Fast publishing is here—but are we fooling ourselves in thinking that it's new?

I don’t know about you, but it seems like quality in everything is tanking these days. (God, I feel so old in saying that—“back in my day,” etc. etc.). Granted, I’m not shopping at high-end places most of the time, but things that used to be decent are either more cheaply made (clothes), sneakily smaller (food packaging), or built to fall apart quickly (electronics).

So how do books fit into this? Or do they?

Buckle in, because we’re talking about fast publishing today!

Probably everyone and their mom has read Rebecca Yarros’s Fourth Wing and its sequel Iron Flame this year. The unexpected success of Fourth Wing, released in May, sold the book out in hardcover—it was impossible to find on bookstore shelves this summer—and caused a frenzy for more. But when Iron Flame was released in early November, fans were quickly up in arms about the quality of the book, both in aesthetics and in the writing—there were misprints, pages missing, typos, and poor writing and editing alleged. (The latter two are subjective—personally, the writing doesn’t blow me away and she crams every romantasy trope and cliché in there, but I did find it propulsive as hell and I flew through it; the editing…was rushed, let’s say, and it probably didn’t have as many passes as it should have for one of the most anticipated books of the year). But this has led to the rise of discussion around “fast publishing.”

Fast publishing makes the comparison to fast fashion, where fashion trends are quickly identified, produced, and rushed to market to capitalize on them while they’re still hot, but the quality of the garments is sacrificed, and the end product is essentially disposable once the trend fizzles out or once the garment falls apart, whichever happens first. 

The pearl-clutching about fast publishing has really only come about because the intense popularity and anticipation for Iron Flame and the trad marketing machine behind it has brought the issue to the fore. (Fashion historian Abby Cox talks in this video why this comparison doesn’t actually hold.)

But the writing to market, racing to release to keep up momentum, and cutting corners in quality is nothing new. We’ve been seeing this for years in indie publishing, especially in indie romance, with rapid release schedules that have some romance writers churning out multiple books a year, sometimes employing ghostwriters to keep that breakneck pace and doing everything they can to keep readers’ attention and game the KU system to continue earning big bucks (remember when a romance writer was giving away diamonds??). This practice goes way back to pulp writers in the ’50s who had to write books fast to make a living as a writer, and even further back to Victorian dime novels (see the Abby Cox video above for more on this), but we’ve been doing it in modern indie romance for a long time.

And if you’ve been with me for a while, you know I’ve been raising the cry for many years that this system is dangerous for romance writers and for the romance industry as a whole. Rapid release is almost a necessary evil in romance if you want to make a living as a full-time indie romance writer, especially when you’re just starting out and building a backlist—but it can lead to serious author burnout and mental health issues, declining quality in the work, and less innovation in the stories (which mean they’re not as often recommended and won’t earn you as much).

A lot of the time, I think that readers don’t really care about quality—if you’ve marketed yourself well that readers know exactly what to expect from you and/or you’ve established yourself well with a solid reputation for putting out good stuff, lots of people will read whatever you write. Note that I put the marketing first, because frankly that’s what will get you in front of the most people and get them to buy. But that’s the short game. If you want longevity as a romance writer, you need to be able to continually build on your craft and produce quality work to keep those readers long-term without them dropping off.

So what do we do when we’re being forced to rush but still want produce quality work?

We are seriously torn between capitalism and what actually makes sense for us on an individual level—you want to make money (especially in this economy), but you also have to prioritize your mental health and creativity and your own standards. I know you don’t want to put out crap—these books have your name on it! So you really have to take this at your own pace. If you can put out three to four books a year, great—I literally sell Series Architecture based on this premise (but full transparency, this is just a marketing tactic; if you can’t do three books a year, I’m absolutely not going to force you to!)—but I want you to put out books you can be proud of and that readers will want to read AND recommend. And listen, I read a ton, and there are very few books that are actually memorable to me because lots of romances are following a formula (which is totally fine!) but not doing anything interesting with it. The ones that stick out are the ones that do something innovative, i.e. an unexpected twist, an unusual setting, etc.

