Showing posts with label M.J. Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label M.J. Rose. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2024

[Link] M.J. Rose, Author and Self-Publishing Advocate, Dies at 71

by Jim Milliot

Melisse Shapiro, also known as M.J. Rose, an early self-publishing advocate as well as bestselling author, died unexpectedly on December 10 while in Florida visiting her father. She was 71.

In a Soapbox column she wrote for PW in 2012, Rose recounted how after her first novel, the racy Lip Service, was turned down by traditional publishers in 1998, she used her background in advertising and marketing to release the title as an e-book and print book on Amazon. Within six months, Lip Service had sold more than 75,000 copies and would later be published by Pocket Books. Her subsequent books regularly reached national bestseller lists.

Rose was also an entrepreneur. Along with partners Liz Berry and Jillian Stein, Rose founded the 1001 Dark Nights Press and Blue Box Press imprints that were part of another Berry-Rose creation, Evil Eye Concepts. In a 2021 interview with PW, Rose said that Dark Night’s books had thus far sold more than 3 million copies across all formats. She also noted that Evil Eye was created to see “what would happen if a publisher treated an author the way an author wanted to be treated.”

Read the full article: https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/Obituary/article/96718-m-j-rose-bestselling-author-and-self-publishing-advocate-has-died.html

Saturday, April 4, 2015

[Link] Great Expectations

by M.J. Rose

Apropos of a few blog posts I’ve read elsewhere and posts here and there, and my own book coming out last week… I’ve been thinking about “post-pub-blues.”

I think one of the real problems we authors face is that in order to write a book–to do all the research, to juggle day jobs and family and make sacrifices to find time to write, to sweat over words and paragraphs and characters, to sometimes bleed on the page–we have to believe what we are creating is not only wonderful and amazing and worth what we are giving it, but that there is no other book like it.

We have to be huge optimists.

We have to believe in the impossible.

Read the full article: http://writerunboxed.com/2015/03/29/great-expectations-2/