Start 2012 with a bang! ‘Sugar & Spice’ wins indie mystery award!

We were thrilled to find out today that ‘Sugar & Spice’ won a Red Adept Reviews indie award in the MYSTERY category for 2011.

How cool is that?

We have lots more exciting news regarding ‘Sugar & Spice’ to come shortly, plus the new indiebooksunited.com bookstore, as well as some brilliant opportunities for our fab writers at MWiDP, so watch this space!

If the first few days of 2012 are anything to go by, it’s going to be a great year!

Happy New Year everyone! It is so far! πŸ˜‰

Saffi

Official annoucement: Publishing deal for ‘Sugar & Spice’ by Saffina Desforges

It’s been one crazy year for the SaffinaΒ Desforges team.

Last Christmas the brand was completely unknown. Two debut novelists (one a complete newbie, the other with background in TV and theatre, but that counts for little when writing a book) writing under a new name, SaffinaΒ Desforges. Their book, Sugar & Spice, was barely a month old on AmazonΒ and had sold precisely nothing. We had hopes we might start moving with all the new Kindles in the UK market, but it was not to be. It wasn’t until February, three months after we launched, that we even made double figures!

It seemed the gatekeepers were right. Time and again they had turned us away, sometimes with encouraging words, more often not. At best we were toldΒ it was a great book but no publisher would touch it due to the sensitive subject matter.

In March, after endless months of rejection, we finally had an agentΒ who seemed seriously interested, and took the book under exclusive consideration. Bear in mind the UK ebook market was still embryonic at this stage. Were there even enough people in the UK with e-readers to make ebooks viable?

We doubted it. So the latest agent seemed the answer to our dreams. At the time we would probably have signed anything she sent to us without even looking at it.Β  But the agent was slow. Very slow.Β  She loved the synopsis and openings and asked for the full script for her in-house reader. The in-house reader loved it. A glowing report came back. The agent asked for a further read.

Weeks became months. March became May. WeΒ became a lot more worldly-wise. When the final decision came, we realized just how crazy the old system was. The agent wanted us to take the ebook down so she could start touting to publishers. Three months earlier we would have done so. We were selling nothing. But this was three months later.

The week we sent our first rejection letter to an agent was the week Sugar & SpiceΒ broke the 50,000 sales barrier in the tiny UK market, and was the second biggest selling ebook in the country, competing – and beating – names we used to idolize.

Sugar & Spice went on to break the 100,000 sales barrier in late summer, and despite an Amazon glitch with the buying links that saw the book literally disappear from Amazon for almost a month, the book continues to sell well today, a year on.

And we continued to send out rejection letters, to both agents and publishers. Not because we had suddenly become anti-agent or anti-trad publisher, but because what they offered would have been a backward step.

When we hit #2 on Kindle UK with 50k sales the almighty Trident Media Group, one of the biggest agencies on the planet, came cold-calling.Β  Months earlier we couldn’t get an agent to give us the time of day. Now New York’s finest were coming to us! Could this be our big break in the American market?

Sadly not.

In fact their representative had not even read the book, and when they finally did she wanted so many changes (to a book that by now had sold 60,000 and was still topping the charts!) it would have been unrecognizable. And this just to get them to approach a publisher, let alone whatever changes the publisher might demand.

When the Trident agent then told us we had to withhold release of our new Rose RedΒ crime thriller series until after they had approved it – this without us ever having signed a contract with TMG – we realized this and many other agents were living in some fantasy past world where writers were nothing more than an irritation in their all-important lives. When writers had no other options.

While all this was going on we were also being approached by overseas agents and publishers. We let slip the name of one Turkish agent in telephone conversation and the next day Trident – with whom we had no agreement whatsoever – had contacted them to tell them TMGΒ were running the show. Six months on Trident have yet to tell the Turkish agency that TMG are not, and never have been, our representatives. Shame on you, Trident Media Group.

Other agency and publisher offers followed, with contracts ranging from merely unreasonable to downright despicable.