It's very, very easy to stint on quality, especially right now when we’re in a cost-of-living crisis and don’t want to spend money, and when it seems like the fast pace at which romance readers consume makes quality inconsequential. But I can’t tell you how many romance books I’ve read lately (mostly indie, but also trad) that I think “this could’ve used a good line edit.” And I think most books benefit from a developmental edit as well—there are very few that I’ve seen that have been in good enough shape to go straight to a line edit. You need quality from the writing to the editing to put out a great book.

And you need an actual person to edit, not an AI. I’m on the record as very anti-AI for lots of reasons, particularly generative AI for creative pursuits. I don’t use Grammarly or ProWritingAid, both of which I believe have an AI component to them—if generative AI is made up of the patterns that the AI is fed and people more often than not are making the same mistake, the AI takes that aggregate as normal enough to be considered right, making the mistake acceptable to its checks.

Also, AI can’t tell you why the errors it flags as errors are wrong—any good editor worth their salt should be able to give you a reason why they made any change they did. AI also misses on the art of editing because it's not a human that understands human nuances. Following a style guide to be technically correct is fine, but if AI put commas exactly where they’re supposed to go in a frantically paced sex scene, but it would slow down the action that way, and the cadence of the scene would be off. As an editor, I’ll run Word’s spelling and grammar check once because the squiggly lines bug me (and I usually reject most of their suggestions because it misunderstands the context), but I’m mostly relying on my trusty Chicago style guide and my own knowledge of language to edit.

All this to say:

  • Fast publishing ain’t new, and indie’s been doing this for quite a long time.

  • It actually sucks that we’re still doing this and running great romance talent into the ground by encouraging an unsustainable pace of production.

  • Prioritize your own mental health and creativity first and go at your own pace—if it means you can’t go full-time writer sooner, that’s okay!

  • Quality is ultimately going to be what you’ll fall back on, so it’s worth paying for, whether it’s in editing or in education and training to build your craft.

So what do you think of fast publishing? How else can we manage the capitalist hellscape that is modern publishing? Truly, I think about this so much, and I would love to hear your thoughts!

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An Old Acquaintance by Cat Andrews

Surprise! A brand-new release dropping from Cat Andrews just in time for Christmas!

This is a Pride and Prejudice-inspired modern second chance romance, where our Darcy is a musician trying to make it big and he meets Elizabeth at a Christmas frat party when they’re at college in the ‘80s. Except we start with them separated in the ‘90s.

We see the Christmases when he makes a disastrous first impression to their happier holidays together and then how things fracture and the awkward post-breakup run-ins in holidays following. So can they make it back together at a future holiday season?

As always with Cat’s stories, this gets deep into emotions and angst, plus the chemistry and heat that she brings to every book. An Old Acquaintance is available now on Amazon and KU!

Hold Fast by Eliza MacArthur

It’s release day for Eliza MacArthur’s Hold Fast, and can we have some commotion for the old-schoolness of this cover??

Una has just ended a handfast marriage with a terrible man she is desperate to be free of. A gifted healer, she takes off to the neighbouring/rival clan when she saves the laird’s brother and finds safety and purpose there. After suffering a year of abuse in her marriage (check the CWs!), she wants nothing to do with men.

Meanwhile, the laird, Ewan, is deeply impressed with Una’s competence and her determination. He’s got his own issues, though, and has promised himself to never marry.

As much as both of them are scarred from their pasts, they’re still drawn to each other, and when they’re forced to handfast each other, they have to work through their trauma together and separately so they can stand against an old foe. But that trauma isn’t quickly healed by love or sex—so how much will their trauma get in their way and potentially tear them apart?

If you love old-school historical Highlander romance but want a more modern sensibility behind it, you HAVE to check this out! Hold Fast is on KU and Amazon now!

