Black Wolf Books, Inc.: March 2008

Friday, March 14, 2008




On the Hunt


Now that a book is published and for sale, the next step is marketing, which involves finding professional reviewers. With my latest release, I am now officially “on the hunt” for those critters.


There are several sources for finding reviewers, such as newspapers in your state (they love touting local authors), clubs that feature your genre of writing, magazines, etc. The tricky part is getting them to agree to review the book.


I’ve spent several hours making up a request letter as well as a sell-sheet to send to these various people. Now, I’m keeping my fingers crossed for positive feedback. Wish me luck, y'all!







Saturday, March 08, 2008




It's finally available!


My newest work, Kuy Syan Joshua, is finally for sale, both on my website and at Amazon. I have to say, it showed up on Amazon several days before I actually got the books here. That was a nice surprise!


Now I'm going through the process of finding reviewers. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that this will be relatively quick and painless.


If you have a few minutes and are interested, you can read the excerpts here.









Monday, March 03, 2008




To self-publish or not


I have seen on several writers forums a raging debate about the best route to take for new authors. Do you find an agent and pray a big publishing house signs you on, or do you take the risk of self-publishing?

Some people have made their decisions and chosen their route. Many, though, are still trying to make up their mind. This is written for them.

As in every choice, there are pros and cons of each.

Traditional publishing is much like winning the lottery. You might be a great writer, but can you catch their eye? So many manuscripts that are sent in go unread and tossed to the side. It can take years, if ever, to find the right agent/publisher combination. Even then, much of the publicity is left to the author, for book signings, etc.

On the plus side, ten percent of a publishing house’s marketing efforts far outweigh 100% of a self-publisher’s efforts. They have contacts and venues already in place. A self-publisher rarely has the funds available for a major marketing campaign.

Self-publishing allows an author complete control over the project, not just the story. Book cover artwork, formatting, sales price, etc. are all the individual’s decision.

There is a stigma attached with POD (print on demand) and vanity press, however. Many new authors aren’t skilled in the craft and put out awful work, unable to even distinguish between active and passive voice. There is no quality control in place, like there is in a publishing house.

There are some associations formed for self-publishers, much in the way of co-ops. Groups of authors purchase blocks of advertising and split the cost, or purchase a spot at a national book fair, again sharing the cost, making it a bit more affordable.

I don’t know if there is an equivalent of the “Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval” for self-published authors in the U.S., letting the consumer know the book has passed at least basic quality criteria. If there isn’t, there probably will be soon.

This blog doesn’t offer any answers, only some insight into the choices before new authors. We’d all love to be the next J.K. Rowling, but, short of that, we are all called to patience.





Saturday, March 01, 2008




A blogger returns


After a long absence from blogging, I have decided to give this another try. My latest novel, "Kûy Syân Joshua", the second in the T'on Ma series, is being released this month. Since the last time I blogged, I've also published the second novel in my Black Wolf series, "Black Wolf at Rosebud", as well as a stand-alone novel, "Tascosa".

Finally, I am co-author of a two-part series, Miko and Lil, a madcap tale of talking mice on the Los Lonely Boys tour bus.

Feel free to look around on my website and to read excerpts.

Have a great weekend!


Belle