Guest post: Alan McDermott on being an author

This post originally appeared on my old Blogger blog on November 23, 2011.

I’ve asked some bloggers to contribute guest posts, where they answer two questions:

what’s the best thing you’ve done, as a writer?

what is the hardest thing, or the biggest mistake you’ve made?

I am contributing posts on the same subject to their blogs.

The responses have covered topics from the kind of writing they do, when they write, their writing process and even managing their personal lives.

5c77e-alan_profile_pic-300x225The first is Alan McDermott from the UK, author of the wildly successful Tom Gray series, which now includes Gray Justice (which I reviewed on this blog), Gray Resurrection, Gray Redemption, Gray Retribution and the latest, Gray Vengeance. He is a member of Independent Authors International. His blog is Jambalian.

Take it away, Alan!

The best and worst of being an author

The best part is easy. You might expect me to say it’s looking at those sales figures and seeing them tick over, but to be honest the thing that pleases me more is when I get a review from someone totally impartial. There haven’t been that many (I think around 16 in total, spread over a few sites such as Amazon, Smashwords and Goodreads), but each one gives me the determination to keep going on the next book.

Readers might think that the book in their hand was written by someone spending hours at the keyboard in an idyllic mountain retreat, but I’d bet that 90 percent of the time the author is like me, working a day job and coming home to a family. As any parent knows, that leaves very little time for anything, never mind writing a novel. This means I have to get up at dark o’clock every morning in order to scrape a couple of hundred words together before setting off for the office. When I get home there are three lovely ladies waiting for me, and they all want a piece of Daddy, and when I get an hour to myself in the evening I am so worn out I can just about say Hi to my friends on Twitter before the sandman comes calling. Weekends are not much better, but at least I can manage a thousand words over the two days.

It’s a tough regimen, but every time I see a new 4- or 5-star review it tells me that someone got a lot of pleasure from my book, and that makes it all worthwhile.

The hard part about being an author? To be honest, I don’t think there is an easy part. Notwithstanding the above routine, I had to come up with a storyline which gallops along at such a pace that the reader cannot put the book down. Having written that story, I then had to tame the beast that is impatience. The beast rears its head as soon as the last word has been confined to the page and screams “Publish it NOW!” I succumbed with my first novel and boy, did I pay the price. I’d given copies to friends and family the day before I published it on Smashwords and the emails soon started coming in, mostly entitled “List of errors.” I cringed as I realized I had given away over a hundred copies and all of these readers would have their reading experience ruined by needless typos. Even after fixing these errors, I got feedback from customers telling me they had found even more! Lesson learned, and for the next instalment I will be doing a heavy re-read and passing it to a few friends well before I publish it.

The next hurdle is probably the hardest to overcome. You now have a perfectly-formatted, error-free book, you think it’s a fantastic read, but how do you get it into the hands of readers? Sure, I’ve got a few friends on Facebook, but when I announced the release I got a couple of responses, both saying “well done,” but neither offering to read it. So I went back and told everyone they could have a free copy, and six people took me up on the offer.
Next came the Google search performed by all new authors: “How to sell my ebook?”

Up came about 150 million results and I started scrolling through. Most of the links took me to writer blogs and the general consensus was that I should get a Twitter account, which I duly did. I signed up and began telling the whole world about my book. After no sales that week, I discovered that people had to be following me in order to hear what I was saying. So I went in search of authors and the numbers began to rise, but still no sales. As I started clicking on blog links in the tweets of others, I discovered some of the cardinal rules of Twitter: don’t just tweet about your book; don’t send new followers direct messages asking them to buy your book; do always thank people who retweet your words; do try and make genuine friends rather than just potential customers. The list goes on, but these are the ones I have concentrated on.

One of the last things I ever considered was having my own blog. With no time to eat, never mind write, how could I begin to pile more work on myself? Nevertheless, it was seen as an essential part of the whole writer-selling-books deal. I already had Jambalian and I added a few posts about the book, but I realised that a proper blog was needed and created a free Jambalian blog on Blogger: http://jambalian.blogspot.com/.

I have tried to keep the focus on writing without saying “BUY! BUY! BUY!” but I find it hard to get time to even think of a topic, never mind commit one to pixels. I’m getting better, though.

At the moment, things are moving slowly, but having stuffed impatience back in his box, I am prepared for the marathon.

Now to get some writing done…

5 Comments


  1. Wow, this was an amazing post – it sort of mimics my own feelings and experiences about trying to become a writer, putting the time in, getting reviews, getting sales. It seems like we are all in the same crazy boat in the middle of a storm, but we have to just keep bailing out the water and swimming until we make it to shore, right?


    1. Not only a storm, but we’re in the water with a lot of other little boats, and five gigantic ocean liners that are drifting aimlessly.


  2. This post actually makes me feel better…I am one of those writers getting up while it is still dark then trudging off to an 8hr workday. I just have to keep biting off paragraphs one at a time and eventually I’ll have a whole. Thanks Scott and Alan.


  3. When I first started writing novels the big push was to get an agent who would find a publisher. Little did I know that the world of publishing would get turned on its head. Now authors do it all, write, design, and advertise. It’s a new world, changing all the time. Don’t get frustrated. Take one bite at a time and soon a whole meal is consumed. Set your goals low enough to reach and high enough to be worth reaching. Join groups of authors who are willing to give advice and help, then you’ll make lasting friends as well as selling your books.


  4. This is reality, Scott, and my life is very similar, though I have a “day job” at home. It’s difficult being a writer but we do it because we love it and can’t help but write, I suppose, that’s the only explanation, unless we’re all masochists! A very good post and very realistic. This post makes me feel better, too, Lisa, but the hardest part about being a writer, I find, is promoting, and that takes the most time, too. I love writing but hate promoting. Truth. Some are much better at it than others, and I was dropped by my first publisher because I wasn’t promoting to her satisfaction continuously. It was a relief to get the pressure off. Eventually we all will look back on the ride and say, “What a ride” I suspect.

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