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The
Indie Author Revolution |
by:
Seth
Mullins |
I
remember well the night I first heard Nirvana.
I was sunk in wretched and ugly despondency,
not wanting to talk to anyone and hating
myself. I couldn't discern or articulate
my inner state, even to myself. There was
no separating cause and effect. Then Kurt
Cobain wove his uncanny spell. Suddenly
I experienced my apathy, my sense of loneliness
and alienation - even my depression itself
- all these emotions as EMPOWERING.
Talk about waving your freak flag.
Nirvana's success paved the road to recognition
for a lot of other great underground bands
like the Screaming Trees, the Meat Puppets,
the Melvins; bands that provided a welcome
alternative to the bland and condescending
music that was being force-fed to the masses
by the industry. The "grunge" movement of
the early '90's was the closest my generation
ever came to spiritual union. A community
took root and grew, gathering misfits from
every far-flung corner until it was massive
enough to shake up the status-quo. This
uprising snatched music from the hands of
the corporate world and delivered it back
to the people. It was fueled not only by
hard work on the part of the bands, but
also by word of mouth - and the invaluable
support of independent labels, magazines
and record stores.
The media generally didn't know what to
make of it. Record companies were rethinking
their strategies and scrambling to hop on
the bandwagon. Oftentimes they latched onto
the surface trappings - unkempt long hair,
flannel shirts and stage-diving - and missed
the spirit of the happening entirely. There
was no Institute of the Arts where one could
go to learn how to translate the frustrations
of the twenty-somethings into timeless music.
I miss the excitement of that time, the
feeling that the ball was in our hands and
we were finally going to see some movement
and change.
There is an upheaval occuring now within
the publishing industry that will make it
possible for a similar grass-roots movement
to flourish through the medium of books
and literature. Frustrated by the major
publishing houses and their worship of the
bottom line - and the elitist milieu wherein
a handful of people in New York deign to
decide what the rest of us will read this
year - ambitious authors are exploring alternatives
like self- or print-on-demand publishing.
They seek greater creative control (i.e.,
no editors or agents demanding drastic alterations
to authors' manuscripts based upon their
knowledge of "what sells"), higher royalties,
and the means to skirt around the powers
that have hitherto been acting as the gatekeepers
of the publishing world.
Getting hip to underground music required
not only soul-searching and discrimination
but also a fair amount of leg-work. The
records were hard to find, and because they
went largely ignored by radio and MTV one
often didn't know which ones were worth
laying down one's hard-earned money for.
An independently-thinking fantasy enthusiast
faces a similar dilemma today when searching
for something other than Harry Potter or
recycled Tolkien to read.
Here the internet proves a valuable resource.
Discussion groups, forums and chat-rooms
have created cyber-tribes that congregate
around every conceivable subject and interest.
Word of mouth travels fast these days -
and between millions of people who've never
even met. Amazon.com has turned readers
into reviewers. Authors have their own websites
where they post excerpts and sample chapters
from their works. The internet is the ideal
launching pad for the indie-book revolution,
because it's taken tools previously monopolized
by corporate publishing and made them available
to us common folks. Books that, once upon
a time, would've been rejected because they
didn't fit into any cookie-cutter genres
can now find a community to embrace them.
Ultimately, when we as authors take our
creative destiny into our own hands we're
giving ourselves permission to BE OURSELVES
- and allowing others a glimpse of our true
nature.
A cultural climate where new ideas proliferate
- and are exchanged - is an environment
wherein the soul can expand and breathe.
Art is meant to open the windows and air
out the closets. It should not be bound,
like Prometheus, to the rock of publisher
shareholder interests, chain bookstore monopolies
and Oprah's selections of the month.
Seth Mullins is the author of "Song of an
Untamed Land", a novel of frontier drama,
musical prohibition and the spiritual quest.
To browse or download excerpts from his
work, visit Seth at http://authorsden.com/sethtmullins.
This article is free for republishing
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| Seth Mullins is the
author of "Song of an Untamed Land", a novel
of speculative fantasy in lawless frontier
territory. His nonfiction includes dissertations
on the craft of writing, as well as the
inner meanings of mythic and fantasy stories. |
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