In an increasingly digital age, the mystery
writing community has noticed a marked decrease in the amount of print space
reviewers are giving books these days. A number of Canadian newspapers have substantially
cut back their review sections, although some are maintaining a strong
electronic presence.
As anyone in the self-publishing business
knows, acquiring reviews is still challenging, however it’s better than it used
to be. When I first published Taxed to
Death in 1995, willing reviewers were few and far between, yet there were
plenty of independent bookstores around to help sell my book. By the time Fatal Encryption came out in 2008, 95%
of the independent stores were gone, however, an abundance of bloggers and
online reviewers agreed to review my book. Still, getting the book reviewed by
a major publication was nearly impossible.
Imagine my delight when I read in The Atlantic Wire this week that Publishers’ Weekly is expanding their
self-published review section from a bi-monthly to monthly event (before that
it was quarterly). Addressing the self-publishing explosion, PW’s co-editorial
director Jim Milliot says, “It’s really become a part of publishing—that’s the
bottom line. It’s certainly not stigmatized in any way.”
Holy cow! Publishers’ Weekly is saying that self-publishing is no longer
stigmatized? I never thought I’d hear those words. But it shows you how far the
self-published industry has come on some levels. I say on some levels because
the article also discusses the Fifty
Shades of Gray phenomenon, quoting another source who says that Fifty Shades is the future of publishing,
but that one shouldn’t mistake form for substance.
We could debate forever the spectrum of quality
among self-published books, but that would take too far long here. In fact, I’ll
leave that to the PW reviewers. I’m just
glad to see mainstream reviewers acknowledge that self-publishing is not only
here to stay but deserves more space on their pages.
You can find the article at http://www.theatlanticwire.com/entertainment/2013/09/publishers-weekly-gets-hip-to-the-age-of-self-publishing/69244/
2 comments:
Yep. We're writing in exciting times. ^_^
Indeed we are! Thanks for your comment, Misha!!
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