Flash Fiction Vote: Get it in Gear

Flash Fiction VoteThe flash fiction challenge is off to a fast start. There are lots of great entries to choose from this week. Which did you like best?

Check out this week’s entries here. Vote for your favorite, then use those share buttons at the bottom of the post to spread the word.

Voting polls close Thursday at 5 PM Pacific time.

 

Whose story did you like the best?

  • Sara Stark (39%, 24 Votes)
  • TJ Perkins (25%, 15 Votes)
  • Kathy Steinemann (16%, 10 Votes)
  • Jon Jefferson (7%, 4 Votes)
  • alkaplan (5%, 3 Votes)
  • Annette Hatton (3%, 2 Votes)
  • tdmckinnon (3%, 2 Votes)
  • Ey Wade (2%, 1 Votes)
  • G Mitchell Baker (0%, 0 Votes)
  • jledgington (0%, 0 Votes)
  • John Shirley (0%, 0 Votes)

Total Voters: 61

Loading ... Loading ...

NOTE: Entrants whose submissions exceed the 250 word limit are eliminated from the poll.

New Titles Available

Happy New Year! Here are four new titles to check out.


Alinors Shard 120x177Alinor’s Shard by Brian Beam

In a world consumed by shadow, the Dark God rules uncontested. Will the power of Alinor’s Shard be enough to end his vile reign?

Alinor’s Shard is available through Amazon.com and Amazon UK.


cookin with the hopkins 120x177Cookin’ with the Hopkins by Jacqueline Hopkins

This collection of recipes is the author’s favorites regularly made by her mother while growing up during the 60s & 70s in Colorado & Idaho.

Cookin’ with the Hopkins is available through Amazon.com and Amazon UK.


Self publishing made simple 120x177Self-publishing Made Simple: A How-to Guide for the Non-tech-savvy Among Us by Melinda Clayton

Compare and contrast distributors, format manuscripts, register copyrights and much more, all in this plainspoken, easy to follow guide.

Self-publishing Made Simple is available at Amazon.com and Amazon UK.


Eugenic reprisalEugenic Reprisal by J. M. Preiss

Cpt. Mason Smith and Lt. Jacob Brown are sent on another exciting part of their adventure in hopes to stop the impending apocalypse.

Eugenic Reprisal is available at Amazon.com and Amazon UK.

 


IU Excellence Award Nominations Still Open

IUEA Nominations ButtonNominations are still open for the Indies Unlimited Excellence Awards. It’s up to you to decide which sites will be included in the voting! It’s time to recognize the sites that have provided you with the most valuable information, insights, and resources. Nominations are easy, just click on the image at left, or in the top of the sidebar, and follow the instructions.

You can nominate your choices for Best Book Review Site, Best Resource Site, and Best Watchdog/Warning Site. Get those nominations in and show that you care!

Indie News Beat: Which Perspective Would You Like with 2014?

As another New Year kicks off, it’s worth taking a look around at what’s being said about this crazy industry we call publishing. For many of us, it’s the data that matters: the most popular sites for readers, the titles they’re buying, which genres are ‘hot’ (and is there a snowball’s chance in hell we could bang out 50k words before that genre goes cold?). However much we may dislike marketing our books, we need to decide where they should be, what the ideal price point is, and many more variables which could see a few more copies downloaded.

So what might this year hold? If you can make it through the hyperbole, a good place to start is Ten Bold Predictions for 2014. Yes, last year was the best ever, except that now the price of eBooks is “plummeting”. Good news for readers, but if the mainstreams are finally bringing eBook prices down to what Independent Authors have been selling them at for a while, where does that leave the latter? Another telltale factoid is that “ebook revenue has tapered off”, which also supports the suggestion that mainstreams now understand they’ve milked the eBook market as much as they can. The problem for Independent Authors is that it removes a fundamental selling point: that our ebooks were cheaper.

An interesting perspective, and much useful information, is to be had in this article by Paul Jarvis. He describes his own experiences with using Indie sites to sell his books, and talks about publishing a book on Amazon as though it were a bit of a chore: “It took 12 hours [for his book to be on sale] which isn’t bad… Basically, there’s a lot of waiting for Amazon…” I found Jarvis’s use of Indie sites to sell his books to be a refreshing change, given that in my experience, Amazon is the number one place where a book has to be available. Continue reading “Indie News Beat: Which Perspective Would You Like with 2014?”