In the art world, people routinely self-publish because issues of reproduction quality, format, and paper expense are so extreme that tiny print-on-demand runs make far more sense for almost everyone. If my husband the photographer were to decide to self-publish a book of photographs, I would be enthusiastic and supportive. I cannot seem to dredge up such enthusiasm for my own self-publishing adventure.
On the other hand, I like the book I wrote. And some of you have liked the essays that you've read from the book. And many well known journal editors have praised those essays as well (and have published them in their journals). Yet there the book sits, upstairs on a shelf in the backwoods of Maine--ready to print and (as the publishers and agents tell me) impossible to sell . . . simply because essay collections are unfashionable unless the writer is already famous for some other reason.
Unfashionable. It's hard to keep wearing that label and not want to fight back. Self-publishing is beginning to look like the only sandlot available.
So as a start, I will share the cover letter I've been enclosing with the ms. This is the me that's on paper. This is my unfashionable book. If you were in this position, what would you do?
Dear editors:
Enclosed is a
chapter from my nonfiction manuscript, The Vagabond’s Bookshelf: A Reader’s
Memoir, which I think
may be appropriate for your memoir/literature list.
This is my
second book of nonfiction: my first, Tracing Paradise: Two Years in Harmony
with John Milton, was
published in 2009 by the University of Massachusetts Press and went on to win
both a 2010 Emerging Writer’s Award from the Writer’s Center in Bethesda,
Maryland, and the 2010 Maine Literary Award in Nonfiction. It also received a
special mention in that year’s L. L. Winship/PEN New England Awards. According
to essayist Sam Pickering (a well-known writer and teacher as well as the model
for Robin Williams’s character in the film Dead Poets Society), “Potter writes beautifully. Her prose
is as clear as the song of bell bird. . . . Reading this book was an
intellectual joy.”
Like Tracing
Paradise, The
Vagabond’s Bookshelf
traces my personal relationship with works of literature—in this case, a
handful of books that I have obsessively read and reread over the course of my
life. But it is in no way a scholarly work. Rather, it treats literature as one
aspect of my daily human interaction with the world. I live in the woods of
remote rural Maine, where I raise livestock and care for my children and
incidentally read and write. In other words, my physical life is woven into my
reading life, and my bonds to the books I read have changed as I have changed.
This book celebrates that world. Authors under discussion include Leo Tolstoy,
Charles Dickens, Charlotte Brontë, Jane Austen, Mary J. Holmes, James Baldwin,
Daphne du Maurier, Malcolm X, and Elizabeth Bowen, as well as many others who
are incidentally mentioned. The manuscript is 133 pages long (35,133 words) and
is complete. It has no illustrations or poetry/lyric reprint issues.
Nearly all of
the chapters in this memoir have been contracted for publication as stand-alone
pieces, and all of those publishers are major literary journals: the Sewanee
Review, the Threepenny
Review, and the Southern
Review in the United
States; the Reader in
Great Britain. So far, response to these pieces has been excellent: I’ve
received numerous unsolicited letters from readers; and in fact, the Sewanee
Review website has
announced that chapter 5, “In Defense of Dullness” (about Jane Austen’s Mansfield
Park), is one of the
journal’s most popular downloads.
The
Vagabond’s Bookshelf
should be marketed as a trade book aimed at creative writers and general
readers of literary fiction. Related books include Wendy Lesser’s Nothing
Remains the Same
(Mariner Books, 2002), which chronicles the author’s project to deliberately
reread books she’d last read many years earlier, and A. S. Byatt’s Passions
of the Mind (Vintage,
1993), which collects her essays about the work of writers whom she admires. My
book is unique, however, in dealing with books that I’ve never stopped
rereading and in allowing personal rather than critical reactions to guide my
writing trajectory.
In addition to
my nonfiction writing, I have published two collections of poetry, with a third
contracted for publication. Like my prose, my poems appear in major literary
journals, including the Green Mountains Review, the Beloit Poetry Journal, and Prairie Schooner. I am also the editor of The Poets’
Sourcebook (Autumn House
Press, 2013), a forthcoming anthology of writings about poetry. Currently I am
associate director of the Frost Place Conference on Poetry and Teaching, held
each summer at Robert Frost’s home in Franconia, New Hampshire.
Thank you for
taking the time to read this sample. Please let me know if you have any
questions about it, or me.
All best---
Dawn Potter
5 comments:
Re: self publishing...you can go straight to electronic publishing now, via Amazon/Kindle downloads. I'm fairly certain it costs quite a bit less (if at all). I have a friend who has now published two books, the most recent as a Kindle publication. I don't know the process, but I could find out how she did it. And the book is definitely worth publishing...I want a copy! =)
You have an online presence, so Kindle might be the way to go. Amazon has tutorials to enable the process, and the cover may be your only stumbling block. http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/the-future-of-the-book
If having a hard copy in hand is what you want, the POD sites can provide that with no upfront costs. But — contrary to what publishers and agents have told you — I believe this book as described has a potential market. I would counsel patience. The pieces will already exist “out there” in their individual publications.
Someone I know recently "crowd-funded" his self-published book by taking advance orders for the edition, which he limited to 100 copies. He sold out. He did the same with a second book and had the same result.
I think people increasingly are accepting self-published work, especially when it is of the high quality of your own.
One thing you might also consider is selling the book not only as published-on-demand but also as a pdf and iBook. Another friend of mine has done that (her book has a lot of her artwork in it, too) has enjoyed some success with the approach.
Self publishing is a fine way to go, especially with the implosion of the publishing world. But I think this book is commercial. Let's talk about this.
I love the winter food commentary
Offline yesterday, so I am late with this response. I would love to own a copy of this work.
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