RSVP for Martha Alderson May 24

We’re thrilled to welcome Martha Alderson for our May 24 meeting. She’ll be speaking on how to plan your plot with the help of the Universal Story.

To sign up, fill out the RSVP below and we will email you the link in advance of the presentation.

The presentation is free, however, we are asking for donations, which will contribute to the honorarium for our presenter. You can donate before or after the presentation.

(In-person meetings are $5 for members and $10 for non-members.)




RSVP for David Corbett April 26

We survived our first online meeting in March — author John Byrne Barry’s “Rewrite Right! 22 Ways to Make Your Book Better.” Here are the slides and video.

On April 26, at 2 pm, we’ll be hosting David Corbett on WebEx. To sign up, fill out the RSVP below and we will email you the link in advance of the presentation.

The presentation is free, however, we are asking for donations, which will contribute to the honorarium for our presenter. You can donate before or after the presentation.
(In-person meetings are $5 for members and $10 for non-members.)




‘Rewrite Right’ Slides and Video

Thank you for joining us Sunday for Rewrite Right: 22 Ways to Make Your Book Better, our first monthly meeting on Zoom.

It was wonderful that so many of you were able to participate — about 40 of you, think. I hope you learned something that will help you face your rewriting challenges. I very much appreciate your patience as we navigate our brave new world.

Here are the slides from the presentation:

Rewrite Right: 22 Ways to Make Your Book Better [SLIDES]

I’m also sharing a video clip of the meeting. It starts just as I’m introducing myself.

Rewrite Right: 22 Ways to Make Your Book Better [VIDEO] 

Hope to see you April 26 for David Corbett. Visit our website for updates.

— John

P.S. You can learn more about me and my books at johnbyrnebarry.com.

https://johnbyrnebarry.com

Step-by-Step Instructions on How to Join Us Online for Our March 22 Meeting

We’ve never hosted a meeting online before, but this is a time of doing things differently.

Author and CWC Marin webmaster John Byrne Barry will present “Rewrite Right! 22 Ways to Make Your Book Better” this coming Sunday on Zoom, a video conferencing host.

We know this is a challenging time for all of us so this meeting will be FREE for all attendees — members and non-members alike, so spread the word.

To join the video conference, click here — https://zoom.us/j/806061116.

Here are step-by-step instructions on how to make the experience as positive as possible.

1. We ask you to RSVP, so we have a general idea of how many people will be participating and we can reach you if there are changes.

2. Please join us a few minutes early so you can address technical issues.

3. When you click the link, you will see a screen something like this:

4. Click on “open zoom.us” or if you don’t get that dialog box, click where it says “click here”

 

5. If you have trouble getting in, we have two CWC Marin board members who will be co-hosts who can help you. (Contact information to come.)

6. Once you’re in, you should see a screen something like this.

Click “test speaker and microphone.” You’ll be able to tell quickly if you’re connected correctly.

7. We will start with the audience muted by the host, but there will be opportunities to ask questions via chat at any time, and we will unmute as well for questions at the appropriate times.

 

8. Because you may not be muted the entire time, please do what you can to be in a quiet space.

 

9. Be patient. We’re all learning how to navigate our brave new world.
Thank you. Check back as we get closer to Sunday. We may have updates and more tips.

Ten Takeaways from Ruth Schwartz’s Presentation on Self-Publishing with KDP and IngramSpark

Last Sunday, we were delighted to host Ruth Schwartz, a.k.a. the Wonderlady, a.k.a. the Book Midwife, as she presented “Best Practices for Self-Publishing with KDP and IngramSpark.”

Here are ten takeaways from the presentation:

1. KDP, which is owned by Amazon, is the best channel for self-publishing a paperback. Once published, it is immediately available for sale on Amazon. 

2. If you want to be in bookstores or libraries, you also want to publish with IngramSpark, which is the biggest book distribution entity in the world, and has been around longer than Amazon. 

3. You don’t dare walk into a bookstore with a book published by KDP and expect the bookstore to put it on their shelves. Not only can’t they make money on your book, Amazon has put many bookstores out of business and continues to be a threat to brick and mortar stores. (Book Passage has stayed alive because they not only sell books, but host conferences, events, author readings, and more, like renting space to organizations like CWC-Marin.)

4. Buy your own ISBN from myidentifiers.com. KDP will offer you a free ISBN. Don’t take it if you are going to publish on IngramSpark. Ingram will not accept it.

5. Your goal in self-publishing is to look as little like a self-published book as possible. One way to do that is to set up your own publishing company. (I did that for my third book — named my publishing company “Page-turners with a Conscience Press.”)

