Adventures in Self-Publishing

"Lovers and Beloveds" paperback 10% off at Amazon--hurry!

Adventures in Self-Publishing

I have no idea why or for how long, but Amazon has the paperback version of Lovers and Beloveds on sale 10% off. It qualifies for Prime shipping, too. If you've been thinking about it, jump!

Why, it's me!

Adventures in Self-Publishing

I am incredibly hard to photograph. I don't know why, I just do not take good pictures. I either look like I'm 75, or haven't slept in a month, or weigh 500 pounds, or all of the above. It's not good. But I need a headshot, have done for a few years now, and all my attempts at getting one have fallen through on time or money problems.

Today the need became urgent, and luckily for me, my friend Colleen needed to get away for a bit. So voila, new headshot!



Now you know what I look like. Smiling

Serializing "The Machine God"

Adventures in Self-PublishingSite News

I've decided to stay true to my roots and serialize The Machine God and any subsequent books. This means potential conflict with about ten of my Kickstarter backers, who voted against it. I don't recognize any of their names, which is good in that I've attracted new readers, and sad in that I worry they'll feel swindled.

For those who voted against it, I'm going to give the option of leaving their pledges as they are, getting the cost of the ebook back, or a coupon here for a different ebook. From now on I'll be making it clear in any Kickstarter presales I do that the book will serialize. It's how I started, it serves as a book club, and it's who I am.

Some thoughts on asking for support

Adventures in Self-Publishing
This was originally part of my latest Kickstarter update, but I wanted to post it here as well. It's the fifth anniversary of this site! Yay us!

Did you see Amanda Palmer's awesome TED talk? Go watch it and come back.

Done? OK. I have asked you guys to financially support my work since I started freely posting it in February, 2008. From that very first day you've stepped up (I'm looking at you, JN). I had been considering stopping the serialization of my main series, "An Intimate History of the Greater Kingdom," with book two since donations have virtually stopped. I figured, well, I guess ebook sales are how I'm going to get support from now on, so maybe I should get with the scarcity paradigm. (Everyone else is. Yay, austerity.)

Seeing that talk changed my mind.

There's a reason I release everything through Creative Commons (attribution/noncommercial/no derivative--for now) with no DRM. I can't stop pirates, and I believe that if you ask people to pay, they will.That faith has been rewarded, but it's flagged recently, even with two successful Kickstarter campaigns under my belt. Why? My ebooks sales are drastically down.

Think about that for a moment. I was considering curtailing access to my work because paid ebook sales are down.

That feels backwards now.

I am not someone who "just wants to be read." I want to be supported, too. But I have always known I don't have a right to be supported. I can only ask. You have no idea how much your support has meant to me.

But I am asking you for something. I'm asking for your support in getting the word out about my work.

The thing I like about serializing is that it acts as an online book club, where people can discuss the book as they read or re-read it together. When my work was strictly a webserial, dozens of comments appeared on story segments; people had deep discussions. I would love to get back to that, to the sense of community my website once had. It dried up once I switched to the ebook paradigm, even though I really had to make that change.

If you're new to my work--and I think a lot of you are this time around--check out the rest of what I've done. Almost all of it is on my site, freely available, and when I get the subscriptions out to you for the premium area, pretty much everything will be available to you. I'm asking you to discuss what you read, and tell people you think I'm worth both reading and supporting.

It's a new world for creatives. The old ways of paying for our work no longer apply, and neither do the old ways of reaching potential viewers, listeners and readers. Advertising doesn't work, blog tours don't work, discounts don't work. Word of mouth is all that matters.

What works is you adding my books to Goodreads, fairly reviewing them at ebook retailers like Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Kobo, and telling your friends about my work--yes, even giving a copy to a friend. If your friend likes it, ask him or her to send me a buck or two if so moved. These things matter as much as your (deeply appreciated) financial support, and I'm asking for them as well.

Thank you.

"The Amber Cross" now available as an audiobook!

Adventures in Self-Publishing


Narrator MacAllister Lee has done a beautiful job interpreting my erotic paranormal Jane Austen mash-up The Amber Cross, and now you can hear it yourself! Yes, "erotic paranormal Jane Austen mash-up" makes me feel and sound ridiculous, but this thing was really fun to write. I did my best to stay true to "Mansfield Park," its source material, whilst playing very fast and very loose with it at the same time. MacAllister has brought out the humor both in the original writing and my own. You can get it free when you become an Audible member. I've been a member for nearly ten years now, and I love it.

Final Cover of the Machine God!

Adventures in Self-Publishing

Elsa Kroese has delivered the final cover for the book and it's a doozy. I'm so happy with it!

If you've got the ARC, don't forget to send me typo/inconsistency reports. It's been vetted pretty thoroughly but stuff always creeps in. Thank you thank you!



Kickstarter update: 200%+ funded, new stretch goal reward!

Adventures in Self-Publishing

The Kickstarter campaign to produce The Machine God has been super successful! But with four days left, I don't think we're going to reach the $4,000 audiobook stretch goal.

Broad Universe sampler now available!

Adventures in Self-Publishing

I'm a member of Broad Universe, an organization dedicated to promoting women in science fiction, fantasy and horror. We've just put out a sampler anthology of short stories and excerpts and it's live now at Amazon (99 cents) and free at Smashwords in a zillion formats. I have a flash fiction piece in it. The twenty-nine samples in the book are well worth checking out!

Something I never ever thought I'd see

Adventures in Self-Publishing

My book in a library, when I didn't arrange for it to be put there:

I'm floored. I know, just one book on one library shelf, but I'm an indie. That usually doesn't happen for us, especially if we don't push for it.

ACX audiobooks: They're your words

Adventures in Self-Publishing

ACX is a great service. It matches up actors and writers to produce audiobooks together. Its best feature for indies like me is that it allows royalty share; the actor can agree to share 50% of the royalties for the audiobook instead of an up-front per-hour payment. ACX handles the split for you.

Here's how ACX works:

When you find the actor you want and s/he submits an audition you like, you send him/her an offer with deadlines for when you want the first 15 minutes and when you want the entire audiobook finished. The offer is accepted, and you wait for the first 15. When you get that, you're supposed to give feedback to the actor if you're not quite happy--wrong tone, character voice needs to be higher, pronunciation of a name is off (though I try to give those right off the bat), and so on--or tell the actor everything's awesome and he can get on to the rest of the audiobook. When the final audiobook is submitted, the same thing is supposed to happen. Some actors will even send you unofficial off-ACX chunks so you can give feedback as needed, or they'll at least ask questions.

The voice actor I approached for "The Mage's Toy" will go unnamed. He has a great voice and his samples showed great talent. I thought he would be perfect for it, I approached him, he submitted an audition. I gave him some feedback on it--not so serious, it's a light-hearted romp, here are the correct pronunciations--and offered him the production contract. He accepted. I was really excited.

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An Intimate History of the Greater Kingdom, The Drifting Isle Chronicles and Scryer's Gulch by Lynn Siprelle writing as MeiLin Miranda are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

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