Gigsplained Education Foundation will be publishing a series of guides on a variety of topics with Gigabooks Press.
Branded “Gigsplained Guides” these books will be single topic books about a wide variety of topics from health and nutrition, to information and technology.
Gigsplained has made a name for itself by advocating for education and public media. The name Gigsplained means explaining a complicated topic in a casual, conversational way. This will make the Gigsplained Guides an easy read for a wide audience.
The Gigsplained Guides do not yet have a set publishing schedule but will be announced as they become available.
Gigabooks Press is offering authors of existing books access to our e-commerce platform. These are the terms.
Gigabooks Press (a division of Gigabytes Technology LLC) is a small publisher of e-bools, audiobooks, and physical books (heretofore simply referred to as “book” or “books”). We also print small format guides and novelettes which is currently the limit of our printing capabilities. What we offer authors of existing books is access to our e-commerce platform and promotion via our social media and other means.
How it works. We do not charge for any of these services. Rather, this is a profit-sharing arrangement. We will sell your book through our website Gigabookspress.com and promote your book at our discretion via our social media channels or other ad channels.
Physical products are purchased from you directly (typically a few copies at a time) at a wholesale price that you set. You are required to fulfil any physical product request in full once a purchase has been made.
Digital products like e-books and audiobooks are licensed and provided by you to Gigabooks Press and a wholesale price is agreed upon beforehand. As a digital product sells on our platform, the wholesale price for that item is paid out to you within 30 business days.
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Signature not required. By allowing Gigabooks Press to sell your book, you are agreeing to these terms.
In 2023, J. Tordsen wrote and finished The 8 Fates of Okteveos. However, on a recent Gigsplained podcast he admitted that when it was given to beta readers they didn’t care for it. So the book will now be reworked into 2 separate books by adding new details that were not included in the original draft.
“They said it kinda sucked,” he explained in the podcast. “I could have paid an editor to tell me the same thing but ultimately I listened to the beta readers. I took a step back and thought about it for quite a while and came up with a plan to rework the single novel into 2 books by adding some foreshadowing and mysticism to the first part rather than making it a dry accounting of the hero/villian’s sins.”
“I felt constrained in the second half of the book anyway. There was so much more to the story that didn’t make it to the book.”
The first book will now be called The Sins of Okteveos and will have the same cover that has already been revealed. The second book will be called The Fates of Okteveos followed by the third book, The Rise of Okteveos.
The 8 Fates of Okteveos is getting major rewrites at the suggestion of beta readers.
Parts of the anticipated book are going back to the second edit process which could delay the release by several weeks. J. Tordsen explains.
I am going to delay the release of The 8 Fates of Okteveos based on the feedback I received from beta readers. I use a self-edit process and to ignore the feedback from the beta readers is ultimately self-defeating. As this is my first foray into novel writing, it is worth taking the extra time to make the manuscript the best it can be.
What did the beta readers say? In a nutshell, the first half of the book was too much of a lift for the readers. So much so that one reader even began skimming and missed some important details that helped make sense of the story in later chapters.
In fairness, I have only been working on this book off and on since about January 2023. Ten months of work on a novel that might take years to write is better than I expected – especially considering how slow I type.
J. Tordsen
The original release was planned for October but with the delay, a new release date has yet to be determined. Gigabooks Press will announce the new date once it becomes available.
J. Tordsen will be on The Author’s Voice Podcast with Donnie Lansdale on September 14, 2023.
He will be discussing past projects like the recently released The Gigabooks Guide to $0 Publishing, The Gigabytes Guide to Writing, and the upcoming The 8 Fates of Okteveos.
To listen, you can search for The Author’s Voice with Donnie Lansdale anywhere you get your podcasts.
Gigabooks Press is now publishing its original guides on Barnes and Noble.
The Gigabytes Guide to Writing and The Gigabooks Guide to $0 Publishing e-books just went live on Barnes and Noble today. Gigabooks Press currently publishes to Amazon and Google Play Books.
The next guide has been announced and will be The Gigabooks Guide to $0 Publishing.The book will be released on Gigabooks Press in paperback and e-book August 29th, 2023 with Amazon Kindle and Google play to follow shortly thereafter.
