Break-even!! Not only digging anymore…

Mike GristLife

Today is the day I have finally broken out of the red in my writing career, through the glass break-even ceiling, and into the black!

Wow, the air up here is rarefied. It’s balmy. I can just swim in these waters all day.

Amazon release the payouts for the previous month (August) on the 15th of the next month (now, September), and tallying it all up in my Excel file, I spotted that I had finally crossed that most daunting of rubicons- I’m no longer an indentured author, paying off the debt of my past indisgressions!

Previously every bit of editing, cover design, proofreading and promotion was just a bucket scooping up quicksand and dumping it on my own head, digging myself in deeper. Sunk costs, you tell yourself. Even Facebook didn’t make a profit for like, what, has it even made a profit yet?

These are essential tricks of the mind to play- because without them, what have you got? Oh yeah, I’m spending more money on my book and getting nothing much back. It’s basically vanity publishing, but you’ve got to have faith or give up, so you have faith, and you’ve got to spend something on promo or you’re not even giving yourself a chance, so if you really have faith you’ve got to spend at least a litle, and if a little then why not quite a bit, and…

Whaaaaat?

It makes debt. Nothing crippling in my case- I’ve never (until the mortgage on this house) spent money I didn’t have. And let’s be frank, the numbers involved are not massive- plus the break-even point is not truly a rubicon, because it can be crossed in either direction. Of course I can dip back into the red- although it won’t happen fast, as I won’t spend like I did in the early days again.

Editing for my first indie novel, Ignifer’s Rise, cost me $600 and wasn’t any good at all. The cover was $160. I spent probably $300 on promotion. That’s approximately $1060, real money by any count. That book never earned close to that much back. It hasn’t sold more than a 100 copies. OK.

Mr. Ruins and his troupe so far have been a similar net loss, with sales between them counting less than 300. My non-fiction travel/memoir book Into The Ruins was the only one offering sweet succor, like a life-vest tossed on a stormy ocean- with good, workmanlike sales, a good profit margin, and zero costs for promo or editing or cover as I did it all myself. It buoyed the rest- though painfully it could easily be argued that was on the strength of my photographs, not my writing, so…

I was down in the thousands of dollars. Then along came The Last. Its cover and promo dug the hole deeper- but this time I hit oil. A little oil, not masses, but enough to make the digging worth it. Enough to start filling the hole.

Today I saw the hole filled. I am on level ground. It has sold along with The Lost its sequel over a thousand copies. Over 100,000 pages of both books have been read in addition to that, according to Amazon borrows, which equates to about another 500 books.

Right now it’s not anything more than level ground. It could go away tomorrow and I’ll be back in the hole again, or maybe this level ground will be a plateau I’ll hover around forever. Nobody knows. Still, it’s a milestone I’m psyched about.

I’m working on book 3.

Life news

Another milestone today was installation of our shower! We still can’t use it for a day or two, until all the silicone and glue dries (the plumber left behind a tube of glue and two screwdrivers- do you think they’ll want them back?), but the prospect of not having to have a bath every morning and night is very appealing.

Here it is. It basically looks just like any shower anywhere now:

shower1

After the leaking, cracked tray was torn out.

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The shower bit came out and was replaced by these.

shower2

New shower tray in.

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Lovely shower! I’ll let you know how it goes probably on Friday when it’s all dry and can finally shower again.

Really moving in and on.

Mike GristLife

Today we finished painting the dining room in cream and orange, which basically completes downstairs bar doing something with the kitchen floor, and it leaves me with a funny feeling of melancholy.

It hit hardest when I was flattening a few boxes- very sturdy boxes from a Korean courier service, which carried all our stuff from Japan over a year ago. Emptying them and now flattening them (I felt like keeping them in storage in the attic, for the next time we might need them) really felt like closing that door to the past.

It’s unexpected, as we’ve been in the UK for a year now, but it was always so in transition. I guess at any point we could have gone back to Japan and not really skipped much of a beat. Our stuff was ready to go.

