It’s been a frustrating six months. We “officially” released Broken Road back in
the middle of November. We distributed
over 300 business cards showing a brief blurb from the book, and our website
address, beginning in Chicago at the site of the Nat’l Writing Project Annual
Convention and the annual convention for English teachers.
We felt sure the website would get some hits from curiosity
if nothing else, but the number of visitors to the site was disappointing. We gave away books on GoodReads to two
members who were selected by GoodReads out of 393 people who requested to be
part of the giveaway. So far, only one
of the winners has read the book and left a comment on GoodReads.
We re-thought the first two chapters and did a major
slash-and-trash on the book in early April; turned it from a 20 chapter book
into a 75 chapter book, based on advice from a successful eBook author. (This
move, I believe, was a HUGE mistake. I think it immediately puts someone off
when they download a sample and see that it has so many chapters. Also, Smashwords considers a book with more
than 300 pages to be an “epic” novel, a description I think the average reader
would find dismaying.
On our recent trip to south Alabama and the Gulf, we had
magnets made for our car with our QR code that connects to our website, which
in turn shows that the eBook of Broken Road is now available for $0.99 on
Smashwords. We’ve had a few more
downloads of the sample, but no more purchases.
No two ways about it, I’m bummed. Mike really thinks the
sequel, Full Circle, should be ready by Father’s Day. That ain’t happening. I can’t read with any positive spin anymore,
so I have serious doubts about the editing process right now.
I guess the fact that most of my family has not read the
book should have been a clue. Maybe the
average reader needs erotic themes, or blood, guts and gore–I
don’t know.
But I do know that I’ve personally read a great number of
books that were really enjoyable reads that didn’t rely on shock or
sensationalism. So I’m holding out hope
for the folks from Broken Road.