The best kept secret in the modern publishing landscape is that you don’t need to spend a single penny pursuing your dreams of being a self-published author – well, except maybe picking up a copy of this book. This publishing system is one that few authors know about and even fewer use. J. Tordsen used this technique to publish The Gigabytes Guide to Writing and details exactly how to do exactly what he did in this new guide.
J. Tordsen, author of The Gigabytes Guide to Writing, independently published the book in 7 days for absolutely $0. In this guide, he will take you through the complete process of publishing your own work with little or ZERO cost.
An author’s name is a brand and the the book is a product. The more money you put into the product, the more you have to sell to make that investment back. Keeping costs as low as possible makes making money on your book faster and easier.
The Gigabooks Guide to $0 Publishing takes you through all of the most cost-effective writing, editing, publishing, and marketing strategies available to the modern writer. Along the way, J. Tordsen will give you advice based on his own personal experience dealing with the publishing process as well as scam artists and vanity publishers – and how to deal with them once and for all.
The Gigabooks Guide to $0 Publishing is a comprehensive template for new and established authors to save tens of thousands of dollars on the publishing process.
The 8 Fates of Okteveos completed its second edit. Then, the SD card that holds the working copy of the book physically broke in half during a routine inspection of the laptop hardware. This could have been a total disaster were it not for an aggressive backup policy in place for the work. In all, 4 levels of backup are in place to protect J. Tordsen’s writing.
Sadly, the first automatic backup of the work failed and he lost about 3000 words of the upcoming novel. Fortunately, nearly half the book was in the hands of early BETA readers after the second edit was completed and the 3000 words lost were in the sections that hadn’t gone out yet.
This meant those sections had to be re-edited. While the original second edit is lost forever, we can look at the word counts and get a sense of how the book has changed since the data was lost.
The following table shows how the book’s word count has evolved through the writing process.
Section
Draft
Edit 1
Edit 2
Edit 2b
1
24,112
22,098
23,013
22,982
2
4,392
5,286
6,453
5,438
3
3,086
3,397
3,471
3,228
4 – 5
5,243
5.457
5,884
6,443
6
2,789
3,248
3,255
3,327
7
11,730
12,602
14,483
14,138
8
2,517
2,957
3,287
3,191
Total
53,869
55,187
59,846
58,747
Okteveos Word Count Table
Section 1: This section was in the hands of beta readers and comprises half of the book. The reason the word count is slightly off is because this section had a slight edit based on the BETA reader feedback. It was essentially a simplification of the introduction that was lost with the other 2nd edits.
Section 2: This is where things start to get hard. As I went through the section again, I would come across part of the manuscript where I knew I expanded a section to add detail, but I couldn’t remember exactly why that was. Then there were other sections that were obvious and I easily filled it in even though it wasn’t exactly done in the same way as before.
Section 3: The process of going through the sections knowing that this edit was not going to be the same as the previous was a bit defeating. I tried to lean into it by making the this edit better than the last. It helped but the demotivating factor was always there.
Section 4 – 5: This is where tracking word counts really helped. This section was always an important section which made it easier to edit. The fact I was able to add much more detail than even the previous edit was very satisfying.
Section 6: The same could be said of this section. I was able to add more detail that contributed to the general quality of the read. I think it was generally improved.
Section 7: This is the climax so I had the goal of getting close to the 2nd edit word count. This was how I measured the success of the new edit in this case. Oddly, despite losing a few hundred words, this section is largely unchanged. The second edit only added more detail from the first but the plot and flow is the same.
Section 8: Whenever there was a loss in word count, it always made me think I missed something. I spent hours going back over this section thinking that I forgot something. I didn’t. The ending changed and was better integrated into the story. It ended up being more succinct with fewer plot holes.
While the book lost 1100 words, some sections were greatly improved. Because I tend not to overwrite, It was a matter of remembering the additions I made in the previous edits. For the other sections, I have to trust the editing process to help fill in the gaps that couldn’t be filled for whatever reason. The third edit I read out loud to myself to help catch inconsistencies in the story. If I added content because of an inconsistency I didn’t catch in this edit, it should shine brightly in the third.
J. Tordsen uses a multi-layered backup system.
Auto Backup: First, Auto Backup is turned on in LibreOffice. This is not the same as Auto Save. Auto Backup creates a second file in another location automatically every time the file is saved. In this case, as he works off of an SD card, it creates a backup file on the main system. This is a feature that must be turned on in LibreOffice.
