Writing the Book on Self-Help: A Publisher's Cautionary Tale
From The Wall Street Journal, November 13, 2007
The self-publishing business has come a long way in the Internet era.
The self-publishing business has come a long way in the Internet era.
Literary do-it-yourselfers now have many online resources to tap, and even a growing number of role models. Best-selling authors including E. Lynn Harris ("I Say a Little Prayer") and the pseudonymous Zane ("Addicted") have emerged from the self-published ranks.
Pic above shows pallets of his wife's book clutter C. Ben Bosah's garage (story follows).
And then there is the cautionary tale of C. Ben Bosah, an environmental engineer who lives in this leafy village in central Ohio. Mr. Bosah was convinced that a nonfiction book about women's health written by his wife was a sure-fire hit. So instead of sending "Letters to My Sisters: Plain Truths and Straightforward Advice From a Gynecologist" to a literary agent or to a New York publishing house, he decided to publish it himself. His view was, why share the profits?
Mr. Bosah's lack of familiarity with the publishing world didn't worry him -- but it should have. Despite his determination and hard work, he made a succession of mistakes, from failing to line up a distributor before publication to selecting a title for the book that limited the potential readership.
For Mr. Bosah, the problems began the moment the order landed on his doorstep: After the truck dropped off his 15,398 books, Mr. Bosah dented the front of his 1995 Camry pushing the heavy pallets into his garage. "We didn't have a motorized pallet jack," he says.
For aspiring self-publishers, the Internet has made transforming Grandma's recipes into a glossy paperback look deceptively easy. There are scores of services online that writers can hire to edit, market and print their books, and many thousands of people use these services each year. Beyond that, national book chains are often willing to put a couple of copies in an author's neighborhood store, which can be another confidence booster.
But actually selling a decent number of books is another matter altogether, as Mr. Bosah and his wife, Ngozi Osuagwu, a gynecologist, discovered.
Today, 4 ½ pallets of books clutter the three-car garage at Mr. Bosah's expansive, modern home. The 330 boxes, each holding 26 books, fill virtually an entire bay. More than half of his original order remains unsold. The 44-year-old Mr. Bosah, who was born and college-educated in Nigeria and arrived in the U.S. in 1987, says that editing, publishing and shipping the book has consumed at least 2,500 hours of his time. "I'm a tough-minded optimist," he says.
As a Nigerian native, we hold our teachers in high respect. What can Professor Beattie teach a novice publisher? I deliberately left the question open-ended because I want to get the most detailed answer I can from a sage in the business. Thanks in anticipation of your answer. Reach me by email at benbosah@benbosahbooks.com.
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