Then along came an offer from France that immediately captured our interest.

For starters, they had actually read the book! Nothing can be more instructive about an agent’s or publisher’s interest in you than they never having read the book they seek to represent / publish. Yet here was a French publisher interested in the Sugar & Spice story, not the Amazon ranking.

So we moved to the next stage, to discuss T&Cs. Here to stress how important it is for all writers to understand that the true value of any deal is not in how much you get out of it, but how much you lose in the detail.

Sure, that glitzy NY agency spiel or the big-dollar advance offered may be tempting. But at what cost to your integrity and future freedom as a writer?

Trident told us (from the very first phone conversation they were dictating terms like they owned us!) our projects list of future books was β€œjust silly”. We could only write crime thrillers for β€œthe next three years”. Our urban dark fantasy, trilogy? Not a chance. Our YA boarding school series, St. Mallory’s? Forget it. Our China TownΒ chicklit mystery series? Go stand in the corner for using foul language. Chicklit doesn’t sell! As for non-fiction… Trident’s rep almost jumped down the phone and grabbed up by the neck to shake sense into us.

And as we looked at other publishers’ and agents’ contracts it became clear many were downright predatory. Non-compete conditions. Exclusivity. World rights despite they having no interest in anything outside the US/UK market. Loss of editorial control. Ridiculous advances and then a timetable to publication that made us wonder if we’d live long enough to see the first edition. Almost every clause was one-sided, and not in favour of the author.

So when we were approached by this publisher in France we were wary. We loved their enthusiasm and personal approach, but Trident, and many others before and since, have been enthusiastic and friendly, until the contract came up. At the end of the day, the only thing that matters is the contract.

So we went through it with the proverbial fine-toothed comb, exchanged questions, asked for revisions, made suggestions, and discussed the whole deal on equal terms.

And when we were quite satisfied, we signed.

As is standard in such contracts there is a confidentiality clause which prohibits us giving the fine detail. But we’ll try to be as open as possible about what we gained, and more importantly about what we didn’t lose.

First off, these guys moved fast. Within a matter of weeks from first contact with this publisher we had negotiated terms, signed and received the advance.

I know you’re all dying to know how much, but we’re not at liberty to discuss that, or the royalty rates. Suffice to say we entered into this contract having weighed up every pro and con carefully, and we are delighted with the outcome.

The deal is for French language rights only. Yes, there’s now a Kindle France site sitting there, ripe for exploitation. So why not stay completely indie and go it alone we hear you cry?

Well, Sugar & Spice is a 120,000 word novel. The translation costs alone are exorbitant. Would we ever recover the costs of translation? If it took off big-time like in the UK, perhaps, but the French e-reader market is tiny by comparison with the UK. That will change, but when? 2012? 2015? We have no effective way of marketing in France anyway, and certainly no time to do so.

We pondered a percentage deal with a translator, like David GaughranΒ and Scott Nicholson have done, but it’s a huge amount of work and time to translate a novel of this length, then to see it only available as an ebook in a country where ebooks are so new, and with no effective marketing.

Now our French publisher MA will translate for us, get us into print on Paris book shelves and into hypermarkets, train stations and bookshelves all over France (Mark is ecstatic at that – it’s his favourite European country!), not to mention on amazon.fr. And as MA is widely distributed by a HUGE press over there we can expect a marketing campaign that may not match James Patterson’s, but will certainly be better than we could do on our own.

On top of that we got an advance which, when you consider the deal is for one language and has absolutely no limitations on us selling again and again elsewhere around the world, compares very favourably with what US and UK publishers are typically offering for world rights. And of course we’re not giving away 15% of the advance, or the royalties, to an agent who picked up the phone on our behalf. IP lawyers? No need. This was a straight-forward contract with no hidden clauses or ambiguous language.

Royalty numbers? Again, we’re not at liberty to discuss details, but MA were open to negotiation and we settled on a figure that compares very favourably with what’s being offered elsewhere.

