By David David Katzman on January 16th, 2018
Tags: a greater monster, david david katzman, experimental, fantasy, fiction, katzman, reading group, university of southern indiana | Comments Off on University hosting reading groups for A Greater Monster
I was excited to discover that the University of Southern Indiana’s official library reading group is hosting two reading groups for A Greater Monster on February 14 and February 15. Event is listed on Facebook here.
By David David Katzman on June 25th, 2014
Tags: a greater monster, Annhilation, Authority, david david katzman, Jeff VanderMeer, Southern Reach, Twitter | One Comment »
Best-selling fantasy author Jeff VanderMeer, the author of Annihilation and Authority, rated my novel A Greater Monster 4 stars out of 5 on Goodreads. I thanked him on Twitter, and he said it was “…a really cool and unique read! Beautiful book, too, in the design.”
It was really quite a thrill for me to get this response because VanderMeer is one of my favorite authors. Here’s my review of Authority, book two in his Southern Reach trilogy.
By David David Katzman on February 15th, 2014
Tags: a greater monster, david david katzman, psychedelic, psychedelic literature, surreal, surrealist literature | Comments Off on Ebook versions of A Greater Monster now available
A Greater Monster is now available in ebook format. PDF, EPUB, or MOBI (for Kindle and Nook) versions can be purchased directly from me here and the Kindle version is also available direct from Amazon here The EPUB is in the iBookstore here.
By David David Katzman on September 26th, 2013
Tags: a greater monster, ebook, ebook release, psychedelic, psychedelic fiction, surrealism | Comments Off on A Greater Monster PDF version now available
A digital PDF version of A Greater Monster is now available for purchase on the Novels page.
By David David Katzman on January 8th, 2013
Tags: 2012 year in review, a greater monster, david david katzman, publishing failures, publishing successes, self publishing tips, self-publishing | Comments Off on A Greater Year
Happy New Year everyone!
I was delivered some good fortune here at the beginning of 2013 when I learned that A Greater Monster was named to two top ten lists. It was named in “Top 10 Books of 2012” by Common Ills blog as voted by members, and it was also named in a “Best of” list on Refinery29.com and described as one of “10 books every Chicagoan needs to read right now” to their email list.
In that spirit, I’ve written four top ten lists to evaluate my success as a self-publisher and provide a little bit of advice for authors-to-be.
Top 10 Things I Did to Produce A Greater Monster:
- Spent seven years obsessively writing it (through fourteen drafts)
- Paid a professional proofreader to give it the once over
- Asked two excellent writers to give me their detailed thoughts on it
- Hired a book designer and spent six months working with him to design it
- Hired an illustrator and spent six months working on the illustrations
- Hired an animator and a musician to collaborate on the web scenes
- Asked authors to read the manuscript and provide promotional quotes (if they liked it)
- Read and re-read several books on self-publishing (my favorite) and created long to-do lists
- Bid multiple printers to find the best price and quality
- Created a video and promoted a Kickstarter project to fund the print run of 1000 copies
Top 10 Things I Did After I Published It
- Held a big reading/release party at Quimby’s Bookstore in Chicago
- Made the rounds to all the indie bookstores in Chicago and St. Louis, leaving them copies with a press kit
- Held a reading at After-Words Books
- Reached out to numerous bloggers across the web requesting reviews
- Entered twenty (or so) literary competitions
- Contacted numerous distributors, trying to find one who would carry a self-published novel (Hint: it’s next to impossible)
- Emailed bookstores occasionally when I had news
- Participated in a Chicago author reading tour in New York City and made the rounds to bookstores
- Created a postcard that highlights my literary award and an excerpt from a blogger review for bookstores to post on the shelf
- Hosted two giveaways on Goodreads
Top 10 Successes
- Made two top ten book lists of 2012
- Gold medal as “Outstanding Book of the Year” in the 2012 Independent Publisher Book Awards
- Finalist for National Indie Excellence Book Award
- Received many thoughtful reviews from both readers and bloggers including The Chicagoist, The Midwest Book Review, Psychedelic Press UK, dig Boston, and the Seattle PI
- Interviewed for Chicago’s Newcity arts newspaper in both print and online, and by various bloggers
- A Greater Monster was featured in University of Wisconsin’s alumni magazine, On Wisconsin
- Managed to get listed with a small press distributor
- I feel proud of my work artistically
- Have sold more than 500 copies
- Am carried in nearly 15 bookstores
Top 10 Failures
- Post office lost 16 books and destroyed 8 (Lesson: always insure mailings)
- My distributor has done very little to promote my book
- One bookstore ordered 15 copies and the order never got through to my distributor
- Don’t have enough media attention to get picked up by a significant number of bookstores
- I have been disorganized following up with bookstores (especially those out-of-state) and getting paid for sales
- Struggling with developing an ebook version—had to fire my first ebook vendor; on my 10th round of feedback with my second
- Started an audio book version but put it aside due to other priorities
- Amazon sales have been pretty slow (bookstores have sold much better)
- Couldn’t get to 10 failures (oh, the irony!)
If anyone ever tells you that self-publishing is easy, they’re not doing it right. Sure, anyone can write a crappy book, export it as an epub and Kindle file, find a stock photo for the cover, submit it to Amazon, and voilà they’re published. But almost no one will read it, it will likely be riddled with grammar errors and typos, and the author will often be too close to the work to recognize its larger flaws. That isn’t to say, self-publishers can’t write great books. But they need some honest opinions and a lot of hard work. If a book is self-published in the wilds of Amazon, does it make a sound?
P.S. What a relief that this asshole lost