Issue #3
Summer
- 2008
ISSN 1525-2140

The View from Down Here
by RD Armstrong
A lot has happened since the last issue came out.
For one thing, I've started publishing books from my
four book set, the Essential Raindog
Reader, which
consists of a two volume poetry collection called Fire
and Rain - Selected Poems 1993-2007, my trilogy of
road epics: On/Off the Beaten Path and finally,
El Pagano and Other Twisted Tales. The only volume
left to publish is the second book of Fire and Rain.
Sales have been slow, but at least the work is out
there.
What makes this possible is a process known as Print
On Demand or POD. It allows you the ability
to publish in quantities from one book to one thousand
books. For small-time publishers like Lummox
Press, this is a god-send because it's nearly impossible
to come up with the thousands of dollars needed to
publish a book in any reasonable quantity in the
conventional way. I've never been able to publish
more than 300 copies at a time, and 300 copies isn't
even a "blip" on the book publishing radar (as I have
been reminded over and over by well-intentioned, yet
tight-assed friends). If only I was living on a
trust-fund and able to do what I wanted with my
do-re-mi, but alas, I'm just another working-stiff &
literary stumblebum. So I must lumber on, trying to make
ends meet, and still be true to the craft.
Which brings me to another point: what's so bad about
self-publishing? Nobody even blinks when a band
produces their own album. These days it's almost
the rule that it be DIY (Do It Yourself), and yet, in
the book world / publishing game if you do it yourself,
you are seen as a lesser being. It's as if the
technology of book-making is still seen as some arcane
knowledge that is protected by some secret society.
From where I'm sitting, it looks as if the big
publishing houses are teetering under their own bloated
weight and could come crashing down at any moment.
Same with the other purveyors of "entertainment" -
music, movies, video - they're all stumbling around like
punch-drunk, used-to-be's; too proud to admit that
they've lost their way. The explanation that you usually
hear in regards to the benefits of self-publishing (or
at least using the services of some POD company) is that
most presses have to take salability into consideration,
so they cannot take many chances on unknown writers or
writers who don't sell as well as they used to. It
always comes down to money. The bigger the
company, the more money it takes to turn a profit.
Duh. That's true universally.
The sad thing is that authors/writers/poets (whatever
you want to call us) want to be published so badly that
we'll be suckered every time. I read recently that
most fiction writers make about 8% from the profit of
their book(s). 8%?! WTF? That's insane. But wait, it
gets better and/or worse. There's a whole industry
centered around getting between you and your hard-earned
cash. It starts at the college level, where you
have MFA programs that, for the most part, are spawning
writer-teachers to continue the program who are in turn
spawning "editors" who, for a fee, will "tweak" your
book so it is marketable. There are hundreds (if
not thousands) of these guys out there, all vying for
your hard won money and all gambling on your
gullibility.
Many POD companies are equally guilty of this as
well. They charge anywhere from $300 to over
$12,000 to help you promote your book! Basically,
you are paying them to tell you what to do. You
still have to do most if not all of the work, too.
Does that make sense? Writing isn't some game
where you get to sit around and eat Bon-Bons -- well
maybe poetry is more like that than I would care to
admit to -- but no, writing is hard work, but it pales
to the work of promoting it. Unless you've got a
BIG following (I wonder what that's like), promoting
your book can become a full-time job, except there's
very little pay. You still have to work the "day
job". Sorry.
Fifteen years in this tiny pond has taught me that
it's all about self-promotion (yes, I've heard it's
unseemly to do that -- but who will if I don't?) and
trying not to miss any opportunities to get the word(s)
out. I'm hoping that there will be enough interest in
The Raindog Reader series to generate some sales, but I
know it won't happen unless I get out there and bang the
drum loudly. So, i hope you don't mind if I get
back to it: Boom! Boom! Boom!
As to this issue, both of the interviews are very
interesting. I met Nila earlier this year and
immediately took a liking to her. She has a
Blog and
you can sample her wares (poetry) there. Patricia and I
have been corresponding ever since I read her chapbook
Don't Turn Away (about surviving Breast
cancer). I think I called her a "healing" poet
when I reviewed that book. Read her interview to
see how she incorporates that healing into her job
working with cancer patients.
I feel I must mention an affinity to the article by
Chris Harter regarding the Mimeo Revolution (see
Essays). When I was in High School (lo those many
years ago), "underground" newspapers were just beginning
to pop up. I seem to recall during my junior year
there was one called La Otra Vista (The Other View) in
reaction to the school sanctioned one - La Vista.
Then in my senior year, I published a short lived (3
issues as I recall) one called The Scarlet Lizard with a
couple of my chums. It ended with my being
expelled for being a royal pain in the butt for the
school. But a year later (after I had graduated) I
published Up Against the Wall for almost a whole year
with my girlfriend. I think that's where I first
caught the 'bug'. So, read the article, it's
fascinating, especially if you remember the smells and
sounds of mimeographing!
Another poet/friend, H. Lamar Thomas, starts a new
column with the LJ this issue. He's a Chef at the
East/West Bistro in Athens, GA, and writes a monthly
cooking article for Southern Distinction Magazine.
He's also a poet whom I've had the pleasure of
publishing over the years. Since it's BBQ weather, it
seemed only appropriate to run his piece on the almighty
burger. I'm getting hungry just thinking about it.
I've added new
links, many of which deal with the wonders of POD. Check them out. But
buyer beware...ok?
New Little Red Books are coming soon. Check them out
as they join the ever-growing list of titles:
I Saw It on TV by Terry McCarty; Sushi and Whipped Cream
by Nila NorthSun, The Mysterious Woman Next Door by W. S. Gainer,
and Hesitant Commitments by Pris Campbell. Reserve your copies
now. As always the LRBs are just $6 each (ppd). And coming next year,
The Best O' the Little Red Books - A Decade Passes. Watch for more
books to follow.
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In This
Issue...
Essays:
Passion and Danger The Renaissance of
Literary Publishing
During the Mimeograph Revolution by
Christopher Harter; The POD Wars
(a collaborative article) and Wired Wash Readers Search For a
New Home by Ellaraine Lockie.
The
Savory Feast - a new feature
by chef & poet H. Lamar Thomas...timely
recipes to sooth your tummy and soul.
Interviews
with native American poet Nila
NorthSun and
Patricia
Wellingham-Jones, a healing poet who
works with cancer patients.
Poetry by
Marie Lecrivian, Pris Campbell, Lyn lifshin,
Darryl Salach, Jason Hardung, Karina Klesko,
Scott Wannberg, Ray Freed and A. D. Winans
Reviews of RELENTLESS
and TELL THE CORPSE A STORY by
Todd Moore and Love at
Gunpoint by Nila NorthSun.
Links
to everything a poet and/or fledgling
hipster might need to succeed.
Raindog
muses on the state of POD or publish/print
on demand.
Contact the
Lummox Journal at editor@lummoxpress.com
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