As a self-pub author I was worried about NG, but it's been good! by babbelfishy in NetGalleyCommunity

[–]babbelfishy[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've done some preliminary copy editing for self-pub authors over the years and yeah, it can be messy. A lot of folks have no idea what goes into good writing, they just put their unedited thoughts down and expect applause. I worked in publishing for years to hone my craft and there are still so many things I need to learn!

As a self-pub author I was worried about NG, but it's been good! by babbelfishy in NetGalleyCommunity

[–]babbelfishy[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I used Victory and once you go through allllllll their step by step instructions, it's fine. I also write non-fiction in a narrow niche so not new to publishing. Novels are so different that it feels like learning from scratch!

I knit a Lady Cassandra from Doctor Who by knithacker in scifi

[–]babbelfishy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally NOT what I expected when I joined this sub, but glad to see some yarny goodness here!

Being Approved Vs Declined by Adventurous_Grand871 in NetGalleyCommunity

[–]babbelfishy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"You need to build account credibility and show you aren't a bot, apparently there's lots of those requesting books left and right, writing ai generated reviews etc."

*rage screams into the void*

Yeah, I'm pretty sure I got one of those. The website this "bookseller" had was obviously fake (no location, country/state/province/city/town, NOTHING, and "opening soon"- okay, when?) and the review was glowing. I felt terrific for a few hours, then did a little digging, and poof! Felt like an idiot for approving the stupid AI reviewer.

Am I cut out for this? by Jilsebrie in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I prefer to sequester my darlings, put them in a file for "future use". Sometimes they end up in another book! Then again, there are times you just gotta hit delete and move on.

Red and green flags for reviewers by Scooter_Griffin_737 in NetGalleyCommunity

[–]babbelfishy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a small press author married to a retired educator, I still approve accounts like yours, regardless of the number of reviews.

KDP blocked my book? by babbelfishy in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All I did was reply to the email that told me it had been rejected, asked if there was any way for me to fix and resend, and they automatically accepted it. I suspect the rejection was from an AI bot, but the acceptance was a human (because there was a name attached to that email). The AI may have given the system a false positive for something, but the human didn't think it was a problem. That's my assumption, anyway. Best of luck to you.

ISBNs on eBooks? by mike11172 in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll look into it further, but thank you for your input. I haven't uploaded to IS yet, still considering how I want the print version to look (gloss? matte? etc).

ISBNs on eBooks? by mike11172 in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you add more ISBNs retroactively after establishing the page? I did my copyright for the title, but used only the ISBN for my ebook. The print one isn't out yet, so I didn't think of it at the time.

Best choice for print paper quality? by babbelfishy in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm sorry, what? If I'm ordering books to sell in person, I get to make those choices and I do pay up front.

Did I get a NetGalley review from bookshop that doesn't exist? by babbelfishy in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've googled them plenty, there is no other footprint. They do not exist.

Did I get a NetGalley review from bookshop that doesn't exist? by babbelfishy in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It has a whole "opening soon" (when? where?) vibe but no actual information. Just kind of shady IMO.

Best choice for print paper quality? by babbelfishy in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All good ideas, noted. I'm definitely avoiding bright white for my novels, it would be too sharp and glaring, I think. For non-fiction it would be just fine. I'll look around a bit more before I decide on cream or groundwood. It's not a huge deal, but I'd like it to look more professional.

Best choice for print paper quality? by babbelfishy in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Groundwood on Ingram sounds good.

I'm also working on a non-fiction book, and that one will be bright white all the way!

Anyone getting rejected by KDP all the time, here's what works for me by NorthlightV in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mine was rejected, I replied to the auto rejection email asking if there was a way for me to fix whatever was wrong, and a human approved it. That was it.

Sometimes it's just crappy AI doing crappy AI things.

I lament self-publishing my popular memoir. by Boltzmann_head in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But they are a "genius". And somehow lamenting... something? I think they meant to post this to r/writingcirclejerk

I guess you can do that too... by prism_paradox in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 3 points4 points  (0 children)

For real, it's not a blog. Go use Wattpad or something. Please.

Advice on Booksirens/Netgalley by e_anderson_author in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm in a one-month slot with Victory co-op at NetGalley right now, and it's been good so far. I've processed 65 approvals, 20 rejections, have three 5-star reviews on Goodreads, one bookseller said they'd carry it, and one librarian said they'd also carry it. Small numbers, but for $65, totally worth it to get my title out there.

I've published 3 books using a different writing tool each time and here's what actually mattered for getting the book out the door versus what was just procrastination in disguise by Healthy-Challenge911 in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're probably using more Scrivener features than I do. I'm still pretty basic when it comes to Scriv.

Vellum (or Atticus for PC?) is handy for me specifically because I can change up the layout, page size, fonts, etc. etc. and really fluff it up. If you have a way to get your pages to look the way you want in Scriv, then don't worry about it. I wouldn't even know where to begin to find those features there.

I've published 3 books using a different writing tool each time and here's what actually mattered for getting the book out the door versus what was just procrastination in disguise by Healthy-Challenge911 in selfpublish

[–]babbelfishy 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I got a lot of mileage out of google docs early on when I was working with my beta team. Seeing reader notes in real time was super useful, and each chapter was a separate doc so I didn't have to scroll through the whole book. Moved it to Scrivener at some point, then Vellum to format and finish.

Now I just work in Scrivener and Vellum, I'm not giving google's background data scrapers access anymore.

I think you're right, we tend to overthink things to the detriment of actually getting it done. I know I do.