Freelance Fiance at Mistletoe Inn

Only in romcoms do you get a crazy inheritance clause, and this one is no exception!

Addison is desperate to fulfill her dream of owning her family’s cozy inn in North Dakota, but the deal is that family tradition says she’s gotta be married by the age of 25. She’s hoping she can rope her high school boyfriend into it, but oops, he just eloped. But there is the cute guy she met at the airport...

Said cute guy is Teddy, who’s a freelancer stranded in ND. He jumps in to save Addison, and suddenly become a freelance fiance, whisked off to the Mistletoe Inn, surrounded by family for the first time in his life, and fake-engaged to a pretty stranger.

They have to play engaged until Addison’s 25th birthday on Christmas, but will Addison’s nosy family and Teddy’s own past catch up to their game before then? Freelance Fiancé at Mistletoe Inn by Lillian Joubert is out now!

An Unexpected Path by Megan McSpadden

It's release day for Megan McSpadden’s An Unexpected Path!

Bennett has a perfectly fine life in the country mostly keeping to himself and his 20–count 'em, TWENTY—dogs that he rescues. On one of his daily walks, he doesn't expect to find an injured woman who upends his quiet, reclusive life.

Marley is a conflict photographer who's become ambivalent about her high-demand job and chaotic lifestyle. Her hike to think about her life puts her in Bennett's path and strands him at his house where they open up to each other. (Gotta love that forced proximity!)

Their days together learning about each other might be idyllic, but they don't keep the real world away for long. But they both need to figure out what path will lead them back to each other.

This is an emotional, heartfelt journey, and it's available now on Amazon and KU!

Mr. Darcy's Christmas Letters by Melanie Rachel

SO. MUCH. PINING.

(And yes, it’s a pun, because Christmas.)

It’s release day for Melanie Rachel’s Mr. Darcy’s Christmas Letters!

Darcy didn’t come back to propose to Elizabeth after Lydia’s disastrous elopement, and he’s been regretting it ever since. He’s heading back to Hertfordshire for Bingley and Jane’s wedding in December and trying his best to respectfully stay away from Elizabeth. All he can do is write a letter to confess all his feelings, though he never intends to send it.

Meanwhile, Elizabeth has also been pining for him and wishing she didn’t waste her chance with him. When Darcy gets detained at Netherfield (for...nefarious reasons?), they’ll finally have a chance to actually clear the air—if Caroline Bingley doesn’t get in their way first. (And what happens with the letter? You’ll have to read to find out.)

A second-chance holiday novella that’s perfect for a cozy afternoon of reading! It’s out on Amazon and KU now!

So Flocked by Sarah Estep

Listen, none of us saw Jordy Taylor coming.

Sarah Estep’s group of CPs, betas, and early readers (including me as her editor) did not expect Jordy to become our fave (out of the Brunch Bros, I was betting on Peter), but Sarah makes him a hell of a hero.

So Flocked features Jordy, a pro football player in the twilight of his career, and Annie, a recent ornithology PhD unsure about her future, accidentally sharing a lighthouse in the run-up to their best friends’ wedding.

They decide that they’re going to be friends with benefits up until the wedding, and are DEFINITELY not going to catch feelings, no they are not. (OF COURSE they do.) But they’re at totally different points in their lives, so how will they make it work?

This is a laugh-out-loud-funny rom-com with tons of heat—Jordy and Annie are SO into each other, physically and emotionally. So Flocked is out on KU and Amazon now!

What I Learned from Doing 30 Days of Reels

I’ve been doing Instagram Reels for…three years now? And every year, I write up a “state of Reels right now” to tell you what’s happening there and if you should be doing them. 

This year, I decided to give myself a challenge: 30 days of Reels to see what kind of patterns came up and if I can figure out this damn algorithm and what it wants.

Spoiler: I did not crack the algorithm.

I did do the 30 Reels, though, and I’ve got some insights to share with you!

