AND
THANK YOU EVERYONE FOR MAKING “The Wolf’s Moon” by Patrick Jones a BEST SELLER at AMAZON in BOTH CATEGORIES!!!!
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!!
AND
THANK YOU EVERYONE FOR MAKING “The Wolf’s Moon” by Patrick Jones a BEST SELLER at AMAZON in BOTH CATEGORIES!!!!
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!!
When I was a kid…I keep going back to those carefree days.
I was twelve years old when I bought my first paperback book. The price was twenty-five cents. For a quarter of a dollar (plus a penny for sales tax), I received a weeks worth of an exciting tale, taking me to places I never dreamed I may really go someday.
Not long after I started reading paperbacks, my dad got really sick. He was in the hospital for a long time. I did not know he liked to read but learned his favorite genre was Westerns. So my twenty-six cents went to Zane Gray.
The author Zane Gray was a member of Penn’s varsity baseball team in 1895 and 1896 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Then one day I went to buy a book and they were up to fifty cents. I had just enough money. I planned to buy two. That was okay, Dad was not working but was starting to get around.
By the time I graduated high school, paperbacks were up to seventy-five cents. There was no money for college and my grades were not good enough to think of a scholarship. The Vietnam war was raging, and I had a choice: Get drafted and go straight to war or enlist. I would get enough training to keep me alive. So, enlist I did.
During those days of training, I learned that cold was not a totally bad thing and that an hour of sleep spread out over twenty-four was actually a lot.
Reading any type of novel was out of the question.
Some years later, I went past a drug store that had rows of paperbacks to buy.
My father passed away not long before. So when I started looking at the books, my first tendency was toward the Westerns. All the ones the store stocked I had already read. It didn’t seem right to read Westerns any more.
I bought another book. That cost me a dollar & twenty-five cents.
Since those days I have bought many books; a great many at used book stores where most were slightly discounted.
One day at a used book store in St. Louis, the owner and I were talking about what a new book would cost to publish.
He explained things simply: A person takes a year of their life to write the book. Then they spend money for the edit. Perhaps, the person lands a literary agent who gets 15%. Then if it gets sold to a publisher, they have the cost of cover design, printing, stocking and distribution. For that they get 50% or a little more. The book store that sells the book also gets a percentage.
At this point the poor author who thought he hit the mother lode is, for the time and energy to write and promote a part of his life, the recipient of the smallest amount from each sale.
On a twenty dollar paperback he makes maybe $5.00 per sale, but more like $3.00.
That made a great deal of sense.
Now I am an Indie author. I pay those costs out of my own pocket.
I am lucky enough to have a wife who is not just a business manager but does as much as a creative consultant. She did my cover design, as well as the book trailer. Sandy stays up with what I have going and need to attend. My wife designed the webpage and tends to it.
My paperbacks sell for almost $17.00 per copy. My e-book sells for $4.99.
I am not saying anything bad about a person selling their book for 0.99 cents, but ask yourself: Would James Patterson or Stephen King?
Nope!
Thanks to Charles Ray for the great review!
Part techno-thriller, part horror, and all entertaining, that’s the only way to describe Patrick Jones’ novel Wolf’s Moon. Mark Lansdowne, aka Mike Linden, lives with his three dogs in the small Ozark town of Maple Hills that’s not supposed to have wild wolves. But, when people start dying, with clear evidence that they’ve been attacked and eaten by some large carnivore, Mark finds himself thrown into the middle of a mystery that could lead to his death. But, Mark is not your normal victim; in fact, he’s not a victim at all. With all the cunning and viciousness of the creatures who are preying on the citizens of his town, he takes the attacks personally, when a woman he happens to think highly of is killed.
With the help of his friend Warren Skruggs, Mark sets out to eliminate the threat. Using the skills he’s obtained from a past…
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Great author interview with Steven Vincent
By Sandra L. Jones, wife of The Author, Patrick Jones
SO…He wrote a book…Now what do we do??