Now it’s not. It’s getting spread into this house. It becomes clearer slowly that, by buying this place, we have most likely committed ourselves to living here for an extended period of time. That is something new for us- after having lived year to year, constantly debating when we were going to move.

I had the same feeling with getting the wardrobes in. I’ve heard people say a house and furniture is an anchor weighing you down- and I begin to feel that, though not in a negative way. It’s just a new thing. This is absolutely what we wanted, and what we want, but it will take some getting used to.

Bye bye boxes. Each step forward stretches our ties to the world behind a little thinner.

Writing news

I put The Last to 99 cents to see if it ups sales. The major income has been from borrows and page reads through Kindle Unlimited- and a cheaper price won’t affect that negatively at all- it could only increase visibility if more people buy, which should lead to more borrows.

Photo of the day

Today’s photos come from our trip to the Harry Potter studio three weeks back, before we’d moved in at all. See the giddy, responsibility-free youth in these camera angles!

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A cauldron. This was part of the Winter Ball they did in Goblet of Fire.

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Harry and Ron’s bedroom. Apparently these beds were too small as the actors grew up, but they never changed them.

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Gryffyndor common room. Designed to look warm, lived-in, cozy and very familial. It’s like a common room at one of the outdoor pursuits centers I used to go to as a kid. Comfy to sprawl in after a hard day orienteering.

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Hogwarts gates.

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Dumbledore’s office.

First 3k words + surreal art

Mike GristArt, Life

I have written the first chapter of Zombie Ocean 3! Or TL3, as I call it (as each book’s title is The L….).

It is very different from what I expected. Will it hook people? Who knows. I thought the exact same thing about TL1 and TL2.

I was uncertain earlier about the start I’d made, but I just pushed through and it came good and conflict-y. I worry I know nothing about this field (inner city gangs!) but then whatever, that rule to only ‘Write What You Know’ is not one I agree with.

Cerulean has a heckuva past, basically.

In other news, the artist is coming back to me with close-to-finished drafts of the new Mr. Ruins cover. It is very different from others- Gothic, sci-fi, ruins, and vampire all in one. I suppose I will get him working on sequels shortly. Plus of course TL3!

Here is a link to his deviant art page.

For today’s pictures, there is more art, made by me when I was an infant. I found these as I was clearing out my mom’s garage, which was full of boxes of my old stuff (diaries, schoolwork, printed out copies of past novels). Enjoy!

Still art. I don’t know about you, but I mostly see the demonic scissors, not the camera.

kid-art1

A walking house beneath a red sun. I was into the surreal at a young age, it would seem.

kid-art2

New desk!

Mike GristUncategorized

Its a mini pedestal desk with 7 drawers and two writing-ey bits that pop out above drawers at left and right to afford more writing surface.

It is where I will do most of my writing hereon in. 

  
Just behind the chair is my weights bench. Did weights tonight. 

Corbyn won the Labour leadership election. People say it’s huge, but the next election is not til 2020, so I’m not convinced it means all that much. 

Plus I can’t say I’m anti-austerity. Increase tax on rich people, yes, I’m for that, but pure socialism just seems so mushy to me. It doesn’t harness basic human drives, or bring out human excellence, as well as capitalism (with a socialist safety net of survival money and good health care).

Anyway. We also watched Billie JD Porter go to China and flirt with cocky Chinese boys. She’s a great presenter- engaging in ways older white men just can’t be. And in your face too. 

Ps- While the desk is new to me, of course it’s not actually new- bought antique off eBay. How old is it? Dunno, but the quantities of dust inside it spoke of long centuries… (all cleaned up now)

Story arc in Zombie Ocean 3

Mike GristUncategorized

Today I thought a lot about what Cerulean’s story arc is. I think knowing that will make the writing flow. 

With Amo and Anna it was easy- they were both a kind of love story. Boy/girl, parent/daughter. The arc from beginning to end is straightforward- have someone, lose them, get them back again.

