This discussion has come up in some of the other threads, so I thought it should be on it's own.
We've already covered, multiple times, the issues with getting on with an agent or a publishing house. However, one question that came up and I didn't see a clear or uniform answer on, is: Exactly what is meant by being a published author now?
In the past you had two options:
1. Get picked up by a Publishing House to print your story.
2. Use a Vanity Print House to print your own books for sale.
Today there are more options:
1. Get picked up by a Publishing House to print your story.
2. Use a Vanity Print House to print your own books for sale.
3. Publish through an Electronic Publishing House where they have internal editors approve or reject books for sale via them as e-books.
4. Self Publish via sites like Lulu, Amazon, Draft 2 Digital, etc.
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I think we can agree anyone who gets accepted and stories sold via options 1 or 3 above is a published author. I also think we can agree if someone uses options 2 or 4 and the only books purchased are by them which they give out free to family and friends aren't published authors.
Personally, I think if someone uses options 2 or 4 and they sell the books for cash via fairs, car boot sales, or on-line they count as a published author. If someone use options 2 or 3 or 4 and they have more than 20 copies sold on-line for which they receive an actual royalty (as against free copies given away) they count as a published author regardless of the sales being a print book or an e-book.
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Please indicate if you agree or disagree with my opinions on what is a published author above.
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It's only through the points others raised on this issue that I've looked into this further, and while I don't have a contract with a major print house I feel I qualify as a published author.
The first fiction stories I had out in the world was back around 2005 or so via an Irish e-book publisher who vetted the manuscripts and then decided on what they would or wouldn't have on their site. Through them I have the original 7 book Clan Amir series, and six other books they've been selling for me on which I get royalties. Over 200 copies sold through them.
Through Lulu I have 110 stories in 39 books plus 6 help guides available as print books or e-book. Since the first sale via Lulu on August 6th 2008 I've sold 7,354 books. However, about a third of those have been books I have at zero dollars for various reasons. Over the almost ten years I've earned almost $13,000 from the book sales with the bulk of that coming from Lulu.
NB: The Clan Amir series on Lulu is a single book Omnibus only.
While I've never had a contract with a print publishing house, I think you'd have a hard time saying I'm not a published author of fiction stories.
typo edit.