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WRITER'S FORUM

This blog seeks to inform and amuse with news and views, information and advice for those with writing as an interest. Feel free to write to me direct.

AN OPEN LETTER
Wednesday, January 23, 2013

A client, not unusually, gets writer’s wobble and wonders if her book is worth plodding on with. It is a novel about the seamier side of life in Glasgow’s sink estates. It is quite a revelation to me. I think, like the TV blockbuster Cathy Come Home, it carries a message that could change society’s attitudes towards the drug epidemic. I thought my reply merited a wider audience as my take on it applies to all new authors.

Dear Sharon,

 

Had I thought it didn’t have merit I would have told you before you spent the first €200. I do tell people if their story isn’t marketable. I suppose I accept about 1 / 5. To do otherwise is a waste of my time - and theirs. I have enough honest work (too much if you include journalism) that I don’t need to gild the lily.

I can say that all of the books I have ghosted are as good as the top 20 percent.

 

This brings us to something else I repeatedly advise. No one, not even Wilbur Smith or Jeffrey Archer, knows what is going to strike a chord with Joe Public. Ironically the key isn’t in the quality or lack of it; as with all things it is the marketing - and luck. A good example; the Spice Girls. They wouldn’t have got a second booking in a Liverpool pub! Marketing achieves miracles.

 

The harder you work at pushing it when it is online the better your chances of a publisher putting his weight behind it and helping you up there. Book writing is an act of faith. As one put it; ‘a successful author is the amateur who didn’t quit.’

 

Sharon, the book’s okay; stop re-reading it as this doesn’t help. Go on gut instinct (and faith).

 

Worst case scenario; it isn’t a blockbuster but you DO sell copies and you get all the trimmings that come with being a successful author (authoress). There isn’t a famous one who didn’t get the wobbles, and confronted failure. None of us have crystal balls. I will do my best on it, to make everyone proud of you; me included.

 

Hugs! Mike.

www.michaelwalsh.es



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Dream on!
Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Dream on

 

I am busy and I have four clients on the go at the moment. The spark goes out after a few hours and I then chill by browsing. This evening I decided to check out the competition. I typed in ghost-writers UK.

 

GULP!

 

How do they get away with it? The first one I clicked looked nothing special but his price certainly was. “You will be commissioning a professional published writer who has bills to pay just like everyone else, so a book will cost a few thousand a month, payable in stages.”

 

Do people pay it?

 

I clicked the next one down; “Expect to pay £7,000 - £10,000 for a 75,000 word bio or novel.” You then presumably have to fork out an outrageous sum to have your book placed on an e-reader like Kindle. My friend-client Chris (Nand) tells me he was quoted €600. OMG!

 

Maybe I am the idiot; at €20 per 1,000 words a 75k novel would work out at €1,500 in total; just €150 extra to put it on Kindle.

 

Perhaps this is the year when I will be able to treble my prices and sell with an attitude of take it or leave it. Well, dreams do come true!

 

Mike



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WILL MY BOOK SELL
Friday, January 4, 2013

The question new authors ask; is my book marketable. The short answer is, yes. If I am asked if it will make money I do not know. If anyone tells you it will be a runaway success they are either liars or they have an aptitude for fortune telling. The reading public is fickle. Who would have thought mummy-porn would have revitalised Mills and Boon. Every day new books break through the glass ceiling and authors retire.

With a little imagination you can draw attention and media interest to your story.  ‘My mother was a nun,’ ‘my dog helped me to write it’; ‘a neighbour freaked out when she recognised herself’; ‘daughter sues mum after mum pens novel.’ ‘Convent denies nuns make out with window cleaners.’ You know the sort of thing.
 
Something new perhaps; like the hotel worker who wrote a book about the things guests get up to and how hotel staff retaliate. I had an enquiry from the owner of a long established sex shop; imagine the tales he can tell. Be controversial; it helps. I ghosted a dog’s biography.
 
If your book is special interest it will help to market it. I often write on matters relating to the Third Reich. I send my book's Press Release to the armed forces periodicals, men’s, militaria and battle re-enactment magazines; media in parts of the world where that epoch holds a fascination. If writing about police, health, keep fit, gay, sailing, alternative, fashion, childcare, sport, travel; presume there are hundreds of periodicals with an insatiable appetite for stories and book reviews on your topic.
 
As a poet I penned verse about Liverpool; I sold out of 3,000 anthologies. Perhaps you were a hotshot salesman; a successful business person; show others how it is done. One book I ghosted was about the tricks used by the Mediterranean’s must successful conmen. Don’t worry if it is trivia; the soaps are trivia; much of what we read in magazines is trivia; trivia is escapism.
 
There is often an odd hour of the day when settling down at my laptop I Google magazines; I then click and paste my book review to those I feel are appropriate. I can send as many as 50 in a day all over the world. If just one publishes it then it is massive free publicity.
 
If you have your own website, which my clients get for €100, you can send the link to hundreds of conventional publishers whose interest is shared by your book’s contents. All it has cost you is a few hours typing.
 
Apart from your time there are just the ghost-writer’s fees (mine, not those of others) paid in instalments. Come on; I see cameras, holidays and cruises, wedding albums that cost more. Returns! You’re in with a blockbuster chance. There will be sales so you get some back. You have the status of author, which can be a meal ticket. You get your name in the newspapers. Your family and friends think you are a miracle, which you are. You have created a book, a biography perhaps that will be as priceless as a posh work of art on a gallery wall. I don’t see how you can lose. Good luck, writers.
 
 


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