A homegrown e-book queen

Published 11:38 am Wednesday, August 8, 2012

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Hocking kicks off national book tour at library

Austin got a rare glimpse Tuesday into the mind of its e-book queen.

Amanda Hocking kicked off a nationwide tour for her newest book by speaking to a packed room at the Austin Public Library. Herald reporter Trey Mewes interviewed the Austin paranormal romance author live Tuesday about her writing process, her books, and the act of self-publishing, with a question and answer period following the talk. About one hundred people attended, filling both sitting and standing room and ranging in age from young readers looking to meet the author to older adults interested in Hocking’s success story.

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Wake” is the first installment in her Watersong Novels, a series of four books that garnered a $2 million book deal from St. Martin’s Press.

The series revolves around sirens, creatures from Greek mythology that would lure sailors to their deaths.

Hocking had been writing from an early age. When she was young, her subjects spanned from dinosaurs to fantasy to Star Wars-style science fiction. It was always something she had intended to do.

“As soon as I realized that I could write for a living, I realized that was something I wanted to do,” Hocking said.

She finished her first novel around the time she was graduating high school, and planned to get a job and write until she got published. Over the years she sent numerous letters to agents, but all of them denied her.

After eight years of trying the traditional route, she decided to shoot for self-publishing instead. That was the beginning of her books’ popularity explosion.

Her writing process involves eight to 12 hours a day of writing, during which she listens to music and cuts herself off from the Internet to avoid distractions. Hocking said for a while she tried to push her writing toward darker themes and more mature subjects, but it just didn’t resonate with her.

“That’s not really who I am,” she said.

Along the same lines, she’s also careful not to let her books become too sobering, she said. She wants them to be easy to read and lighthearted at times, even while the darker elements are present.

“Sometimes paranormal romance books can take themselves too seriously,” Hocking added.

Her work has touched on a range of mythical and paranormal phenomena, including trolls, vampires and zombies.

“Zombies were the hardest to write about, I think,” said Hocking, noting that it was challenging to come up with so many different ways to kill a zombie.

Hocking cautioned other aspiring authors that self-publishing isn’t as easy as it looks, and that it pays to do some research before diving in. Actually uploading a book to a site like Amazon.com isn’t a difficult task, but getting a story finished and online isn’t all it takes.

“That doesn’t mean that it’s going to sell or do well,” she said.

She advised authors to get as many fresh sets of eyes to see a draft of the book as possible, and to use the feedback they give. When it come time to pick an agent, she recommended a lot of research, since a bad agent can be worse than no agent at all, she said.

Hocking said she isn’t sure how the first few copies of her book were sold, but the low starting price could be responsible. Each copy was 99 cents when it originally debuted on Amazon. The low price made it less of a risk for readers to give her work a try.

When sales began to really pick up on her books, Hocking said, she thought it was a glitch on the website. Copies were going off the digital shelves at a rate of a hundred a day. Soon, Hocking found it tempting to constantly be checking to see how many copies were sold.

“You don’t realize how crazy it makes you to get realtime sales,” she said.

Being the author and the publisher at the same time began to be too much for Hocking. She was so busy it was getting hard to get any real writing done.

“I knew I had to partner with a publisher for my own sanity and to keep writing,” she said.

She cited some of her biggest influences as Judy Blume and Stephen King. She also admires “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling for being “a little nutty” and embracing that.

In response to an audience question, Hocking said she didn’t care for the bustle of the big city and she plans to stick around Austin.

After the talk, she and her assistant, Eric Goldman, who’s also been her best friend since age 16, left Tuesday afternoon on an 11-city book tour that includes a stop in New York and a Harry Potter-based convention in Chicago.

“It was fabulous,” Library Director Ann Hokanson said of the talk. “It’s not often we’re the first stop on a national tour.”