Spotify has been discussing its move into the audiobook business for a while now. Now that they have partnered with Storytel, authors and readers alike are wondering how the partnership will affect the audiobook business. More importantly, how will publishers manage rights going forward?
Moving Quickly
In Publishing News This Week,
Audio – the hot growth area for publishing. When the news broke of a potential move by Spotify into the audiobook business, there was a collective gasp. One of the biggest music subscription services taking an interest in audiobooks, how would it change the audio publishing landscape? Today, Storytel one of the fastest movers in this area partnered with Spotify. If you have an exclusive with Audible… you may want to reconsider.
The Alliance of Independent Authors has some great podcasts/ transcripts available. This week they looked at non-disclosure agreements and how these are being used as a weapon against authors’ free speech.
Hugh Howey has put together a Self Published Science Fiction Competition. It’s all about eyes on books. 300 books to make the cut… and then the competition is on.
Anne R Allen has been fielding some plaintive emails from concerned friends on what to do when someone they know looks like they have been sucked into a publishing scam. Anne points out that friends don’t let friends do this but we all know how tricky it is. No one wants to burst their bubble. Read Anne’s excellent blog for tips on how to have these awkward conversations.
Roz Morris is a super resource for great writing advice. This month she wrote a great post on why writers have such difficulty ‘killing your darlings.’ If you haven’t come across this phrase it means when you have written a fantastic scene or dialogue and find that you have to cut it and you just can’t. She followed it up with a great post on the 7 steps to a long-haul novel.
Jessica Conoley has an excellent post on Jane Friedman’s site on creative stewardship. What do you owe your story when it goes out into the world? This is where many writers feel paralyzed. Sometimes all you need is to make a tense change from My story to The story.
Kris Rusch is writing a new series of blog posts on decisions made from fear. What do these decisions look like? This week it’s fear vs growth. How can you navigate through the emotional minefield to make a good publishing decision?
Have you ever read fan fiction? That is a story set in a familiar fictional world. These stories are written by fans of popular books. C M McGuire has an interesting blog post about using fan fiction to experiment and try new styles without pressure. It is an interesting idea.
In The Craft Section,
How to outline a series – K M Weiland
Character building – Angela Ackerman- Bookmark
Editing down your words– Kathy Steinmann- Bookmark
Know your audience– Melissa Donovan
The multi-layer book edit- Michael Gallant- Bookmark
In The Marketing Section,
Two posts from Sandra Beckwith – 9 things you wish you knew before the TV interview and Author branding
Four rules for designing your book cover– Nate Hoffelder- Bookmark
How to promote your seasonal read– Penny Sansevieri
Two interesting posts from New Shelves- Using a Dear Author letter for marketing and Market your book in 10 minutes a day – Bookmark Both
To Finish,
Michael Lucas has a book in the Storybundle curated by Kris Rusch. He wrote an entertaining roundup of the books in the bundle and why you should buy the collection of writing business books. If you have been meaning to check out one or two of the books on the list grabbing the bundle will get you some bonus exclusives and it pays the authors directly with a cut for charity if you want. The Storybundle is available only for another week so don’t miss out.
Maureen
@craicer
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