As The Authorand I continue on through the Indie Author self-publishing platform, it is very obvious that the process typifies a continuous learning model. It never ends!! We continue to read, learn and implement our strategy toward discovering new and better ways from the ground up. The publishing industry changes logarithmically, and the speed at which the current “Information Age” progresses is unprecedented.
This particular project has taken us about a year to complete. Anthony Wessel with Digital Book Today suggested that we recount our journey so that others in the industry may learn from our experience. Collaboration is essential in the process of brainstorming. That is key to the equation.
Significant Points to Consider:
View original post 1,476 more words
By Sandra L. Jones, wife of The Author, Patrick Jones
SO…He wrote a book…Now what do we do??
As The Author and I continue on through the Indie Author self-publishing platform, it is very obvious that the process typifies a continuous learning model. It never ends!! We continue to read, learn and implement our strategy toward discovering new and better ways from the ground up. The publishing industry changes logarithmically, and the speed at which the current “Information Age” progresses is unprecedented.
This particular project has taken us about a year to complete. Anthony Wessel with Digital Book Today suggested that we recount our journey so that others in the industry may learn from our experience. Collaboration is essential in the process of brainstorming. That is key to the equation.
Significant Points to Consider:
The first cover I did was with the template format with Create Space. They talked me through how to do it on the phone. What is neat about Create Space is that you can put your phone number into the message and opt to have them call you back whenever you want them to. It really works. I used it a lot!
First…You need a cover.
This was the very first cover I made with the template format:
Copyright (C) 2012 Sandra L. Jones, All Rights Reserved
It was OK…one step closer. I learned how to make a cover. That is when we brainstormed and decided we wanted a more professional appearance. We settled on one of the pictures that I took on the Wolf Moon cycle in 2012 from just outside the back door! I got Adobe Photoshop and decided I could surely do this myself. Note: Significant learning curve here! I watched hours of self-help videos and finally got the hang of it. That is when we used this picture as my first ever try at Photoshop. A work of art, for sure!
And Then…You have to Publish it!
This was the second cover we went with to publish. A funny story is that now when Pat (The Author) goes to the grocery store, they think he is Mark Lansdowne. Too funny! It does work in some fashion as the readers associated the picture with the main character in the story. Interesting.
Copyright (C) 2012 Sandra L. Jones
We were featured on Digital Book Today on June 12, 2012. After the article, Anthony sent me an email and said, “…I don’t mean to overstep my bounds…but…while your cover is good, it needs some work”. How much more diplomatically could he say this!! And I am glad he did. That precipitated another brain storming session that lasted the rest of the year in 2012. He continued, “Your name is your asset and therefore must be prominent. Your readers will follow your name. It is not big enough.” He sent me a few examples of book covers that were created with this concept in mind. I was able to visualize what he meant by looking at examples of other covers. Clicking my red studded heels three times and uttering something like, “There’s no place like home,” I went back to Book Cover Designing 101.
The Journey
I set out to find the perfect picture for the book cover, because I certainly didn’t know what I was doing. I looked at thousands of pictures at iStock Photo, Deposit Photo and the like. I was redoing the website as well, so I got some really good ideas. (That – is another saga, to be continued). So I found a great picture of a wolf but not the moon. I kind of liked it until my son-in-law said it was beautiful, but looked like a laid back German Shepard. Back to the drawing board. Not the “wow” effect we were searching for.
This was the third book cover. I was really not unhappy with what I had done with this one, but something was missing. It looked as though I had done it, which is OK…but we wanted some validity to the first decision and subsequent purchase of the book by the reader. Once again, the project was re-opened! (2 renditions here!)
The Wolf’s Moon by Patrick Jones with iStock Photo
The Wolf’s Moon by Patrick Jones with iStock Photo
So, then I decided I REALLY did not know what I was doing! I happened upon a photographer in Canada, David C. Cassidy. He did a super job on the book cover and it was reasonably priced, so I went with his vision of the book cover for the book. The key point here is that although it was The Photographer’s vision, it was not The Author’s vision. Pat had a particular vision in his mind of how he wanted the book to “grab” the reader if it was sitting on a coffee table. As good as this cover was, he, after all, is The Author. I couldn’t argue with that, although I give it a try every chance I get!
