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Award-winning author Ellen Gable describes her experiences and reasons for hope.
Another reason there may be a negative bias toward self-publishing
could be the belief that self-published authors wouldn’t be able to get
published by a traditional publisher or that perhaps they have already
been rejected. This may be true for some self-published authors. But
consider the case of self-published millionaire, Amanda Hocking who was rejected by traditional publishing houses and who is selling 100,000 books per month on Kindle.
On the one hand, I understand why some newspapers, magazines and
websites need to have a blanket rule in place for self-published books
(since there are many poorly written self-published books). On the
other hand, I have also read extremely well-written novels by authors
who self-published: Elena Maria Vidal, Gerard Webster, Christopher Blunt, Krisi Keley, Regina Doman, to name a few.
Although self-publishers have come a long way, we have not arrived
yet with regard to “stigma” of self publishing. Despite the stigma, I
don’t believe I would ever go the traditionally published route. After
self-publishing four books (with lots of assistance) and after having
100 percent of the control, it would be hard to give my books to a
publishing company. For me, it would be like giving my baby away to
someone else to raise. (Read entire post.)
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