Beware Moonshine Cove publisher
My second book (first novel),
Minister of Justice, was published by
Moonshine Cove Publishing.
Let me back up.
My first book (true crime book
Deadly Vows) was published by New Horizon Press, one of the bigger true crime publishers. That book came about the traditional way, with my agent, Sharlene Martin, making the deal with New Horizon, etc. But that book was an anomaly, because I'm not a true crime kind of person - I just happened to have been involved in that crime. I had ghost-written tons of books before that, and after being published under my own name, I decided I wanted a novel under my own name, too, because that's really where my interests lay.
Sharlene, however, is a nonfiction-only agent, so though she loved the novel, she couldn't help me with getting it published, because she has no fiction contacts. Getting an agent is a pain in the ass, and even though Sharlene, who is a great agent, more than earned her commission on
Deadly Vows, I decided I would try to see if it was possible for me to start at the bottom without an agent for my fiction books. I realized the downsides: smaller publishers, smaller marketing opportunities, more scams, but I also realized that Sharlene made more money on my book than I did, at least initially.
So I shopped around, and I considered myself pretty savvy (a mistake I now regret) at avoiding vanity publishers and self-publishers. Reading somewhere about where other authors had gotten publishing contracts without an agent, Moonshine Cove Publishing came up among a list of other publishers. Long story short, I perused their Web site, and they seemed like the real deal - if a little wonky on Web design.
I submitted queries for that novel to several of the publishers on the list, just seeing what would happen. I eventually got offers from a lot of the publishers I submitted it to, but Moonshine Cove was first, and after a couple of conversations with the publisher, Gene Robinson, I signed with them, so the other offers that came in later had to be rejected.
During the editing process, I noticed a thing or two with their editing that concerned me. Specifically, they appeared to have been reading trade magazines and seizing upon a few editing ideas and running with them. When I wrote that novel, I had a bad habit of using the word "had," like "she had walked that road before, and it had been a disaster" (not an actual line from the book, but you get the idea). They seized upon that and went through the book, pretty much deleting every instance of the word "had," even when it changed the text in ways that made it difficult to read. That's just one example, but the point is I started to get concerned.
Then, when it came time to design the cover, they literally asked me to send them a cover. Seriously.
I do a little painting, so I worked up a couple of ideas, hated them, and eventually ended up sending them a Photoshop composition using several of the elements from my manuscript represented by stock photos. They loved the cover, but then they said, "Where did these stock images come from? We don't really have the budget to pay a lot for them." One of the images was a Getty image, which they rejected as too expensive, so I went to Dreamstime and bought the image that ended up on the cover, making sure the contract covered books as well. I mention that to say this: That's not the kind of thing a publisher should be expecting an author to do!
I've been a graphic designer before, so I may have been uniquely qualified to help out in that instance, but the fact is, that's their job, as is naming the book. Almost no traditionally published books end up using the title the author gave the work when it was being created. But "Minister of Justice" made it from my mind to the cover of the book - a cover I designed.
Later, the publisher suggested I get "quotes" and "blurbs" from other authors, using a PDF of the formatted manuscript for them to read. Even though New Horizon had handled all that stuff for my first book, I figured "what the hell, Moonshine Cove is a small publisher, I don't mind." The problem was, I don't really know any authors (I hadn't signed up here yet).
So I went through Moonshine Cove's list of authors, figuring they had also had to get authors to give them blurbs for their books and they'd be understanding. I found a few and emailed them. One of them suggested he'd buy my book if I bought his, which I thought was weird, but I'm a sucker for a struggling author, so I bought his book. I won't say his name here, because I'm not trying to be mean, but his book was
unreadable. It was absolutely horrible; poorly written, poorly edited - and the plot, such as it was, was absolutely incomprehensible. It felt like it had been written by a sixth-grader. And my immediate thought was, "holy shit, this publisher will publish
anything." Nothing takes you down a few notches like reading horrible drivel published by the same people who are publishing your stuff.
When the book was finally published in May of 2015, that was the extent of my contact with Moonshine Cove, other than going through them to buy copies of my books to sell to my fan base, because I got a discount using them. I got NO advance or author's copies, and no review copies were provided. When I asked about it, Gene said, "we don't get free copies, either." Not the point, but OK.
So I went to a few bookstores around the area that had stocked my last book to look and see if it had been stocked. I wasn't surprised that it hadn't been, because Moonshine Cove had done literally no marketing for my book. So at the first Barnes and Noble I visited, I asked the books manager if they could get a couple of copies. She was very accommodating and said they'd love to - my first book had sold well there. Then she looked it up in her system and said, "Oh."
"What?" I asked.
"This is a print-on-demand book," she replied. "We can't get it."
Can't. That's what she said. Barnes and Noble, only the largest bookseller south of Amazon, could not get my book to sell. I had no idea Moonshine Cove was doing print-on-demand. I mean, what the hell did I need them for? I can do print-on-demand all by myself. For all the marketing help they provided (zero) and all the effort they spent trying to get the book into bookstores (zero) and all the editing expertise they offered (I could have gotten more help from Microsoft Word's grammar editor) and the design work they did on the cover (zero), they were a complete waste of my time - except for the fact that whenever a copy of the book is sold, they get the bulk of the money from it.
I know this is long, so I'll recap:
Moonshine Cove:
* Amateurish editing
* No graphic design help
* Print On Demand
* No marketing
* No placement in bookstores
* The author is largely left on his or her own to do everything.
It's horrible.