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Self vs. Traditional Publishing Part 1: Lyndsie’s Author Saga

I am a writer. It took me 15 years to admit that one. I’ve written 5 complete novels, countless short stories, flash fictions, and a few incomplete novels. I have hundreds of titles or incomplete ideas floating around the world in word docs, blogs and physical notebooks that will never see the light of day. I love blogging. I even enjoy technical and process documentation for industry.

I don’t have my name in print, save for several academic papers I contributed to in college.

Why?

But you know what? I’m tired of hearing the becauses. If you are a writer, then get on that G-D laptop and write stuff! Here I will tell you the saga of my last 10 years of writing. This is centered around the debate: Self vs. Traditional Publishing.

So why am I not published yet? Because the decision between these two publishing models has crippled me. In part 1 of this 2-part series on Self vs. Trad Pub, I think it’s important to understand how much writing has meant to my life.

2008

I participated in NANOWRIMO for the first serious time since the early 2000s while I was in grad school finishing my M.A. I “won” by finishing the novel, Sparks at around 60k words. This was a epic YA fantasy about an inter-dimensional magic school where magic was performed using the 4 elements (earth, air, fire, water). I even “won” a free voucher to get a published copy from some company. I didn’t do anything with it b/c I was told self-publishing would shoot myself in the foot for the rest of my (nonexistant) author career.

2009

I participated in NANOWRIMO for the second time while studying for my Master’s Exam and finishing up my M.A. Thesis. I won again, by finishing a contemporary, sci-fi, zombie novel called Love in the Time of Zombies. Then I saw Zombieland and realized my story was eerily close to the movie though I had never heard or seen any previews for it. I abandoned that project as well…

2012

In 2012, in the midst of planning my wedding and planning a large event for my medieval reenactment group (The SCA), I used NANOWRIMO to start the novel that some of you may already know about. Since this is the novel that I am *still* working on, if you don’t know about it, you must be living under a rock… This is my near-future, dystopian, science fiction (Cyberpunk) new adult novel called Anamnesis.

Two observations:

  1. Apparently I only want to do NANOWRIMO when I have 75,000 otehr things going on in my life.
  2. This “book” has now morphed into 5. A prequel, In Memoriam is 80% finished. Anamnesis is being split into 2: Anamnesis and Insignia. A third book, originally the sequel, Memento Mori is 50% finished. And a 4th series-ender, Nirvana is in outline version. Thus is the lament of a writer who goes too long sitting on her own work

2013-2017

Anyway, in 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, & 2019 I finished Anamnesis . (Yes, I “finished” it multiple times because it has undergone edits every time I wanted to declare it officially “finished”). Currently I am working on “finishing” it again but this time for reals…I have an editor now!!!

As you can tell, I have sat on this book forever. What am I going to do with it? The idea of submitting to traditional publishers has literally paralyzed me. Though, I couldn’t really place my finger on why.

Most people would just say that I’m lazy and/or not committed enough to my writing to work really hard and do research 45 hours/day and get 1000 rejections before finally getting accepted somewhere. But in actuality, I think my feet-dragging was really related to other things:

2018

However, I realized that NOT getting my work out there was kind of killing my self-worth too. Then in 2018 some things happened:

Those two things put the fire under my butt to begin fine tuning my Anamnesis manuscript and seeking publication in earnest. I went to CIPA meetings. I got in touch with authors, publishers, editors, writing coaches and a bunch of other inspiring people. I happened upon a talk about Traditional vs. Indie publishing which was very enlightening.

Self-publishing was starting to sound very appealing. It really relies on networking and marketing which are some of of my BEST talents. But the thought still lingers…will I be shooting myself in the foot as a writer to self-publish? There still seems to be a bit of a stigma or “ugh-factor” when you hear of someone self-published. Like…did they take the time and money to get a good editor? How long did it take them to write the book? Are they any good? These questions make the decision a difficult one.

2019

In early 2019 I made some sort of a decision. Before I pulled the proverbial trigger and self-published, I should give myself a really good chance at getting picked up by a traditional publisher. So, I wrote query letter after query letter and saw rejection after rejection. Then, one publisher actually provided me feedback along with my rejection. They also said that if i fixed that stuff, they would consider publishing me. HOLY CRAP RIGHT? But the feedback was really vague.

At this point, I decided to try and get some beta readers to take a look and see if I could edit it per the publisher’s wishes. Well, it took a huge amount of time to get 3 feedbacks from 20+ beta-readers. (I will have another post out about beta readers who are your friends, so stay tuned).

2020

By this point, it’s early-2020 and I’m finally starting to update my novel based on some great beta-reader feedback. Well, surprise surprise, it is now 15K words longer than before for a total of 30k too long. Buuuuut….I can’t cut it enough to fit the YA or NA category. So…why not just split it!? Well, now it’s two too-short novellas that need more content. Back to the writing board, it is!

Preview(opens in a new tab)

In the mean time, I’ve almost finished the prequel, In Memoriam, which I’d always intended for self-publishing since it was going to be novella-length. Well, it may not be as short as I had originally planned, but ya know…we’ll get there when we get there right?

Also, I finally admitted to myself that if I wanted a great chance at getting picked up by a publisher, I needed to hire an editor. I would need to do this for self-pub anyway, so why not? The editor I selected was adamant that I try to go trad-pub before self publishing. She’s a bit traditional, but seeing as how much my novel has changed, why not try?

And this is where I am at. The new #1 (half of the original Anamnesis) will be going to the editor at the end of the month. Then…we’ll see what happens! I am going to do this, darn it!

Now, if you are as terrified/paralyzed as I was, I will tell you that you can do it! In Part 2 I will weigh the Pros & Cons of both styles of publishing from my experience. I am no expert, but I have done a crap-ton of research. First of foremost keep in mind, everyone has their opinion.

In the meantime, keep writing!

<3 Lyndsie

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