That’s not Cerulean’s arc though. If anything, his is about heroism, and straining towards an ideal. So in the start- he loses sight of that ideal. Then he dpends the rest of the story trying to get it back.

I’ve been tinkering with the blurb, and thinking to compare this story to ‘Born on the 4th of July’. First, he’s in a wheelchair. Second, they’re both about heroism.

But it’s not only that for Ron Kovac. His journey is from blinkered patriotism and black/white morality to a more balanced view of reality. He lost something- or never had it- but earned it through the story. 

For Cerulean? He wasn’t ever a coward, so it’s not that he has the gain. I have a few ideas.

Plus of course I have the plot; the whole story. I’ve got cool events and characters. It’s the deep drive for Cerulean that is still foggy.

In other news, another day spent painting. The living room is now cell block gray. See-
  
I really dig it. Gray can totally be warm. 

Pre-story ‘set-up’ writing?

Mike GristUncategorized

I had some time today for writing, and I set to it with slogging perseverance. It was not especially fun, more like wrestling with a slippery goat in a vat of cold spaghetti bolognese. There were certainly mini-highs, as I stumbled upon a bit that seemed fun or pointing in the right direction, but there were quite a lot of fumbles and potential missteps.

Ah, writing beginnings. They have to do so much work- . And recently, I keep on setting myself challenges to ‘set up’ the story with a pre-story, because I want to ‘situate’ the crazy changes to come (whether it’s zombie apocalypse or mind-vampires or whatever) with a firm sense of reality.

I did it with Amo in The Last, and a mini romance which then went o to inform the whole book, set stakes, and provide a sense of closure at the end. I did it Anna in The Lost. Doing it with Cerulean in this latest book is going to be of a different sort, and it’s a challenge to make it conflict-ful (conflictual?).

Of course there is the other school of ‘in media res’. You start at a high, and get the character and stakes stuff stuck in via backstory. That way is fine too. I did that in both the other zombie books as well, in addition to the opening story. But I think, for me, I’ve really enjoyed movies and stories where the characters are fun and interesting independent of whatever the big story event is, and we see that for some time.

There are countless examples. Ghostbusters. The Goonies. Super 8. No others spring to mind right now…

I think I’ll get it with Cerulean. If I don’t, I’ll try something else. I’ve got an arc, a middle and an end with punch. In fact I’ve written much of the end already. Now I need to make it sync up to the beginning for maximum punch and full-circleness.

In life news- work was work. This week was all materials development, along with the next two weeks.

In house news- the plumber came and did ‘first-fix’ on the shower. Total installation cost will be 1200 pounds!! The shower and all bits (including tiles) came to 500. We already spent 250 for the previous plumber to pull out the old shower. It’s getting to be serious money.

In sales news- sales continue to fall, which is natural after a promotion. They rise and fall, down to 5 sales (actually that’s up! 🙂 ) and 2,000 pages read (cut in half or even third).

Here is a picture of the shower before and after:

shower1

After being ripped out. God, it looks nasty where the shower tray had cracked and was leaking through. Most of these tiles just fell off with a touch, they were so rotten.

shower2

This looks much healthier. The previous shower tray was literally a few millimeter thin plastic stuffed with foam core crap. This one is some kind of stone resin.

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This thing was leaking.

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Not anymore! New shower taps will go on on Tuesday.

Adventures in Book Marketing: The Last

Mike GristBook Cover Design, Marketing

The Last is without doubt my most successful book yet. It has sold close to a thousand copies since release 4 months ago, with several hundred more in Kindle Unlimited borrows, and close to 10,000 copies given away free.

Why is this happening? It surely has been down to three things: title, cover, blurb. In a nutshell- the book’s marketing.

This post is about the marketing path to the current title, cover and blurb.

DESIGN ONE

I started off with a wordy, opaque title which I thought was clever, silly and fun. It tied in perfectly to the book, being the nickname the hero Amo takes for himself after the apocalypse (all very tongue-in-cheek).

