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Saturday, November 5, 2011

Info Post
By John Ramsey Miller

I almost clean forgot this blog because I've been so absorbed in work that I almost forgot I was up to bat this week.

This week I got an emailed message from the International Thriller Writers that stated that due to the insanity in the publishing world at the moment, authors who are members can submit their self published works for inclusion in the ITW awards selection process. That, my friends, is HUGE.

Part of it went as follows:
"The awards committee would like ITW members to know that he criteria for the 2012 Thriller Awards have been expanded to include self-published work by active ITW members. Active status members may submit independently published work to the appropriate category of Thriller competition (best Hard Cover, best Paperback Original, best Short Story).

Independently published work from Associate ITW members will not be considered for competition at this time."

There is no eBook only category, but everything is up for grabs at the moment.

Our organization is promoting eBooks self-published by members in their (our) webzine which goes to 13,000 individuals and industry related businesses.

This goes to show you how many previously published authors there are in our ranks. These are guys and gals who have proven they have the "goods" and are quite capable of writing a book that is at least readable, and probably ought to be on shelves as long as there are shelves.

I am proud of the ITW for understanding where a lot of us are right now, and largely through no fault of our own. We the houseless. Not long ago this would have been a dire situation. Whether or not our large houses need an individual at the moment, said individual needs to write, and have their work available to their readers, existing and future. I don't know if the MWA (Mystery Writers if America) or the SIC (Sisters In Crime), or the other similar organizations will follow suit, but I think the ITW has been a leader among the organizations that "serve" us authors. It shows me that there is an organization that "gets" the situation and is trying to take care of its members. This flexibility is crucial and shows that the ITW cares about its members as individuals. I have heard that others do not want to change something it might have to change back in the future.

Recently I found a talented author who is writing top notch books, and he is self-published. I've been reading his series as fast as I can download them to my Kindle. I sent him a note and we started a correspondence. He wants a legitimate house to publish his work because he feels the self-published stigma. As he is successful at self-publishing a house has offered to re-release his books under their banner and take half of his profits. To his credit he has so far declined their offers because they won't give him an escape clause in the event that they do not increase his numbers significantly. The only upside is the branding. I have heard that there are houses, both large and small, trolling the eBook world looking for authors with a following. Often they can pick up the author's catalogue cheaply. I get it.

I look forward to the day that authors like this talented individual will not feel as though they are looked down on by other authors who are (or have been) published by a "name" house. I am finding more and more quality authors available only on Amazon. So the quality is there, and the I imagine the stigma (real or imagined) is getting to be a thinner curtain. It is the story that counts and there are more talented storytellers than publishers who will get behind them.

Sorry if this is a disjointed mess of a blog, but I am rushing so I can spend my Saturday on the planet Rewrite.



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