she was, everything she had ever done.

And she looked into his eyes and saw everything he was. Everything he had ever done.

“No…”

They whispered it as one.

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Self pub & BLADE SONG

Kindle

I’ve had a lot of people asking me things about what/how/why I did things with Blade Song (focusing on the ebook…technically, the print version that’s coming won’t be self published)

So I’m going to just do a quick run down of the basic process I used.

Naturally, the first thing I did was write the book.  Then I had a beta reader read it and see if it sucked it or not and I tried to sell it in traditional markets but nobody was biting.

Sooooo…since I had it and I wanted to get it out there, I decided to self publish it.

This isn’t my first self-published book, not by a long-shot, but it is the first full-length book, it’s the first urban fantasy book I’ve done and it’s really the biggest project I’ve ever taken on.

Edits

The primary editor I worked with is Sara Reinke, although she only takes on projects occasionally.  Sara is an author, but also has editing experience from Samhain.  When I talked to her about this project, I asked her if she’d help me…well, I begged.  She did this out of the kindness of her heart and because I threw myself at her feet over P.F. Changs one day.  If you want to inquire about her rates, you need to contact her.  She doesn’t do these often, but she does occasionally take on projects.  You can reach her via her website. http://sarareinkeauthor.blogspot.com/

I also had a secondary line editor, Lorena Streeter.

The rates she quoted:

Services and rates effective 7/1/12

A basic editorial read, checking for timeline, continuity, consistency, and glaring errors is 75 cents a page.

Simple edit: spelling, punctuation, grammar including sentence structure: $1.75 a page.

Comprehensive edit includes the above, but also includes suggestions for story structure, characterization, plot questions, as well as suggestions for any paragraphs that should be restructured, deleted, moved, and so forth. $2.75 a page.

Word-use read (spelling errors not caught by spellcheck programs, homonym confusion, word usage errors): 50 cents a page.

Contact @ lorenas@cfl.rr.com

I’ll probably have a third for future books.  NY pubbed books usually have numerous editors going over them and I still found things I’d missed even after numerous passes by all of us, so maybe a third line editor will help.

Formatting

Now it’s possible to format on your own.  Nadia Lee has a fantastic book on it.  I used that for several of my books, including the first few Hunters I reissued.  But, it gives me a massive headache and after a while, my eyes start to cross and my deadlines are getting murderous.

I asked Jax Cassidy from Romance Divas for some names on edits and formatting and she passed on several names, including LK Campbell. LK has since saved my life, for very little compensation.

From her site, formatting a book runs roughly:

Normal fees for basic formatting (based on word count) are as follows:
Short Stories Under 10K – $10.00;
Short Stories 10K-20K $15.00
Novella 20K-45K – $20.00
Novel-length 45K-80K $25.00
Novel-length 80K-100K – $30.00
Novel-length 100K-125K – $35.00
For very long novels $35.00 + $5.00 for each 10K over 125K

And she can do it in Kindle, Nook & Smashwords formats.

Covers

There’s very little question of who I have do my covers.  It’s Angela Waters Art.  She’s my go-to person.

Distribution

One question I was asked a lot was how did I get the book up for pre-order.  You can sort of thank Sylvia Day for that.  I’d asked her how she had BARED TO YOU up on Net Galley and she mentioned she’d used INscribe.  I wanted BLADE SONG up on Net Galley.  So I checked on INscribe and I’ll be honest, at first I was leery.  It handles distribution for you and there’s some upfront fees, yes.  Some of the forms made my head spin.  (I don’t do well with forms.)  But it had two undeniable benefits…getting that book on Net Galley for a fraction of what it would cost me to do it on my own.  And making the book available for pre-orders.  They can also get the book available for some of the special deals with Amazon and BN, like the Daily Deals, etc.

And… they can distribute your ebook to libraries.  One of their partners is Overdrive.  They have world wide distribution so your book isn’t just made available to Amazon, BN, etc.  Ebook partners in countries across the globe will be able to order the book, if you choose.

A quick run-down from my contact at INscribe:

INscribe Digital helps…distribute and market effectively. They distribute content to all the biggest retailers, and work with the online merchants to drive sales and suggest promotions.

Promo

Finally, all those years of sending dead roses to bloggers paid off… *Just kidding*

The first thing I did was set up a huge giveaway.  I did a rafflecopter giveaway of 50 PDFs back in June, well before the book was due out.  This suggestion came from Ilona Andrews…I was talking to her back in the spring and she suggested a big giveaway.

I contacted Patricia Briggs–I already knew Patty enjoyed my work, so I figured it couldn’t hurt to ask to for a cover quote.  She was happy to read it over and so I sent her a copy and hoped for the best.  Carolyn Crane was happy to read it as well and… yay!  Both of them liked the book.

I posted a call on my blog to see if anybody might be interested in hosting me for a blog tour.  Some very awesome people responded, included my die-hard favorite author, Lynn Viehl. I had print galleys printed up on LuLu (I hadn’t yet worked out the print deal for the book) and did giveaways on Goodreads.  Having the book on Net Galley helped a lot.

Several bloggers read it in advance and were talking it up and no, I didn’t bribe or send them roses.  Word of mouth is one of the biggest things you can get for a book, but there’s no magical guarantee any book will get that.  I managed to get a little bit of buzz going on this one, but there’s no rhyme or reason to what works and what doesn’t.

So…the first full-length self pub project doesn’t look to be a total flop.  Yes, I’m going ahead with book 2.  Sara has Night Blade and I’ll have it back in a couple of weeks.

The things that I think helped the most…

it’s the things that help with my traditionally published stuff.

  • Getting it edited.
  • Having it formatted.
  • Having a cool cover.
  • Having promo-the hard part is, I don’t have any of that behind the scenes promo that’s going on…well, behind the scenes, so I was handling it all on my own.
  • Distribution

I out-sourced as much of this as I could this time around.  I already have a great cover lady and having somebody else handle the formatting, the distribution made things go smoother.

Promoting the self-published works is still one giant pain in the tail.

But I loathe and abhor promo anyway.

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