LAST MAYOR OF AMERICA

Shall I explain that? It’s foursquare meets the apocalypse. Does that help? Foursquare is the GPS-linked location-based cell phone app, where by ‘checking in’ to a place you can raise your rank there. So if you check in to a place a lot, more than anyone else, you can become the mayor.

So, it’s fun. It’s easy to check in the most when you’re the only person there. But one problem here is how vague it seems- even misleading. Is it about politics? Is it Rudi Giuliani’s memoir? In the book it’s fine to explain, but as a title there isn’t that time.

Anyway- I had the idea I wanted to go big with the title, splashed boldly across the cover background image- which would be a scene of New York in ruins. I was inspired in this by the novel ‘Ready Player One’, not for any particular reason- just I liked that style, and I wanted the ‘fun’ title to do the work for me.

Here’s Ready Player One:

ready

It’s a book I really enjoyed and admire, with some similarities to The Last- in that it’s an odd skew on a quest story, with time jumps that take the character ad story leaping forward.

Here’s my first take:

lma5

There wasn’t room for my full name, so I dropped a little MJG in the corner. Ameri-ca is also a bit tricky. I searched for ages for a good image of New York destructed, but couldn’t find any, and so came back to a photoshop tutorial I followed years ago, when I thought I might get into ‘destructing’ photographs for fun.

See that tutorial and my efforts here.

But I soon changed the title, and with it I wanted to change the image. Of course I could have used the same image- but it wasn’t strong enough. So I looked around. Here are some of the covers I got inspiration from:

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Robinson Crusoe was a definite inspiration for The Last- being largely man against environment. Although perhaps the Tom Hanks movie Castaway was more directly my inspiration. There is even a similar character to Hanks’ ‘Willis’, his friend the basketball.

So I need a character, for the ‘man’ in ‘man vs. environment’. In this image the environment is this stormy ocean. I need something like that too.

Video_Game_Cover_-_The_Last_of_Us

This is a zombie video game that was huge. It really looks like I’ve copied this title, hey? And just shrunk it down?

Happily there is no copyright for titles. Also, believe it or not I started from ‘Last Mayor of America’, dropped to ‘The Last’ for simplicity’s sake, then remembered this video game. Of course it doesn’t matter either way.

They have a nice ruined city, environment, and two characters. I also liked the font. Bold, white, stark.

The Walking Dead - Season 3 - Poster Art - Frank Ockenfels/AMC

The Walking Dead – Season 3 – Poster Art – Frank Ockenfels/AMC

Of course I looked at The Walking Dead. A bad-ass character and a ruined environment- check.

zminus

Here’s another zombie book. It’s all environment. A lot of zombie books have this bio-hazard symbol on them. It makes the genre clear.

Finally:

Book Review The Martian

This cover, of a sci-fi, Robinson Crusoe-esque story of a guy abandoned on Mars, was my clearest inspiration- both for the story and the cover. It has man and environment, displayed very compellingly and elegantly.

The novel is a series of man vs. environment problems that the protagonist has to solve with creative use of science. My novel is similar- though he solves his problems not with science, but with art.

So…

DESIGN TWO

I draft a basic interpretation of this idea, with zombies in place of sand. They are my environment.

lma-rough

It’s very rough but you get the idea. Seems I was toying with the idea of ‘Final Man’ as a title here. Am glad I went with The Last instead.

I put the job up on deviantart for $100, and get as usual like 30 responses. I comb through them and pick the guy who looks best- Francisco Ruiz. I give him the brief, this rough cover, plus all the reference images above. he gets to work on a sketch, and comes up with this:

zombie john 2

It’s a good start. The guy looks too young, and given his nakedness this looks a bit rapey, plus I want more zombies with more sense of him lost amongst them, but it’s good. I go back and get the next sketch.

zombie john copia

At least he’s wearing clothes now. Still too young, too much ammo bandoliers, and his hair looks like he’s in a boy band.

zombie john 3

OK, now this is more like it! He’s a man not a boy, he’s holding one weapon, and the zombies are everywhere. I pay half the money and the work goes ahead.

zombie john 4

The artist starts to color in. It’s looking good!

zombie john 5

Here we’re at full color, almost there, though the main guy looks kind of weak-chinned now as his face has changed, and the image broadly lacks contrast.