This was the proof of the fourth cover.
Cover design by David C. Cassidy
Moon Photograph by David C. Cassidy © 2012
Used by permission.
By this time, I had learned about Adobe Photoshop 6.0 where the 3D text was outstanding. David had introduced me to Sinister Fonts by Chad Savage. He also suggested that we have a photograph professionally done to demonstrate validity.
Then, you FINE TUNE!
We went back to the very beginning and started trying to find the perfect picture again, given the knowledge I had acquired. This time, it was a little easier. My brain had processed the information. Little did I know that once I knew what I was doing (sort of)…all of the pieces started to fit together just like the pieces of a puzzle. Pat liked one picture when we had first started this journey which I thought was too fuzzy. I thought it needed to be done by a professional, but it was simpler than that. Pat insisted that one picture was the look that he wanted for the book. Bless his heart, I think he may have been humoring me, but it worked. So we went back to the original picture that we had both liked from the beginning. I had to really think about Adobe Photo Shop 6.0, but that is what made it a challenge. Since I am rather an extroverted personality, I again danced the “Victory Dance” around the house!
This is the fifth (AND LAST!) book cover…
Copyright (C) 2012 Sandra L. Jones
All Rights Reserved
Validate Your Results with an Objective Critic
I ran this book cover by Anthony Wessel of Digital Book Today. I didn’t want to be overbearing, but did want an opinion from an expert (especially since he was the one that started this brainstorming cascade!). Mind you, Anthony would never tell me yay or nay along the way, just little hints that he had stored in his memory. I liken it to a treasure hunt! Anthony said, “Your name is your asset…that is where your reputation comes from. Your readers will follow your books and therefore the author’s name needs to be prominent.” At the end after we made the decision, he did say, “I like this one the best anyway!” So we knew we must have a winner! So far, we have had a lot of great compliments from our readers and other authors, in addition to more sales and reviews. The book cover makes a difference because you have to “grab” the reader within the first 8 seconds. You have to stand out in the crowd, somehow, so that people will pick your book up and give it a try. We are thrilled about it (pun intended) and are now finished with THIS book cover. The sequel will follow toward the end of 2013 as well as a short story.
Thank you to Anthony Wessel for taking the time away from his busy schedule to pay credence to our endeavors. He didn’t have to mention anything about the book cover, but he felt it was necessary from his perspective. He did not want to be remiss by not pointing out something that was so obvious to him, but obscure to a new author trying to figure it all out. I have learned in this industry that you call it, “paying it forward.” Now I know what that means. Thank you for inviting me into your world with your friendship. The quote from Friedrich Nietzsche says it all, “That which does not kill me, makes me stronger.”
Take care,
Sandy
Copyright © 2013 Sandra L. Jones, All Rights Reserved.
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References:
The Quotations Page
(c) 1994-2012 QuotationsPage.com and Michael Moncur.
It has been one year ago today that my novel, “The Wolf’s Moon”, was launched. After a year, one might expect the memory of that day to have faded – at least a little. It has not. Everything from my first cup of coffee that morning to the cup of black tea before retiring, are still vivid in … Continue reading →
Digital Book Today is very approachable for the author. Kudos to Anthony Wessel
By Sandra L. Jones, wife of The Author of “The Wolf’s Moon,” Patrick Jones
I start my writing career with this article dedicated to Anthony Wessel, CEO of Digital Book Today.
He believed in me, in us. Sometimes in life, you meet people that are cornerstones in your pathways through the maze they call life. My husband wrote a book. Great! How could I possibly have ever known what this self-publishing platform had in store for us, as my whole career has been in the medical field!
Anthony Wessel featured “The Wolf’s Moon” by Patrick Jones on his website. The book had received just enough reviews and a rating of 4.2 to qualify for the interview questions. We were so excited! It was the very first “Featured Article” that we had!! We had an incredible response on our free Kindle days thanks to the popularity of Digital Book…
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