Yes, we could theoreticallyΒ get 70% from Amazon by going it alone. But that would be digital only. We have no way of getting into any other French ebook outlets, and we have sold precisely four English-language books in France since the Kindle store opened. Now we get to see our book in print in Paris and on Amazon Kindle and other French ebook sites professionally translated and marketed.

The math was simple. Seventy percent of nothing, or a smaller percentage of a very real something.

Throw into the ring the additional problems we’ve had recently with Amazon – where a glitch they admit was their fault just last month cost us literally thousands of sales with no hope of compensation – and it was really a no-brainer.

We lose absolutely nothing, and gain in almost every way. We’ve already banked the advance, and the translation for the print and ebook version of Sugar & SpiceΒ in France is on-going, with Paraphilia expected to hit the French market mid-2012. Yes, that soon!

Paraphilia? Just one more benefit of having a French outfit on board to sell in France.

Sugar & SpiceΒ translates easily enough, of course, but the traditional British nursery rhyme it draws upon (β€œsugar and spice and all things nice, that’s what little girls are made of” – a reference to the story line of the hunt for a child-killer obsessed with little girls) is pretty much unknown in France, so the title was meaningless and potentially misleading. Something that would never have occurred to us as outsiders.

So are we still indie?

Of course we are!

We are very excited about our partnership for 2012 with this forward-thinking publisher and are currently also discussing other options with them.

But we built our brand up from nothing, with no help from any trad publisher or agent, and we will continue to do so. We will continue to release all our books as indie ebooks first, written how we want them written with covers we choose, published to a timetable that suits us, and priced as weΒ see fit, for maximum royalties. Oh, and without paying 15% to an agent for doing so.

And once we’ve proven the market we can negotiate from strength if and when another agent or publisher comes up with an offer for partial rights to those books. Or indeed for Sugar & Spice itself, which is still open to offers from publishers and agents anywhere that doesn’t speak French!

But don’t even think of trying it on with your boilerplate contract for rookie writers like so many have recently! Take a lesson from MA on mutual respect.

We may not be selling in James Patterson’s numbers, but we think allΒ writers, whatever their status, deserve to be treated with courtesy and respect. And we sure as hell think we’ve earned the right to some.

Saffi & Mark

Saffina Desforges presents…

 

Yes, it’s live!

A cool collection of shorts from Tracy Marchini, Anne R Allen, Miriam Joy, Peter Salisbury, Misti Wolanski, Michael Yarwood, Debbie Bennett, Katrina Parker Williams, Pam Howes and of course, us! Er, actually, nope! We haven’t got a story in this one, but watch out for Vol 2, where “Grime & punishment’ will be making an appearance!

Short story sex on a stick! (and no, there’s no sex!)

Amazon UK

Amazon.com

Remember, remember the fifth of November: Guy Fawkes, fireworks and the day I became two people

Ok, so strictly speaking, it was the SIXTH of November – so sue me!

A year ago this weekend, I was preparing to go to a bonfire party Β and celebrate the famous Gun Powder plot and Guido Fawkes‘ failed attempt at Β blowing up the Houses of Parliament (as is our strange British tradition) with friends and family, armed with fireworks. Ok, nothing out of the ordinary there eh?

Dead right. Another ordinary Bonfire night weekend.

What I did the next day however, changed my life.

You all know the story, so I won’t bore you with the details, but 12 months ago this weekend, we released ‘Sugar & Spice‘.

It’s fair to say that the first three months of it being live on Amazon were about as exciting as a dud Catherine Wheel, a wet sparkler or a rocket with no fuse (you get the picture , right?), but what happened after that, lit a fire up under our asses!

We went on to hit the #2 spot on the UK Amazon Kindle Paid chart 3 times and spent just under 200 days in the top 100, selling almost 75,000 copies in the space of 5 months. To this day, we’ll never know what would have happened if we hadn’t made the mistake of messing with categories and therefore the unfathomable algorithms of ‘Zon (a nod to Shea there) and if KDP hadn’t stuck our book in the invisible e-wilderness for two days, but hey, we live and learn.

