Wednesday, April 22, 2026

A to Z: Going Indie: S is for Self-publishing Stigma


Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs

Self-publishing isn't a new thing. I mean, Charles Dickens did it, back in 1843 with A Christmas Carol which is arguably his best known book. 

But success stories in self-publishing have been kind of unusual. While there are Cinderella stories in the 70s-90s like What Color is Your Parachute? by Richard N. Bolles and Bone by Jeff Smith (later republished by Scholastic), mostly self-publishing became associated with vanity. 

In fact, an entire industry of "vanity publishers" began to grow up to bilk would-be writers out of their dollars to produce books with no distribution system behind them and little chance of any measure of success. 

Then, in 2007, Amazon introduced an amazing new device: The Kindle. Producing an ebook is waaaaaaaayyy cheaper than producing a paper book, and readers loved the ease of access that ebooks provide, so it was a hit all around. There were some major successes: Christopher Paolini’s Eragon, E.L. James’s Fifty Shades of Grey, Hugh Howey’s Wool, and William P. Young’s The Shack to name a few. 

That was the beginning of a new era, where individuals could get access to printing and distribution and get their books out there in the world without having to play along with the Big 5 publishing game. 

It didn't mean that self-publishing was considered the same as traditional publishing though. And there is and was quite a variety of quality of work in all those self-published books. 

I remember sharing a table with a man who had started self-publishing in his retirement at one of my first author events and being shocked to see how error-ridden and careless his books were. He admitted that he published his first drafts! To me that was like saying you go outside in just your underwear. 

It's that way in a lot of the arts. Professionalism and high standards for quality come from within, and plenty of folks are willing to "throw something together" but not to truly invest in it with time, energy, and, yes,  money to make it the best it could be. So, that caused the stigma that still comes up from time to time in 2026--where someone assumes that a book is self-published because it's not good enough to have been picked up by a traditional publisher. 

When really, there are a LOT of reasons to go indie, including plain old business sense and a desire to take risks in your work that traditional publishing houses just aren't comfortable with.  

That stigma? It's less and less all the time. 

At one of my recent events, someone came up to my table and said, "So, are you self-published?" I braced myself for impact and offered my short spiel about being hybrid, with some of my books produced by publishers and some of them being books I published myself. I honestly expected something more like interrogation and a demand to prove myself by establishing my credentials. 

I needn't have worried. Turned out, they just wanted to talk shop for bit and learn about what systems I used to make my books. Like many readers, they have aspirations to publish their own books someday. "These look great!" they said, walking away with one of the romances. I just hope they leave a review!

 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

A to Z: Going Indie: R is for Reviews

 

Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs.  

In the algorithm games, one of the horses writers are betting on is reviews. Indications seem to be that having reviews for your book increases the likelihood that your book will be surfaced in different kinds of searches, get added to lists, and just generally be more discoverable.  

Is it true? It's hard to know. It's like Amazon would just be straightforward, direct, or honest with either the authors who sell there or the customers they sell to. It's all smoke and mirrors. Google's not really better. 

But I figure it doesn't hurt and might help. So, I set out to get reviews for my GenX romances in the months leading up to release day. I figured ANY reviews were better than none, but I'm hoping for 20 reviews for each book. 

Here's what I tried: 

1. Asking my audience: I put out feelers in some engagement groups I'm in on Instagram, posted sign-up forms for ARCs on social media, and offered ARC access in my newsletter. How'd it go? Well, so far, for Not Too Late, 11 people requested ARCs through those channels, and 2 have posted about it. Of course, I'm writing this on April 13th and release day isn't until April 28th, so they still have time!

2. NetGalley: My entire N post was about NetGalley, so I won't repeat all the details here. But the short version is that I paid for a slot in a NetGalley co-op ($63 for one month, as opposed to $500 for one book directly), and netted 10 public reviews for Not Too Late so far. I also did this for Acid Reign and Ready or Not. 

3. BookSirens: Another ARC service that connects authors and readers. They've had my book available about 3 weeks at this writing, and only 4 people have selected it to read, and 1 person has reviewed. I'm wondering if I should have done this earlier in the process to allow more time. 

 In contrast, for Stories for Shadow Hill I sent a copy to two friends who said they would review and that was all the effort I made in that regard. To date, that book still has zero reviews. 

See, up there next to the title? No stars, no reviews at all. (sad trombone noise)
 

From past experience, I know that reviews do matter. People are reassured, when taking a chance on a new author, if there are reviews. My first Menopausal Superhero novel, Going Through the Change, for example, has 713 reviews on Amazon and I have anecdotal evidence at least that just the number of reviews was enough to convince some folks to give it a try. 

