Oh the Irony…

It is almost time for the launch of Undeliverable! And in preparation of this, I have been sending copies of the book hither and yon in an effort to cultivate reviews, and, as is expected when one has sent over 200 packages in the last three months, a few of them have gone astray. One was even gutted by a piece of machinery and the envelope returned to me sans contents. Two weeks later, what should arrive, but the contents! (Ms. Vejo, your book is back in the mail now!)

Oh the Irony

The irony of the fact that my book passed through the very center it takes place in, but no one appears to have even cracked it open is almost too much to bear. I think this means I must send a copy to them directly to read, what do you think folks?

 

RED ALERT! ACX is Getting Ready to Gouge Content Creators

Red alert, everyone to battle stations! If you have been contemplating putting your work up through Amazon’s ACX for audiobooks, I’d start rethinking that plan or securing a contract IMMEDIATELY as their terms are changing.

Previously, content producers were offered a sliding scale of 50-90% of the royalties of their audiobooks, depending on how many sold. Starting in early March, that changes to a FLAT 40%. Period. To be split between you and your producer. Oh, and if you choose a non-exclusive contract so that you’re not locked into only being sold on Amazon, iTunes and Audible? You are only entitled to 25% royalties.

I personally find this entirely unacceptable and have already voiced my opinion to the company.  I encourage you to do the same. They are a distribution company and have done absolutely nothing to help develop the content they are selling. We have spent YEARS writing the content and the producers we partner with spend MONTHS creating the recordings. They have no right to take that much of the royalty. I might have been okay if they had announced that it was going to a simple flat royalty of 70% or possibly even 60%. But to take a majority, and a massive majority at that, of the royalty is absurd.

Here is the official announcement.

Here is where you should send your complaint: support@acx.com

Join me in showing Amazon that we will not go quietly into the night. Then join me in trying to secure distribution for audiobooks through an independent platform.

Pages are Live, Time to Review!

Hey, all you wonderful party people who have been reading Undeliverable: If you have made it through the book, would you be kind enough to leave a review at one of these three sites, or, better yet, all the ones you have an account on? The more people we get talking about this book the better!

Amazon
Goodreads
LibraryThing

The print books are live now to purchase, the large-print will be available in a couple days, and the ebooks will be live on the 6th! We’ll get this party started right! You guys are amazing!

Taking a short break…

Hey guys, I’ve got two weeks before Undeliverable launches, which means I’m working my fingers to the bone networking and creating marketing campaigns, so I haven’t had time to read lately, which means I have no books to review at the moment. I’ll make sure you always have writing prompts on Friday though! I’ll be back to the regularly scheduled reviews after things calm down a bit.

Writing Prompt!

Happy Valentine’s Day! In honor of this day’s namesake, write a story about someone helping out a persecuted minority, as Saint Valentine helped the Christians of his time. Yeah, yeah, roses and tulips and all that crap, but really, what’s more awesome than a man put to death for performing secret marriages?

Breaking News!

So, a couple months ago, I submitted Undeliverable to Kirkus Indie for a review, and, today, I just got that review back. This is the first time an independent source has reviewed my writing and…drum roll please…they loved it! Everything that I wanted to accomplish with the novel made it through, and the reviewers seems to have genuinely enjoyed the book. I cannot begin to tell you all how relieved I am.

“Engaging, inventive and full of feeling, Demarest’s debut engagingly addresses what we lose when we lose someone we love.” ~ Kirkus Review

You can read the full text here.