Friday, August 19, 2011

Speaking the Language of Books ? All Things Fulfilling

This morning I had the honor and privilege of interviewing the award-winning writer-producer-performer Mara Purl. For the back story of Mara?s professional career, please visit yesterday?s blog Portrait of a Consummate Artist. Mara is on a month long virtual book tour to promote ?What the Heart Knows? which will be released in hardcover next month.

The Interview:?

Sue: Mara, we met when my company, Cornerstone Fulfillment Service, LLC ?joined the Colorado Independent Publishers Association as a vendor member. You were President at the time. Can you tell us what you learned as an independent publisher that led you to a new publisher, Bellekeep Books?

Mara: Primarily, I have always been an author.? I had gotten an offer from the? London office of Random House books many years ago and because of very complex situations between an agreement with the BBC relating to my radio drama series and some changes that were going on with Random House I felt it was not a good time to engage in a contract with them.

So, I and five other authors and our teams independently published our books through Haven Books. It really began as a test marketing phase of the books and to get to know who our readers were. What I didn?t know was NY publisher Eric Kampmann was watching me. He was a very wise man.? He recognized the trend that began the implosion of the larger publishing companies and saw that good books were getting lost because they weren?t getting into the system. He founded Mid Point Trade Books , and has now roughly 400 imprints under his umbrella. He became a distribution arm for the independents, including my new publisher Bellekeep Books.

Sue: What did you learn from first independently publishing your books?

Mara: I learned after rejection that there were some publishing elements that were important and missing. Every field has some language and that was rapidly evolving. I always thought I was a fiction writer but really I was writing women?s fiction. Then I began studying displays at book shows and in bookstores. I learned that my book covers did not speak the language of the women?s fiction code. I learned about developing a vision for my brand and each decision I made for my books were art projects designed to make sure they fit the genre and they would catch the eye of the buyer of women?s fiction.

Although my new publisher Bellekeep Books did not require that I rewrite my book, I did go through ?What the Heart Knows? with my editor and brought some story elements foreword which added 100 pages to the hardcover book. I also learned that the cover of my book, which was a line drawing, did not fit with the character of my protagonist, Miranda Jones, who was a painter. So the hardcover has a new cover design. Mary Helsaple, who has been my art research expert and is a nationally known artist, painted a watercolor cover for my book. I loved it! Now the cover design matches the integrity of the inside of the book.

Sue: ?As you well know, independent publishing is continuing to grow and now represents over 50% of all publishing revenue. Where do you see the publishing industry going and how do e-books fit into your assessment of this new generation of publishing?

Mara: I notice that people are reading incessantly. As I travel, I see people reading hardcovers, on laptops, trade paper books, hard cover books and using e-readers. E-books are just another platform. People still love the tactile experience of holding a book. They are tracking book sale trends and surprisingly, those that like an e-book are treating them as a morsel for a real book. If they really liked it, they want to purchase not the paper back but the hardback version to keep on their bookshelves as part of their permanent collections.

Mara: People value?time they can carve out for themselves and they use that valued time to read on all different kinds of platforms.

Sue:? Mara, many lives are changed through reading non-fiction, but many say that women?s fiction has the same ability to change lives. How do you go about getting messages across to women through a fictional narrative?

Mara:? Well?non-fiction is about facts and fiction is about truth. Through non-fiction you can?t access every nuance. ?You can only record the facts. For example: If you are telling a story of violence ? ?facts are sometimes distasteful and you can use fiction as a lens to magnify theoretical cases and go inside the mind of the victim and perpetrator.

In the case of a positive issue of relationships ? through fiction you can follow the development of a romantic attraction and how a relationship develops. Through fiction writing you can present a picture for people to understand what is going on inside the story.

Read the rest of our in-depth interview with on Tuesday, August 23rd when Mara will be back on All Things Fulfilling to discuss her career and how she has incorporated her love for the Arts into her books.?

That is it till Monday, folks!

Like this:

Be the first to like this post.

Source: http://allthingsfulfilling.wordpress.com/2011/08/18/speaking-the-language-of-books/

groupon shannen doherty shannen doherty blush blush sigmund freud fridge

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.