I don't even get upset about so-called "bad" reviews. After all, what a review is meant to do is tell you whether this particular story worked for a particular reader. You're dreaming if you think there's a book out there that will please EVERYONE and sometimes those "poor" reviews reveal the very thing about the book that would delight a different reader, so they still can help with sales. 

Getting reviews isn't easy, and I won't know for a little while yet if all these effort will help my book find a broader audience or not. Reading reviews is a whole different kind of difficult, and I don't advise spending too much time there. But I also don't advise ignoring reviews all together. They can be useful!

Reviews give me pitch language. Seeing how readers describe my book gives me categories, phrases, and descriptions I can use to hand-sell my book, make social media posts, and use in advertising. It's sort of like sorting through feedback from a focus group, especially if you can distance yourself emotionally from the more harshly worded criticism.  

Reviews also give me food for thought in improving my craft in general. Going Through the Change was my first published novel, so I'm willing to admit it has flaws. For example, most lower star reviews complained that the ending of this first-in-series book was too much of a cliffhanger. 

I could have gotten defensive about that. After all, it's a superhero book and the comic book and pulp material that inspired me in the first place is chock full of cliffhangers. But instead, I took that to heart and as I wrote the rest of the series, I tried to better balance wrapping up one book satisfyingly while still flowing into the sequels. That "cliffhanger" complaint isn't there in the reviews of the other books nearly as often, so I think I found a better balance, at least so far as the evidence reveals. 

So, review what you read, y'all! Especially if it's by someone small potatoes like me. It helps! Even when you didn't like the book that much. 

Monday, April 20, 2026

A to Z: Going Indie: Q is for Questions

 

Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs.  

So, I had (and have!) so many questions about indie publishing. The wonder and the curse of publishing in 2026 is that there are so many options. So many paths you might take, tools. you might use, ways you might go about the whole thing. That's freeing and paralyzing at the same time…because how are you supposed to know what's "right" even when you just mean "right for me"? 

So, I ask questions. I reach out to other writers and ask what they do and why they do it the way they do. Sometimes those answers mean I try what they were doing, sometimes they don't. 

For example, SEVERAL romance writers advised me to go with Kindle Unlimited since so many romance readers are book gobblers and they LOVE those one-fee services. They say I'm shooting myself in the foot by not having my book available in that program. 

But I hear from so many other writers that KU is a worse and worse deal for writers every year. I mean, I know "the house always wins" but do they have to win by such a LARGE margin? Makes it so some of us can't afford to play at all. I'm not willing to let Amazon exploit me for their profits if I'm getting so little in return.

So, I asked a lot of questions, and settled on what they call "going wide" which basically means that I'm not enrolling in KU or any other exclusive agreements, but am making my books available broadly. 

Is it a good idea, going this way? Time will tell, I suppose. All you can do is keep asking questions and making the best decisions you can with what you know at the time.  

 

Saturday, April 18, 2026

A to Z: Going Indie: P is for Profitability


 

Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs.  

So now that I'm trying to treat my writing life with a little more respect and be more of a businesswoman about it, I have to pay attention to things like profits. And the big question is how to measure that. 

There's a lot that I've bought for my writing life (see my M post on Money for details), but which things count in my reckoning for whether a book is profitable yet? 

Mostly, I've decided that things I buy that are for author life in general or serve as infrastructure don't go in the reckoning for any single book. So, buying an author banner, getting bookmarks made, paying a table fee at an event, doesn't count. 

But things specific to that book like editing, book cover, buying copies, etc. DO count. 

So for Not Too Late as an example:  I came up with $726.10 as my starting number, my "sunk cost." 

That includes: 

  • $62.50 for Vellum (not sure this should actually count, because I'll use it for ALL my future books, but if it does count, that is 1/4 of what the software cost me, since I've used it on 4 books so far)
  • $59 for two ISBNs, one for ebook, one for paperback (since I bought in a group of ten--they're cheaper if you buy more at a time)
  •  $196.80 editing
  • $400 book cover 
  • $7.80 for a paper proof copy 

Since then, I've purchased 68 copies of the book for resale. I know that's a weird number, but it's because I shipped to bookstores in weird amounts for consignment arrangements as well as buying for my own in-person re-sale. I've sold 9 copies at full price in person, three at lower price to the cover artist, and one through one of those consignment arrangements. 

When I track how much I spent buying books, I always include the shipping, too. So each book costs me between $4 and $5 on average. So, the copy that sold through consignment paid me $9, but it's really $4 or $5 profit since I had to buy the book in the first place. I hope that makes sense. The copies I sell in person make me $10 or $11 each, for comparison. 

