A friend of mine introduced me to the Hawaiian saying, "talk story," which means to really have a conversation with someone. It can be several anecdotes tied to a lesson or just a funny ending. It’s an amazing concept because it makes you stop and consider the person in front of you as a person. A
living, human being with desires, hopes, dreams, successes, failures. It makes you relate to people as whole individuals, not some delivery system or consumer purchase.
I forget sometimes people don't know my story.
|
Â
I forget that some of you don't know that I've been pouring myself into NightBlooming because it's what allows me to publish The Iyarri Chronicles independently, meaning I get to keep all my creative rights, but every single one of these books costs me about $25,000 out of pocket to have all the professional services of editing, ebook conversion, cover design, access to distribution networks,
and all those books printed in hardcover.
Â
Â
|
|
Thankfully I've got more stubbornness than sense...
|
But I can't give up on all this, on NightBlooming, on my books, even though the day job, keeping up with NightBlooming, and publishing deadlines are killing me right now.
Â
When I first started to get serious about publishing I had a lot of misconceptions about the process.
I had delusions of sitting beside an artist while they crafted my cover. I always wondered why some covers didn't match the contents, and the answer is because in traditional publishing you, the author, are sent an email along the lines of "Here's your cover, see attached .jpg! Hope you like it." As an artistic, visual person who has a clear vision, it crushed me to be totally excluded from such a meaningful part of the process.
More revelations made me realize that traditional publishing was not the best match for me. In addition to being in control of the cover, a publisher can:
- Change the title of the book
- Make you edit on their timeline (which is something I can’t do due to time constraints)
- Make you change your name so you can keep being 'a debut author' until one of your series sticks, making it hard for readers to find your other books
- Publish your first book and then decline to publish the rest, meaning that you’d have to let your series die or wait until you can get your rights back, which sometimes takes years
Â
Writing this series is my heart's dream, publishing independently lets me tell the story the way it should be told, and NightBlooming is a passion that helps pay for it all (and that one day I hope to be able to quit my day job and do full time--that's another thing I think that people don't know or forget, that NightBlooming is a one-woman business and I do it on top of
writing and on top of a full time career).
|
|
This month is my second Patreon anniversary!
|
So what's a Patron anyway? Historically, art patronage was the gift of support and thus, survival. Royalty and the aristocracy retained artists who created in return for food, lodging, and much-needed supplies. Â
Today, however, support for art doesn’t have to come from some elite group, but from everyday people giving a little bit here and there.
Â
We have two more big Patreon Goals coming up:
|
|
Don't forget the 15% off Evergreen Discount for Patrons!
|
|
|
This month is my second Patreon anniversary, let's make it a great one.
|
Essentially, this is me asking you to be my Patron, to support my art with a few dollars a month, so that I can produce the things you love. Think of it as buying me a cuppa and having a chat with you once every few weeks <3
Â
I would love it if we could get enough people to hit these last two goals... but like the $2 tier says, it takes a lot of little feathers to fly, and more than the money? Every Patron, to me, is someone that cares about this, that believes in me... and sometimes I need that when I don't believe in myself.
|
|
|
|
|