If you do create your own company, make sure you include it in the ISBN record on Bowker.

You should also file a DBA (“doing business as”) notice with your local county. (This is critical if you receive checks in the name of that publishing company, since you will need a bank account in that name, and the bank requires you to file a DBA.)

6. Use the same ISBN for both KDP and IngramSpark, and make sure the title, subtitle, and publisher name are exactly the same for both. Set it up in KDP first. If you do Ingram first, then KDP may not take it, because it’s already in the system.

7. There are three ways you can make money selling self-published printed books — (a) by publishing through KDP and selling through Amazon, (b) by publishing through IngramSpark and selling through bookstores and libraries, and (c) by buying author copies from either KDP or IngramSpark and selling them yourself at in-person events. (That’s where you’ll make the most.)

If you buy author copies, you’re likely to earn more from KDP because your print costs will be less than with IngramSpark. Both KDP and IngramSpark have calculators so you can figure out the cost of your book, which will help you set the price. 

On IngramSpark, set the discount at 55 percent, which means the bookstores get 40 percent. 

(For my most recent book, When I Killed My Father: An Assisted-Suicide Family Thriller, with a retail price at $15. When I sell a KDP book on Amazon, I make $4.11. When a bookstore or library buys my book through IngramSpark, I make $1.55. When I buy author copies from KDP, they cost me $4.89, plus shipping, so when I sell a book at presentation for $15, I make about $9.) 

8. To publish your book on KDP or IngramSpark, you have to upload print-ready pdfs. Either you or a designer you contract with has to do the interior layout, and turn that into a pdf. You also need to upload a pdf for the cover, which is one file that includes the front cover, the spine, and the back cover.

After you’ve uploaded your file, KDP has an online previewer where you can see what every spread looks like. It will show you where the spine is, and you can scroll through your book page by page, on the screen. Once you’ve approved that, then you can get a proof copy, which will have a “not for resale” band around the middle of your cover.

9. No matter how many times you or others proofread your book, you will find mistakes after you publish. But you can fix those mistakes and upload a new pdf at any time. 

10. KDP has no upfront costs to upload a book. You may need to pay an editor or designer to get your book ready to upload, but there’s no cost to upload. KDP/Amazon makes some money every time you sell a book, or buy an author copy. KDP also does not charge for uploading new files with corrected typos.

IngramSpark does charge an upfront fee for uploading your files — currently$49 — and they charge $25 for uploading each revised file once you approve the book for distribution. 

However, if you are a member of the Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA), you will not have to pay any fees to IngramSpark. And if you are a member of the Bay Area Independent Publishers Association (baipa.org), you can get a $30 discount when signing up as a member of IBPA. 

(You can also learn a lot more about self-publishing by attending BAIPA meetings, which are on the second Saturday of each month at 9 am in Novato. See baipa.org.)

 


John Byrne Barry is author of three novels — When I Killed My Father: An Assisted-Suicide Family Thriller, Wasted: Murder in the Recycle Berkeley Yard, and Bones in the Wash: Politics is Tough. Family is Tougher.

Join Us Online March 22 for ‘Rewrite Right! 22 Ways to Make Your Book Better’ with John Byrne Barry

Dear CWC Members & Friends,

We’re moving our meeting online this Sunday. Here are Instructions on How to Join Us.


Writing is rewriting—we’ve heard that so many times, it’s lost its meaning. But in the age of self-publishing, it’s truer than ever — too often, authors click “publish” before their books are ready for prime time.

Whether you work with editors or not, you as the author have to do most of the editing and rewriting. On March 22, author and CWC-Marin board member John Byrne Barry will present “Rewrite Right! 22 Ways to Make Your Book Better.” He’ll walk through 22 rewriting and editing strategies and tactics. Such as:

  • Start scenes and chapters in the middle of the action.
  • Map out chapters like you’re turning a combination lock.
  • Eliminate unnecessary filter words.
  • Make your setting work so it’s more than a description of your backdrop, but it advances plot, reveals character, echoes theme, and more.
  • Always be in scene. (Or almost always.) If you can’t picture what’s happening, you may not be in scene.

John Byrne Barry is a writer, designer, actor, bicycle tour leader, and crossing guard. He is author of three novels — When I Killed My Father: An Assisted-Suicide Family Thriller, Wasted: Murder in the Recycle Berkeley Yard, and Bones in the Wash: Politics is Tough. Family is Tougher. For 25 years, he was a writer, editor, and designer for Sierra Club, serving as Director of Editorial and Design. More at johnbyrnebarry.com

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