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Karen Crumley @klcrumley ?

active 4 days, 14 hours ago
Name

Karen Crumley

Location

Pittsburgh

Website

http://www.dragondreamzpublications.info

About

Dancer turned writer, who hung up her pointe shoes and picked up the pen…never looked back.
Gave up the corporate publishing route when Parisite hilton “wrote her book.”
No regrets. Live each day as if it is my last.
Author of: Wishful Thinking
currently working on Prophecies of Fire.

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post IndieProse.com: Gatekeeping Self-Published Books   1 month ago · View

    Okay, well maybe not ALL about…but, …ya know what I mean. ;)

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post IndieProse.com: Gatekeeping Self-Published Books   1 month ago · View

    The whole thing sounds kind of scammy to me. And, it seems like another “vanity” thing that would give self-publishing a bad name. Make us look like stool pigeons shelling out dough for some sort of “legitimacy” or stamp of approval. You shouldn’t have to pay for anyone’s stamp of approval. If your book is [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post An Argument Against Self-Publishing   1 month, 1 week ago · View

    exactly! I write for passion first and foremost. Profit comes second. When I receive a profit it is an added blessing.

    That’s how it should be.

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post An Argument Against Self-Publishing   1 month, 1 week ago · View

    Well this is the part of my reply that disappeared: LOL A) believe it or not some of us are not in it for the money. I am in it for the enjoyment, and for the passion of writing and having my stories read and enjoyed is its own reward. NO writer (whether SP or [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post An Argument Against Self-Publishing   1 month, 1 week ago · View

    eek how did my reply get all screwed up?

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post An Argument Against Self-Publishing   1 month, 1 week ago · View

    >>Publishers also, very importantly, pay me an advance. This is how I live and eat. I like advances. I don’t get big ones, but I still get them, and that’s damn important. I do not like paying the equivalent of an advance to others in order to publish my book. Because then I wouldn’t have [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Why So Much Hostility Toward the Mainstream?   1 month, 3 weeks ago · View

    Exactly, Zoe! We didn’t start this supposed war between SP and TP. We’re not the ones giving into childish name calling, and labeling everybody who chooses a certain business model a “hack.” But the funny thing is, we are winning. :) I’m hearing more and more that readers not only don’t care who publishes a book, [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Why So Much Hostility Toward the Mainstream?   1 month, 3 weeks ago · View

    I know this sounds childish, but to those people I would just say “Takes one to know one!” LOL Then again, calling someone a “Loser” without even knowing the person and/or knowing why they chose to self-publish is pretty childish in itself. Somehow, to many people in the TP industry have it in their heads [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post You’re a Slush-Pile Slave   1 month, 4 weeks ago · View

    Here here, Scott! Give the readers what they want–Variety, diversity, something beyond the same old copy-cat formulatic stuff perhaps? I don’t need to be force-fed literature that somebody else deemed “good.” Because guess what…The “Gatekeepers” get it wrong about 90% of the time. It’s intellectually dishonest, to compare the huge number of self-published/indie books on [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Why So Much Hostility Toward the Mainstream?   2 months, 1 week ago · View

    Hate is a very strong word. I reserve my hate for those who deserve it: Rapists, murderers, and terrorist. I have had short stories “traditionally published” by small press periodicals, college presses, and ezines. I made very little money, had zero control, and also found myself nearly suing the editor of a small magazine…who was [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Self-Publishing Has Arrived   2 months, 1 week ago · View

    Well, maybe there are some traditional publishers with very poor taste? And maybe the quality of writing is subjective? >>BTW, high-advance celeb memoirs rarely earn back the advance, though most are net revenue winners. The high advances are paid because of imprint branding issues, not normal revenue considerations. The high-profile hoo-hah leads to spikes in [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Self-Publishing Has Arrived   2 months, 1 week ago · View

    Well said, Henry. Not to mention the fact that your description(s) also describe 90% of traditionally published sf/horror fiction. LOL Some TP fiction is very, very bad. the Pro-TP may claim “but it’s so bad it’s good” but that is a rather lame argument. Twilight is not “SO bad it’s good.” It’s a bad book [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Self-Publishing Has Arrived   2 months, 1 week ago · View

    What I continue to find ironic is that none of them complain when someone like Paris Hilton or Tori Spelling get commercial publishing deals, and dub themselves as authors. But let a talented, yet unknown writer independantly publish their own work and it’s the end of the literary world?! Tsk. They have messed up convictions [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Self-Publishing Has Arrived   2 months, 1 week ago · View

    Absolutely! The cream will always rise to the top, and it’s happening more and more with GOOD self-published fiction. Bad self-published fiction disappears, and the writer(s) move on to discover what they really ARE good at. However, BAD traditionally published fiction is out there for all the world to see; revealing that “The Emperor has [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Are You a Vanity Author or an Enterprise Author?   2 months, 2 weeks ago · View

    First of all, this is a great post! You’ve made some really excellent points. The thing that I find ironic is that I consider traditionally published authors–as well as authors seeking that path–the ones who are truly vain. Indie authors, or as you’ve said enterprise authors, treat writing & publishing as a small start-up business. [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post The Bad Old Days: A Rebuttal to Keillor   2 months, 4 weeks ago · View

    Well said, James! I agree. A good author can succeed regardless of publishing model he/she chooses. It becomes a matter of choice, and how much control you want…and what YOU want to do, as opposed to what others want to do with your book(s). I wouldn’t be able to do the things I’m doing in [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post The Bad Old Days: A Rebuttal to Keillor   2 months, 4 weeks ago · View

    Yeah, exactly. I hate his condescending use of the word “Children.”

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post The Bad Old Days: A Rebuttal to Keillor   2 months, 4 weeks ago · View

    Zoe, Your success has been both inspiring and encouraging. Regarding control & artwork, I completely agree! I basically made the same points in a discussion with a certain scifi illustrator, and he didn’t get it… He couldn’t comprehend why an author would want total control, and what good did we think we were doing ourselves [...]

  • Karen Crumley wrote a new blog post: The Bad Old Days: A Rebuttal to Keillor   3 months ago · View

    ThumbnailA response to Garrison Keillor’s take on self-publishing . I grew up not much different than any other author, whether traditionally published or indie published. I spent a lot of time with my nose in the books too. I loved The Chronicles of Narnia, The Hobbit, and Charlotte’s Web. I excelled in English classes in school–straight A’s & B’s in [...]

  • Karen Crumley commented on the blog post Garrison Keillor on Self-Publishing   3 months, 1 week ago · View

    >>And that is the future of publishing: 18 million authors in America, each with an average of 14 readers, eight of whom are blood relatives. Average annual earnings: $1.75.<<< HAHAHAHA! I Love how they still think we're only read by immediate family. My family (with the exception of my Aunt who gets a free signed [...]

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