So I've put all that into a spreadsheet and currently, I'm further in the hole than I started, at $834.35. I'm not worried though, because, like I said, this book hasn't actually released yet. This is all PRESALE still.

My *hope* is that the book will be "in the black" within its first six months. So, just in time for Halloween. I'll let you know how it pans out! 

 

Friday, April 17, 2026

A to Z: Indie Publishing: O is for Older Characters


Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs.  

So one of the "different" things about my GenX romances is that the people falling in love are in their 40s and 50s. I've read a fair amount of romance in my life, and if you based your ideas about love on romance novels, you could easily come to believe that it only happens to people between 17 and 25 years old. 

I don't mean to denigrate those stories. I've LOVED lots of them. But, it seems like a pretty narrow band of human experience to explore when it comes to love and relationships. If things go well, there's a lot of life to enjoy after age 25. 

And, I'm not 17 to 25 years old anymore. In fact, one of MY CHILDREN is older than that! And I myself am living a second-chance romance with a man I married when I was 34. So many people in my life are finding love either for the first time, or second or third time, in their 40s and 50s. I've got a friend with a really active dating life in her 60s. 

Writing romance for older characters is the same and different as writing for younger ones. 

You can still get the fun of "he said/she said" chapters, using the alternating points of view to build in some fun for your readers who will know what both characters are thinking and feeling, even when they haven't told each other yet.  

The giddy bits and emotions can be very much the same as they would be for 20 year olds. Swooning still happens after thirty, y'all. 

On the other hand, your characters have history. They've probably loved and lost before. This isn't their first rodeo. So some of the kinds of situations that play well with younger characters make older ones seems TSTL (too stupid to live). 

A lot of time the angst and obstacles are more external than internal. People in their middle age kind of know what they want and what they don't want, and are more willing to communicate it, so what's standing in their way when it comes to love has to be something different. 

For Amanda, in Not Too Lateit's the idea of giving up her wandering life and staying put in one town--her hometown at that. She also has to consider whether she wants to deal with romance while she's in the middle of elder care for her mother. 

For Abby, in Acid Reign, it's realizing that steady and reliable doesn't have to mean boring. Abby's losing her best friend to cancer, too. Is this really the time for love? 

For Becca, in Ready or Not, it's giving another man a chance even though she's been burnt before. Besides, her daughter is leaving for NYC, leaving her to face an empty nest. Isn't that enough? 

I've really enjoyed writing these and my early readers are saying good things, so I'm hoping that romance for older characters is a concept that might really have some legs! 




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

A to Z: Going Indie: N is for NetGalley

 

 

Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs

So one of the big struggles for indie writers is getting their work seen. The big publishing houses don't do as much for writers as they used to, but having your work published by one of the Big Five does still come with higher likelihood that it will get seen and reviewed. And having reviews is part of how Amazon and other online vendors judge whether or not to surface your book for people browsing their sites. Oh, the dreaded algorithm!

So, one of the ways I tried to garner some early interest and reviews for my GenX romances was by getting them on NetGalley. NetGalley, if you're not familiar with it, is a well established and popular web destination where readers, booksellers, librarians, and educators can get free access to ebooks to read and review. It can be a great way to get the word out there that your book exists!

But, NetGalley is EXPENSIVE. If you just straight up pay for it, it's $500 for a single book…and I had three I wanted reviews for. But luckily through networking with other writers, I learned about a NetGalley co-op, which I could rent a one-month stint with for $63! Much more in my reach, financially. So I rented three months in all, one for each book. 

As of this writing (I'm writing this on April 10th, though you won't see it until April 16th), here are the numbers: 

Not Too Late: 127 requests, 114 downloads, 16 reviews/feedback on NetGalley, 10 public reviews on Goodreads. Language I pulled from reviews to help me know how to pitch the book when I'm selling it: prodigal daughter, self-care read, second chance, feel-good. 

Acid Reign: 53 requests, 45 downloads, 9 feedback on NetGalley, 7 public reviews on Goodreads. Language I pulled from reviews to help me know how to pitch the book when I'm selling it: fresh perspective, welcome change, leans into intensity and emotional stakes, mature

Ready or Not:  62 requests, 56 downloads, 5 feedback on NetGalley, 2 public reviews on Goodreads. Language I pulled from reviews to help me know how to pitch the book when I'm selling it: super cute, adorable dog, humor and heart, sweet pairing. 

For contrast, I published a collection of short stories last October (Stories from Shadow Hill) in part as a learning book on how to do all this. I didn't do any of this review-seeking for it, and to date (six months later), it has no review and has gotten no traction at all online, even though it sells well in person. It's not quite apples-to-apples since Shadow Hill is a short horror collection and these others are romance novels, but it gives me hope that the reviews will make a difference come official release day. 