Flash Drive: A manual backup is also done to a USB drive.
Cloud: If Internet is available (it isn’t always available everywhere he writes), a manual backup is made to Google Drive. This protects against bag theft where someone steals the entire writing kit. A process to automate this system is being looked at.
Server: Finally, the work is backed up to a file server.
Process: Yes, even the process can be a backup. In this case, sending out to BETA readers saved half of the manuscript.
Despite this, accidents can happen and no system is completely foolproof. There is also no set system for backups. Three locations is the general rule for best practices with one location in the cloud. Regardless, the system that works for you is the best system.
The 8 Fates of Okteveos has completed its second edit and author J. Tordsen has been tracking word counts throughout the process.
The following table shows how the book’s word count has evolved through the writing process.
Section
Draft
Edit 1
Edit 2
Change Edit 1/2/Total
1
24,112
22,098
23,013
-2014/+915/-1099
2
4,392
5,286
6,453
+894/+1167/+2061
3
3,086
3,397
3,471
+311/+74/+385
4 – 5
5,243
5.457
5,884
+214/+427/+641
6
2,789
3,248
3,255
+459/+7/+466
7
11,730
12,602
14,483
+872/+1881/+2753
8
2,517
2,957
3,287
+440/+330/+770
Total
53,869
55,187
59,846
+1318/+4659/+5977
Okteveos Word Count Table
Section 1: The first section is consistently the largest part of the book, however, during the first edit, a massive 2000 word chunk was deleted to move the story along. In the second edit, some detail was added back in but the overall length is about 1000 words down from the original draft.
Section 2: This section grew by nearly 50%. Detail needed to be added consistently as the other sections took shape.
Section 3: It was the least developed story in the draft. After the first edit, very little needed to be added to it.
Section 4 – 5: Section 4-5 are combined for a very good reason in the book. While not a lot of detail needed to be added, it need to be added consistently like section 2.
Section 6: This section was probably the most developed part of the book. Edit 1 involved some corrections but by edit 2, the story was polished enough where it only needed a small edit.
Section 7: This is the second largest section of the book and where a lot happens. It also needed massive edits to tell the story properly.
Section 8: The rest of the book leads up to the events at the end so, any changes here almost require changes elsewhere in the book and vice-versa.
As you can see, the book started out smaller and grew as the story was refined. Most of the time we hear about authors “over-writing” a manuscript and the tug of war that happens between the editor that wants to cut it down and the author who wants to keep every word. This is not how J. Tordsen writes.
“For me, the story has always developed in editing. The rough draft is, well, rough. While I am not afraid to cut out entire sections out of a story to make it flow better, on the potter’s wheel of writing, I only start off with enough clay to make an ashtray before adding clay to build up the story into a vase. I have a short story I wrote decades ago and I have revisited that story many times over the years to re-edit it. With each edit, it got better and more detailed. If anything, I under-write a story.”
A call has been put out for beta readers for the upcoming The 8 Fates of Okteveos.
Author J. Tordsen is looking for beta readers for his upcoming novel, The 8 Fates of Okteveos, a supernatural fiction novel written as a series of short stories with an overall story arch connecting them all. Readers will be invited to read some or all of the sections and provide feedback to the author. Those who complete one section of the beta reader project will be given an ebook copy of the finished product. Those who beta read for the entire novel will be given a special paperback copy of the novel signed by the author.
This announcement coincides with the new Beta reader program hosted by Gigabooks Press. As stated on the Beta reader application page:
Beta readers are an important part of the publishing process at Gigabooks Press. Beta readers get early access to some or all parts of an unpublished work to critique it and provide the author with useful feedback.
There are no prerequisites for being a beta reader apart from a willingness to read and provide the requested feedback. As long as you provide the appropriate details, acceptance into the program is a given.
How it works: An author will invite you to beta read their manuscript based on the information provided in your application. Beta readers can then accept or reject any assignments they are invited to. The author may provide incentives to complete their particular beta read. Gigabooks Press facilitates the program but does not have any bearing on who is invited for a particular beta reading assignment or what incentives are provided that is entirely up to the author.