LMA-desat-blur

 

I put it into photoshop and punch up the contrast, blur the edges, and start experimenting with fonts. This grunge font is called ‘Twisted Stallions’. At the same time the artist is working on minor changes.

zombie john final man4_2

I don’t know what the artist did, but he looks less weak-chinned now. His shirt is blue which I prefer. There are fine level details like spit is coming out of his mouth as he screams, he’s wearing dog-tags, and also environmental features have been added like the Police Caution tape wrapped around the zombie at bottom right, and power lines running across the top right.

Wow, I thought, when I saw Francisco had done this. He is dedicated. This is good work.

Also I’ve gone with the blocky white title. It seemed best, since the image is so busy. To add a destructed, grungey font seemed like overkill. The eye wouldn’t know where to settle.

TL-full-sponged

To try and off-set the busy image, and punch up the contrast more, I went into photoshop and did some sharpening, de-saturating, and selective darkening and blurring. It’s like painting with huge thick special effects crayons.

The main difference is the zombies are black and white, with splashes of red blood. the only real color is Amo and his shirt. I like this color contrast. There is also vignetting- darkened corners and edges- which I believe help frame the image. There’s a band of dark across the middle too, to help the title stand out.

So, done? Almost. For three months the book was on sale like this- then I started with Francisco on The sequel design, The Lost, and I wanted to add some bits that I also had to add to this.

I hadn’t been totally happy with the level of contrast, or with the font. so I experiemented more, and came up with:

TL1-fresh

I zoomed in on the image a bit, cropping the edges and making Amo bigger. I re-did the de-saturation and darkening to punch up the contrast. I changed the font and figured out how to make it look all ragged- and was surprised how it didn’t seem to clash any more.

I also added the biohazard icon- sourced for free.

What do you think?

I think it’s been all improvement so far. Refining the cover, the blurb, the title have all really helped home in on what the book is, what it’s USP is, and who will enjoy it and for what reasons. It’s all there on the cover.

And the blurb? It evolved too. It always was short and sweet, inspired by the likes of Hugh Howey ad The Martian itself. State the premise in one or two lines, then get out.

When the zombie apocalypse hits America, not a soul is left alive.
Except Amo. He’s a comic book artist. He’s a video game world-builder. He’s mayor of his local coffee shop in New York.
He will survive.

It’s so simple. It doesn’t tell you enough? I knew that- because to say any more would be to venture into spoiler territory for the book’s major twists. I hoped reviews would help out here, by stating there were twists and they were fun.

I also decided to help that along. I thought- why not be bold? Provocative? So now the tagline above the blurb reads-

The zombie apocalypse like you’ve never seen it before.

In big letters like that. I also edited the book file so this message is the inside flap, first page after the cover. so people don’t forget what book they’re reading.

Afterward I added a line comparing it to other works, and describing what reads have in store for them-

‘Robinson Crusoe’ meets the zombie apocalypse, packed with gore, twists and existential angst.

The existential angst bit is true, but also intended as a bit tongue-in-cheek. The book has humor too, so I try to showcase that here.

Finally, I decide to spell out a bit ore what kind of twists we have in store, with a little more humor too, plus mention that while it is series, readers won’t be left annoyed by a cliffhanger-

A standalone novel that kicks off the Zombie Ocean series, continued in Book 2, The Lost. Burning questions will be raised and answered, like:

– How do you survive when the whole world wants to eat you?
– Where does hope come from when you’re the last one alive?
– Where are all the zombies going, and what on Earth do they really want?

CONCLUSION

So that is the book’s marketing package. Spelled out like this, it looks like quite a lot of work. It is, really. It’s fun though- difficult but one of the more fun bits of the whole writing/publishing process. I’d miss it if I was traditionally published- though before I got started with indie publishing it was the bit I dreaded most.