I have done radio and newspaper interviews; locally and nationally, spoken to reporters from Sunday magazines, had photo shoots, worked with the local college, given hundreds of blog interviews, answered questions, written guest posts and spent 99% of my life glued to a computer.

We have created a web-site, six blogs, Β three twitter accounts, four Facebook pages and joined hundreds, yes, hundreds of writer/author/readers groups online.

We have re-written ‘Sugar & Spice‘ for the American market, published the first of the Rose Red crime seriesSnow White‘ and are working on the second, ‘Rapunzel‘. We have started a young adult boarding school project called ‘St. Mallory’s Forever’, begun work on the first book in a chick-lit mystery series ‘The ChinaTown Mysteries‘, resurrected the first book of the dark urban fantasy series, ‘Equilibrium: First blood‘ and completed half of that, and have sketched out books 3, 4 and 5 of Rose Red. Oh, and we turned down representation from two of the biggest literary agencies in New York.

When we weren’t doing that or sleeping, we founded a Digital press for the 21st Century to help other authors and writers from across the pond to get their books noticed called MWiDP (markwiliamsinternationaldigitalpublishing). In the first month of it going live, we now have 65 titles live on Amazon from 30 odd authors.

Within the next few weeks before Christmas, we will be launching our new digital bookstore, MWiebooks (more on that soon), releasing the first anthology of short stories under the ‘Saffina Desforges presents…’ banner and publishing the second in the Rose Red series.

2012 will see the launch of many other projects (and books!) but most notably, SDTW2R.

Saffina Desforges teaches the world 2 readΒ is a fabulous concept. Mark will be explaining more about that in the coming months.

So, as you can see, it’s been a busy year.

As is stands today, 12 months after dipping our virginal toes in the shark-infested waters of ‘indie publishing’ we can state this:

  • It’s been hard
  • It isn’t easy
  • You’d be mad to attempt it
  • We need a brain transplant – each
  • Our lives have changed forever
  • We’ve loved every minute of it!
We can also tell you this:
  • Sugar & Spice has sold over 100,000 copies and is STILL in the top 400 books on Amazon UK and #3 in Waterstones and selling thousands a month
  • Snow White has only been out 10 weeks and is also selling thousands (and is currently number 9 in Waterstones)
  • We did it all without an agent
  • We can’t believe any of the above has actually happened!
It’s been the most exciting year of my life (and the greatest and hardest in some respects, personally) and I cannot believe what we have achieved in such a short space of time. Who knows what the next twelve months will bring? One thing is for sure though, life will never be the same again! πŸ˜‰
Happy Bonfire night/fireworks night/Guy Fawkes night/Friday/Weekend/birthday/Bar mitzvah/anniversary whatever day, stay safe and remember, remember: Guy Fawkes may not have succeeded in his plot, but there were still fireworks!
Light that fuse… πŸ˜‰
Saffi

Saffina Desforges presents…

…coming soon to a KindleΒ and many other generic e-readers near you.

 

 

 

Covers designed by the wonderfully talented Athanasios at Mad Gods.

Packed with quick reads from brilliant, talented authors.

Check back here soon for a release date and list of authors.

Saffi

  • Buy ROSE RED CRIME THRILLER BOXED SET FROM AMAZON

  • Buy Sugar & Spice from Amazon

  • Buy the French edition of Sugar & Spice (Paraphilia)

  • Buy Snow White from Amazon

  • Buy Snow White in PRINT from Amazon

  • Buy Rapunzel from Amazon

  • Buy London’s Burning from Amazon

  • Buy Ring A-Ring O’Roses from Amazon

  • Buy The Night Before Christmas from Amazon

  • Buy Anca’s Story from Amazon

  • Buy Anca’s Story in PRINT from Amazon

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  • Buy ‘Awakenings’ – Book ONE of INDIGO KIDS from Amazon