070: Marketplace Updates - Book Info

Hey sweeties!
Bit of a one-off here as I’m letting you know that hey, my books have moved again. About a week and a half ago, Draft2Digital, the book distribution platform I’ve been using since a different fiasco with Amazon, decided to start charging all their small-time authors for continued access to their services, as well as a new start-up fee for every new account, on top of the royalty cut they were already collecting. I simply can’t afford this as a niche author in an already niche genre.
So, begrudgingly, it’s back to Amazon. On the bright side, their ebook translation doesn’t jack my formatting up.
I have the following available:
THE FAILURE EXPERIMENT - a serial poem influenced by 20th century sci-fi and cyberpunk, dealing with love in the age of mechanical reproduction. Novelist KB Wagers called it “a delightful electrical tangle of words and feelings.” A Kindle version is available.
confessions from a drainage ditch - a collection focusing on growing up rural and how those experiences carry forward, both helpful and harmful. A Kindle Version is available.
A Void and Cloudless Sky - A chapbook akin to an EP, short and experimental, and containing some of my favorite work. Musician and editor Mer Yayanos says it’s “packed with highbrow references and lofi phrases that beg to be verbalized, to be invoked.” [Note: this is my only “traditionally published” work, and I get no money from it until I hit like ten sales a year. But you get a pdf for free, just for being subscribed to this newsletter! Grab it here! It’s a beautiful object, if you’d rather have a physical copy, though.]
Go buy whatever you’re missing.
In addition to this, I’ll likely be reaching out to some of my less invested subscribers soon, in an effort to sort out some delivery stuff. Chances are, if you’re reading this, you’re not one of those folks, but we’ll see. I also have some other under-the-hood stuff to tinker with this week.
Thanks for sticking with me through all this. One of the often-repeated phrases in the author world is that your job isn’t really writing books as much as it is selling books. Having you all around makes that latter part a little easier.
Talk again soon.
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