Here's what I discovered doing 30 days of Reels

The Reels I did that were about writing or reading in general had the biggest views. (Examples: 1, 2, 3.) BUT this isn’t what I actually want. These attract writers of all genres; I want only the romance writers because they’re the ones who are ultimately going to buy from me. The lesson: Don’t go too broad. What do your ideal readers want to see?

You gotta be SUPER specific for your ideal audience. The ones that did well that were specifically targeted to romance writers hit on something that they want. E.g. Keeping readers buying through the series, what they need to be doing now, mistakes they’re making on Reels—these all had text in the video that got them to stop because it spoke to them, and then kept them reading through to the caption. The ones that were just mid and didn’t have enough of a hook ended up being the majority, getting around 400-600 views per Reel, instead of the 1000+ views.

I researched (*cough*scrolled Reels A LOT*cough*) and did EVERYTHING the social media “experts” tell you to do: use trending sounds, make your Reel dynamic with movement/transitions, have a hook in your video and in your caption, have a call to action in the caption. These were all hit-or-miss for me. To break it down:

  • Trending sounds don’t seem to make much of a difference. IG may reward you with a slight boost in the algorithm for using it, but I don’t think it’s boosting your discoverability. I’m not going into a sound to find new people to follow; I’m just going in to see what kinds of Reels people are making with that sound.

  • Movement is definitely important as a way to create anticipation and keep the viewer anticipating the next move. Movement combined with sound (a beat drop, usually) create great anticipation (example).

  • Hooks, as above, have to be specific and scroll-stopping—if it’s not speaking directly to them, it’s not going to work. For romance authors, it might be a matter of grabbing the viewer’s attention with the first line of a quote from the book and keeping them watching by revealing the next line, then the next, etc. (For those of you writing spicy, this is where you bring out the sexiest moments in your book.)

  • Call to actions are necessary to tell them what you want them to do: buy from you? follow you? leave a comment?

That said, even when doing all the things right, there were some that just did not pop off in the way I expected them to. And then there were ones that did really well even without all the things done right. Sometimes I genuinely think this whole thing is a crapshoot. So leave room for a margin of error for reasons no one knows.

Did doing Reels for 30 days help?

Kinda? It definitely boosted engagement and reach, though that did not translate to a ton of new followers or more comments than normal on individual Reels.

But the followers I got were good followers, i.e. romance writers and/or enthusiasts (I block anyone who doesn’t look like they’ll actually engage with my account—bye-bye, creepy dudes!), and that’s what I want. I don’t want to go viral and get a ton of followers that way because most of those followers likely aren’t romance people and will never engage again.

Was 30 days of Reels worth it?

Ehhhhh…I don’t know about that.

Coming up with 30 days of content on my own is a LOT of work. I had a lot of ideas and sounds and transitions banked in my Saved folders on IG and planned in advance (there was an epic spreadsheet), and filming part doesn’t actually take that long—I batched my content every Thursday, so I had the Reels with my face done for the week (I used stock photos/video from Canva for other days). But consistently creating hooks and captions that will hit right is HARD, and that’s where most of the time and work was every day. I was burnt out by the end of the month and so sick of my own damn face, and I definitely lost some momentum after that. (I’m still burnt out, honestly, so take this with a grain of salt, but I am continuing to post Reels two to three times a week instead of the one I was doing before the 30 days.)

However, these 30 days of Reels gave me a ton of data to pull from, and gave me a much better understanding of what I need to do to draw more of my ideal audience in. In that way, it was a good experiment.

Do I think YOU should do 30 days of Reels?

After doing it myself, I would say only if you have the bandwidth to do it. This is one of the reasons why I’ve been so resistant to TikTok—because it’s a platform that really seems to prioritize posting frequency and rewards users for posting multiple times a day. If you have the ability to post short-form video a couple time a day, amazing! If not, do what you can as consistently as possible.

