All those nights when you can't reach me? I'm making these things. |
But recently I went a different route and published a chapbook through CreateSpace, Amazon’s print-on-demand program. A client had asked me to help him marshal his book through the CreateSpace process, so I decided to use one of my own chapbooks as a guinea pig first. I figured if things went badly, I could steer the client away from the mistakes I’d made. And if it went well, it would be smooth sailing for him…and I’d get a spiffy new book at the same time.
Something for
nothing?
In a nutshell, CreateSpace works like this: You design the
book (either by yourself, or with the help of their online templates and design
services), and then Amazon prints and ships copies of the book whenever
customers order them. If you design it all yourself and simply upload your PDFs
to their system, it’s completely free and seems almost too good to be true. You
do pay for any copies of the book you order for yourself—say, a few dozen for
your own readings or book shows—but you buy them from Amazon at such a deeply discounted
author price that it works out to about what you’d pay a local print shop to do
them (for most chapbooks, a little under $3.00 per book, including shipping). And,
unlike with a local print shop, your book gets listed on Amazon and is handled
and shipped by them, which means your readers can find it easily and buy it while
they’re shopping for frying pans, yoga balls, and Breaking Bad DVDs. I’ve got to admit that, even for an independent-bookstore
lover like myself, it was all weirdly attractive.
The CreateSpace portal. |
If you
don’t want to wade into the world of design on your own, CreateSpace can do
that for you too, but this is where it can get pricey. They offer all sorts of professional
services and packages, ranging from design and copyediting to help with marketing
and publicity, costing anywhere from a hundred dollars to several thousand. And
judging from the online forums that I’ve scoured over the past few weeks**, many
authors do use these services, and some are perfectly happy with them. But I didn’t
wade too deep into that; I figure that thirty years in publishing should have
taught me a few skills. And besides that, I’m a cheapskate. I was going it
alone or bust.
Enter the guinea pig
Editing—in my house, anyway— still takes paper and patience. |
Beautiful Brutal started life four years ago as a palm-size nugget of a book, 5.5 inches high by 4.25 wide. So I took a
couple of weeks to add a few new poems to it, revise some of the old
ones, and do a little re-ordering. I also gave it a larger, airier trim size (6 x 9), fancied up the interior
design, and built a new cover around a 17th-century painting*** by
Georg Flegel that I particularly love and that is firmly planted in the public
domain. Finally the files were ready, and I followed CreateSpace’s easy
directions and made the PDFs.
Ready…set…stop
The next step was to register the book with CreateSpace.
This is where you let them know what you want your book to look like—page
count, trim size, paper color (white or cream; I chose cream), cover finish
(glossy or matte; I chose matte). At this point you also set up the book’s
Amazon page, which entailed a couple of curveballs I didn’t see coming, such as
deciding on a cover price and where to send the royalties, and that brought the
process to a grinding halt while I pondered them. The toughest was the “book
description,” that little marketing paragraph that you see on the book’s Amazon
page. I tinkered with that thing for a long time, trying to make it descriptive
but not dorky.****
Filling out
the online forms was fun, but then came the meat and potatoes: uploading the
PDFs of the book. That part went quickly. I clicked through a few windows to
send the files, their system processed them in just a few minutes, and then a
digital proof of my book appeared on my screen. Many printers use online
proofing systems, and CreateSpace’s is particularly attractive and realistic,
with animated pages that appear to turn. My book looked fine—nothing had
shifted or reflowed, and the fonts looked the way they were supposed to. The one
hiccup was that the system froze up twice while I was sending the files, and I
had to quit out of my browser and go back in. Also, they didn’t process the
cover file right away, I presume because I asked them to insert the UPC barcode
on the back (another free option). They finished it the next morning and sent
me an e-mail; I looked at an online proof of the cover and it looked fine too.
The moment of truth
Sharp yet velvety. |
The proof
arrived in my mailbox about three days later. Just like in my book-editor days,
I opened the package with a mixture of excitement and dread. I pulled the slim
volume out of its little box, leafed through it and sniffed it. I scrutinized
the cover: handled its silky matte finish, pressed my thumbs on it to try to
make fingerprints, and lightly scratched it to see if it got easily marred. It
passed all the tests. And I’ve got to say—it was beautiful. The matte cover
felt velvety, the type was clear, the cream paper robust, the perfect binding elegant
and crisp. I was pleasantly surprised. This system actually worked.
Next up
So now Beautiful
Brutal has a new home on Amazon (see its page here). I like the way it
holds its own alongside the Hawthornes and Lemony Snickets—there’s a wonderful
sort of democracy at work*****, not unlike the internet itself. I also did a
Kindle version (which you can see here) while I was at it—it was like, I’m in
the hospital already, so while they’re fixing my knee, I might as well get my
gall bladder out too. That’s a whole other story, which I’ll write up at a
later date. And Amazon is a world unto itself, with author pages and analytics
and keywords and search engine optimization, which I will also write about
later. For the time being, I’m just trying to figure out how to get the print
and Kindle versions on the same page. Apparently the Amazon robots, which take
care of such things while patrolling the system like so many Skynet terminators, haven’t figured it
out yet.
* That was like some crazy-sad dream garage sale. A local
print shop, which had been in business for decades, was closing its doors and
needed to get rid of a warehouse full of supplies. It was down to the stuff
that they couldn’t sell—literally tons of paper, envelopes and hand tools—and
they asked people to just come and haul it away. They even had two
letterpresses, which broke my heart. Each was about the size of a Cabriolet
convertible, and probably weighed more. I wished I had a house big enough for
one of those beasts. Hopefully somebody did.
** There were many, many points in this process where I had
to stop and look things up online. Amazon has plenty of instructions, but
sometimes they get bogged down in legalese and make things overcomplicated.
Plenty of bloggers and internet writers out there have used CreateSpace and
have good advice, available at your Googling fingertips. This makes me a little misty-eyed
about the democratic nature of the internet. I mean, look at us right now. I have written something that you are reading! And we’re real people
with no editors or agents between us, like we just bumped into each other on
the street. Doesn’t that just make your head go pop? Nutty good.
*** With this title of characteristic German precision: Zitronen
in einer Schale, welche auf einer Käseschachtel steht, ein Korb voller Wal- und
Haselnüsse, eine aufgeschnittene Zitrone, ein Messer, eine Maus, die von einer
Walnuss nascht und eine Katze auf einem Holztisch. (Translation: “Lemons in a bowl standing on a cheese box, with a
basket of walnuts and hazelnuts, a sliced lemon, a knife and a mouse eating
nuts on a wooden table, and a cat.”)
**** It was late and I was tired, so I was tempted to stick
something flippant in there, like, “These 22 poems are the best ones I could
write.” But you know, thumbing your nose at Amazon on Amazon does not hurt Amazon; it just makes you look like an idiot.
I ended up with “This graceful, unflinching collection of 22 poems explores the
real cats in our lives—the companions, the hunters, the strays, the kittens who
grow up and grow old with us. Beautiful
Brutal turns the ‘sentimental cat poem’ upside down, reminding us of the
deep, wild mysteries we seek in cats—and see reflected in ourselves.” It still
feels over the top. But I can change it later.
***** I know—I’m totally missing the capitalism angle, the
consumerism and instant-gratification culture and big-brother apocalypse. But I
just had a baby (book). I'm emotional.