igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)
[personal profile] igenlode
A neighbour's daughter has just had her children's book 'accepted' by Amazon and the mother was proudly showing a copy. Friends very impressed. Of course all this means is that she has submitted a formatted file to Amazon's print-on-demand process and had a (unmistakably self-published) paperback volume emerge automatically out of the other end. I didn't read the book itself, only got a glimpse of the binding and the opening page (plus home-brewed illustrations). It may of course be a work of talent, but the odds are against it, especially when it comes to writing for children, which people tend to assume is easier simply because the books are short...

Sour grapes on my part? Yes, almost certainly :-(

And I haven't even *tried* to get mine published; at least she has gone through the work of formatting and submission and soliciting reviews, even if only from friends and family.

Date: 2024-06-30 05:10 pm (UTC)
watervole: (Default)
From: [personal profile] watervole
I'm always wary of self-published books... There is a occasional gem, but the focus is on the word 'occasional'.

Date: 2024-07-01 11:17 am (UTC)
watervole: (Default)
From: [personal profile] watervole
I've bought two self-pub books in the last couple of years. One was by accident - it was cheap on Kobo and there was nothing to say it was a self pub. I managed three pages. But at least it only cost me 50p

The other was a historical romance with an Armada theme. I think I may have reviewed it on DW. The writer had consulted my daughter among others about some sailing issues, (which was why I decided to give it a shot) but hadn't got any of them to proof read it. So you have a good description of sextant use - followed by a complete ignorance of the existence of portolan charts. Rinse and repeat. I managed about three chapters of that one.
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