(And by the way, don’t be afraid to reuse previous posts that did well, as a way to cut back on some of the work you have to do.)

Do I think you should be doing Reels in general?

Yes, if your primary platform (i.e. where the majority of your audience is) is Instagram. Reels reach is down in general, and carousel posts actually tend to be the highest-performing content on IG right now, but Reels are still a good way to reach new audiences, if that’s what your goal is. Also, I don’t think video content is going away any time soon, so you’ll need to know how to use this format to continue to grow and not fall behind.

Real talk

This marketing stuff, like Reels, is not the fun part of being an author, at least for most people. (It’s not the fun part for me, either—I would much rather be spending my time editing and coaching, but I feel that I need to do it in order to find people to edit and coach.) It is a necessary evil, though, and sadly most authors aren’t doing enough of it. You need to do more marketing than you think—not just Reels, but really be pushing your book often in every way you can, with social media posts, newsletters, podcasts, IG lives, blog tours, events, etc. (Yes, even if you are trad published. You’re still going to be the main marketing engine for your book, long after your publisher has moved on to marketing their next book.)

Take a look at Nikki Payne as a wonderful example of someone who does all the things for her book that came out in 2022 and for her latest that’s coming out in 2024. She’s a marketing machine and so good at applying trends to her books. I’m also watching Sarah Estep go hard promoting her upcoming book with clever memes and Reels and lives while also tying this marketing back to the previous book in the series. (Go give both of these brilliant authors a follow and check out their books!)

Please do not let the book you worked so hard on not find its audience because marketing feels scary and uncomfortable. Writing a book is scary and uncomfortable too, and you did that! This is just a new thing you’ll have to learn. It breaks my heart to see people make a couple of posts to promote their book around release day, and then nothing more. It’s gotta be way more than that.

Don’t worry about annoying people by posting about your book so often on social media—the algorithm is only showing it to a low, low percentage of your followers so they aren’t seeing your post all the time, and if they are, most won’t be bothered to unfollow you because of it. They follow you because they’re interested in your work and they care about you!

If you have any questions about Reels, I’m happy to answer them!

BONUS TIME!

If you’re ready to either get started on Reels or revive your Reels strategy, I have a brand-new resource for you: A Romance Author’s Guide to IG Reels!

Inside, I break down all the important parts of the Reel and how to use them to your best advantage, give you the dos and don’ts of Reels, tell you how often you should be posting, and present a bunch of prompts (including faceless ones!) to use when you’re trying to come up with ideas for your Reels.

Download it here!

Hazel and Elijah Get Mixed Up by Marty Vee

It’s release day for Hazel and Elijah Get Mixed Up by Marty Vee in the Fall into Love anthology. The anthology is all small-town romances with big fall vibes, and I got to edit Marty’s!

Hazel and Elijah had a one-night stand a while back, and it was unforgettable for both. So unforgettable for Elijah that he’s willing to go back to their hometown that he was essentially run out of when he was younger just so he can spend more time with Hazel.

But Hazel is a super-busy veterinarian who hates asking for help even when she needs it, and she needs to raise money for the animal society in town. When she puts together a bachelor auction, she comes under fire from the more conservative townspeople, led by Elijah’s estranged father, who wants to use her relationship with black sheep Elijah against her.

Who will prevail? Read and see! The Fall Into Love anthology is out in KU now!

All the Ways We're Wrong by Amelia Elliot

It’s release day for Amelia Elliot’s All the Ways We’re Wrong!

Movie star Ava Blum just wants to process turning 40 alone in the mountains—but when a mudslide washes away her cabin (with her inside!), she has to trek down the mountain with a hot, grumpy structural engineer who saves her life and luckily has more survivalist skills than she does.

Killian and Ava trauma-bond on their days-long hike, and even though they’re opposites in every way (he makes a list), they can’t stay away from each other. With totally incompatible lives, how are they supposed to be anything but wrong for each other?

It’s out now on Amazon and KU!