 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

A to Z: Going Indie: Money

 

Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs

So, let's talk about money. I know some people consider that rude, but I think transparency about numbers is useful.  What did it actually cost me (in dollars) to publish Not Too Late and the other Gen X romances? 

So, I broke down my math in the first month recap in my Substack series about Going Indie, but here's the money bits: 

So far, I’ve spent:

  • Vellum software for formatting: $249.99 (August 2019--bought when I thought about doing this the first time). I’ve used it for 4 books so far, so that makes Not Too Late‘s share: $62.50

  • ISBNs: $295 for 10 from Bowker June 2025 which amounts to $59 for the two I used for ebook and paperback of this book. (These are cheaper per ISBN the more you buy at a time, but I figured 10 would keep me busy enough for a year or two—at this point, I’ve used eight of them).

  • Editing: $196.80, July 2025 (I got a friends and family rate from a FANTASTIC editor)

  • Bookcover: $400 Pd. July 2025 (I hired a person I met through convention life to do all three covers)

  • Proof copy from Ingram: $7.80 (September 2025)

That’s a total of $726.10 by my reckoning, but notice the dates in that list. I didn’t spend all of that at once, but spread it out across several months. And the software purchase is an unlimited license, so the more I use it, the less it costs per book.

Buying paper copies of my book (I get them from Ingram) costs me roughly $4-$5 per book depending on  how many I order at a time. I sell them for $15 at in-person events and the pricing will be similar online come release day. That pricing seems to be pretty standard. No one balks at the number if they were thinking of buying it. 

There are other expenses not there in my production costs, but that still matter. To be able to sell at in-person events, I've collected a bunch of things: 

  • bins for books storage/hauling: I use a 19 qt from Container Store that is easy for me to manage alone. Roughly $14 per tub and each holds 15-30 books depending on size of the books. 
  • 6 foot folding table: $50-70 (I happened to already have one I bought as "the cookie mom" some years ago)
  • 4 foot folding table $60 (I happened to already have one I bought in support of gaming parties at my house)
  • wagon for hauling stuff around: $60-$200. I have a $60ish dollar one I bought when my kids were doing soccer, but I covet a more expensive one that I can push as well as pull and with better wheels. 
  • canopy tent for outdoor events: $120 or so. I bought one years ago, the first time I had an opportunity for an outdoor event and recently upgraded to one that's easier to put my by myself. They can be cheaper if you buy them off season. 
  • Tent weights: gotta keep that tent from flying away! $40 bought my the first time a venue required them.  
  • standing banner: I've had a couple of retractable ones from Vistaprint. $100-ish. But after the last one broke, I haven't replaced it and haven't decided if I'm going to or not. You can't use them everywhere and they're fussy. 
  • table runner: $80 or so. I LOVE mine because it "brands" my table and looks nice, but folds into a tote bag and is machine washable. 
  • bookmarks: cheaper the more you buy at a time. My most recent set was $70 for 500 booksmarks. 
  • postcards: cheaper the more you buy at a time. My most recent batch was $50 for 100. I used them to create cards that let people buy ebooks from me at in-person events. 
  • stickers: again, cheaper the more you buy at a time. My last batch was $117 for 300. 

Me under my canopy with my table runner

You don't *have* to have all that, but some infrastructure definitely helps! There's also stuff I subscribe to not for just one book but for my general writing life: 

  • Canva for making graphics: $120 a year
  • Mailerlite for newsletter management: how much depends on number of subscribers. Mine is $40 a month. 
  • Bookbub websites for my website (not this free one, just for blogging--my other one for branding/selling). $5 a month. 
  • Bookfunnel: where I provide download opportunities for readers and can connect with bundle opportunities. $250 a year
  • Duotrope: where I find publication opportunties and track my submissions: $5 a month.   

Do you HAVE to do all this? No, not at all. There are a lot of ways you can do this, and you have to balance your goals and desires against financial feasibility and your skillset. 

For example, if you're going Amazon only, you can just use their free ASINs and not buy ISBNs at all. I bought them because I wanted to go wide and not be beholden to the Big River Overlords. Ingram and Amazon also have online formatting options you can use for free. I wanted more flexibility and something easier for me to use. So I bought Vellum. You can also hire people to do layout for you, usually not that expensively. 

There are cheaper cover options, using ready-mades for example. But I'm anti-AI for creative works and it was important to me to work with an artist.  

Each of us has to make our choices about how we invest in our writing lives. These are just the choices I've made. We'll see which ones I later regret and which ones were worth the investment as time goes by!