I have to sell my books? To people? I don’t know what to say!

Just say it boldly, cross your fingers, and be ready to iterate new versions when the idea comes.

I’ll do a marketing post like this for all my books- starting with The Lost next, and then going back over Mr. Ruins (which has a new cover coming) and the others.

See other posts in the book marketing range here.

Meanwhile, you can buy The Last here :)-

The wardrobes fit!

Mike GristUncategorized

We hired two guys who came round today and brute forced the wardrobes up over the banister and into the room.

The banister got pretty scratched up, but paint will fix that. The wardrobes are massive, very deep, but they look great.

The TV stand we bought though was damaged, crunched on the corner, so it will hopefully go back for a full refund.

It’s weirdly stressful, receiving furniture- even stuff you want and are mostly happy with. I’ve never experienced it before, having never really owned anything. 

Maybe it’s a bit like that feeling after you take a cast off an injury and see the wrinkly healed scar underneath. Like a disconnect, or a connect with a new reality setting in. It’s a strange reaction.

I’m sure we’ll adjust soon. In the meantime, here I am still in the first blush of happiness at having wardrobes-

  
I wrote the blurb for Zombie Ocean 3 today. I do this first now- trying to get each as short as I can. It really helps me home in on what the main conflict/story is, and if it has enough punch.

Being snappy and easy to grasp is key. People need to know quickly what kind of story they’re in for, what the USP (unique selling point) is, and what kind of emotional ride they’ll be on.

I think I’m there. I’m almost ready to start writing. Who’s the viewpoint character? I can say that much.

It’s Cerulean.

Wardrobe nightmare

Mike GristUncategorized

The wardrobes don’t fit!!

The stairs prevented the delivery men from getting either of our two wardrobes up the stairs, round the bend, and into the bedroom, and poor old SY was at home to deal with it.

Now they are in the dining room. To return them costs £100 a piece. But, but but but, I am holding out hope they can be handled in such a way as to get them alley-up and over the banister.

I will hire men to do this work with me. It will be like 300 on those stairs. We will battle until not one of us stands!!

Francisco got back to me with new Mr. Ruins art. It is pretty awesome, probably the best yet, and definitively embraces the books vampire DNA. 

I’ll show it soon. Sales 3 and page reads 4,000. It’s falling. 

Here are a few more pictures of Harry Potter stuff at the studio.

 
Potters ruined house  

Skinny knight bus.

    
Walkway thing.

  
Animatronics, illustrated by Warwick Davis.

Little bits of daily life

Mike GristLife

– These days it’s dark when I wake up at 6:30, though the house is warm from the new Hive central heating controller which turns the boiler on automatically. It goes to 23 degrees Celsius, and if I wanted I could crank that up from my phone via the app connected to the wifi router.

– I could turn the heat up in my house from anywhere in the world, as long as I had internet access. Think about that for a minute.

– Actually I’ve unplugged it. Not much call for it, really. It seems neat, but the timer function handles our heating needs nicely.

– In the morning when we step out the air is cool and fresh in a way that reminds me of outward bound trips as a kid with my school in some remote corner of Wales, staying en masse in ancient old youth hostels on creaky bunk beds that smelled of Lynx deodorant and wet socks and sweat.

– In the morning you’d go for your shower in the freezing, barren toilets, but thanks to blazing central heating in 100-year old pipes, you’d be warm even with all the windows rusted open, and in would pour this gorgeous morning dew smell, rich with the sap of freshly ruptured clouds, vibrant grass, twigs and bracken and the calls of last night’s wild hunt still ringing in the air.

– I get a taste that from the park every morning, wafting over in waves. When it’s misty it’s gorgeous. I go to work. The Hive central heating controller is supposed to beep to warn me if I ever leave the house with the heat on – it has GPS too of course- but I’ve unplugged it so it never does. Why would I need it anyway, when it’s all on a timer?