Hello:
Well, as with so many things, it depends. I will use myself as a not necessarily representative example.
Last year, I completed my novel
Dragon's Ark (submitted to and rejected by Nathan) and have been going the traditional route of querying agents. After I run out on that list, I'll turn to small publishers.
In the meantime, I've been building a fairly nice presence on the Web with my page over at the Red Room Website for Writers
http://www.redroom.com/member/thomas-burchfield
. Lots of interesting articles, essays, photos, etc.
At the end of last year, it occurred to me that it might be a good idea to e-publish one of the screenplays I wrote in the 1990s. While most of them were liked to one degree or another, not a one of them was purchased or produced, or even optioned. Nor, I am sure, will they ever be.
Nevertheless, I thought, some of them are genuinely good pieces and enjoyable reads, so what do I have to gain by leaving them in the drawer? Who's going to be upset if I e-publish them? For free?
So, just last week, I published my personal favorite of the bunch on Smashwords.com. "Whackers" is a shamelessly ridiculous and racy farce in the tradition of Mel Brooks, Billy Wilder, and more contemporary movies like
Tropical Thunder. Its pitch goes like this:
A law clerk's blind passion for a lawyer puts him on the Fast Track to Hell when a glib n' greedy hit man hires himself to whack the lawyer's fiance. A madcap, slapshtick nightmare about the awful things that can happen when dreams comes true.
As I just officially launched it last Wednesday, I have no opinion on how well this works yet, but if you'd like to read it and put your nickel in, you find it at:
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/9295
.
You knew there was a catch, didn't you?
So: I encourage those of you with a taste for offbeat farce, to check it out. I bet you'll like it. And it's for free and available on your e-reader and i-Phone.
Now, as far as my novel goes,
that I will not e-publish, until I'm sure I've explored all other traditional options. IMO, what I take from this debate is, until you've tried
everything else, save e-publishing for last.
I'll add this: given that the publishing industry seems so gun-shy about new authors, those of us out here who are unknowns, but with good books to show, shouldn't be blamed if we eventually decide to take that route.
Cheers,
Thomas Burchfield