Thursday, 30 October 2014

From Thought to Reality

Six months or so later, Rebecca, Bethany's mom, was unemployed and looking for ways to earn some money, and she remembered Bethany's teacher's suggestion.  Maybe publishing The Lotus Princess would be a good way to stay busy and earn money.

At that point, Rebecca started researching different ways to publish a story.  There are lots of guides out there on "how to get your story published," but there are two main ways of doing it.

The old way was to send your story to publisher after publisher and agent after agent, hoping one would find it worth working with.  This was difficult in the old days, when stories could be rejected hundreds of times before being accepted. These days, it is hard even to find a publisher who accepts manuscripts directly from authors!  In this way of publishing, the publisher has a lot of control over the final product, and the author gets paid royalties for their work.

The new way is called "self-publishing."  In this way of publishing, you pay lots of money to a company who then publishes your book for you.  You have to sell it yourself.  There are also lots of self-publishing companies out there, and they all offer different options for how your book is published and distributed.

While Rebecca was doing this research, a teacher in Bethany's school published a children's story book (Sunbeam Music by Sarah Froese). Rebecca decided to look into the company that published for her, and eventually decided to go with that company for Bethany's book.

The Lotus Princess is published by Word Alive Press.  They provide editing and professional illustrations, and they make sure people can order your book from Amazon, Chapters (Indigo), Barnes and Noble, and other book stores.  This is called "distribution" and it's very hard to do on your own, since most book stores won't take books that don't come through their own channels.

The final step in starting the process was paying for the services of Word Alive.  Rebecca's Oma (grandmother) was willing to loan Rebecca the money to pay for the publication of the story.  Money was exchanged, legal contracts were signed, and the publishing process began!

(By the way, if you are considering publishing your story and you decide to go with Word Alive Press, be sure to mention Bethany's name so she can receive a referral bonus.)

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