|
|
|
Publishing for Fun, Profit and Genius
Karen E. Quinones Miller has it All in her Pocket
by Sherella
Gibbs
|
 |
|
Karen E.
Quinones Miller |
Karen E. Quinones Miller will have you know that self-publishing is a
risky gamble. During her publishing seminars, she explains that only one
percent of ink-slinging-entrepreneurs make back their investment.
In 1999, Miller, who graduated Temple with a bachelors degree in
journalism, created Oshun Publishing Company in order to publish her
first novel, Satin Doll. In 2001, the book's rights were
consigned to Simon and Schuster. Along the way, the entrepreneur
published Yo Yo Love, written by the 23 year-old Temple
University student, Daaaimah S. Poole, which became an Essence
Magazine best seller and was picked up by Kensington Publishing in
2001
These days, you'll be as likely to find Miller giving a seminar at a
bookstore as you will be able to catch one of her live readings.
Miller admits that she never thought about writing a novel before
conceiving Satin Doll (Oshun, 1999, Simon and Schuster, 2001).
"I guess all of that stuff was just locked up in my heart,"
she says. At the time of the book's inception, her daughter, Camille,
had been a huge Jada and Will Smith fan. After watching the movie Set
it Off, Camille insisted that her mother was suited to writing a
story, which the celebrity couple could adapt into a movie. According to
Miller, Camille, who was twelve years old at the time, innocently and
assertively asked, "Mom, why don't you write the book?"
Miller, who was more interested in tucking her daughter into bed
replied, "Yeah, whatever--- I'll write the book. Now go to
bed." The next morning, Camille asked Miller if she had finished
writing her oeuvre. "And that made me write [the novel],"
Miller concludes.
The first novel, Satin Doll is the story of a young black
woman, Regina Harris, who was orphaned at the age of thirteen and
consequently dropped out of school to support herself and her infant
niece. Regina tries to get a legitimate job and fails. To make ends
meet, she employs her good looks and charm to become a
"professional girlfriend." The shock of getting shot at
nineteen propells her to go back to school. With a degree in journalism,
Regina begins a successful career as a freelance journalist. Satin
Doll is the tale of a woman struggling to find a medium between her
professional self and her Harlem, street-girl persona.
After completing the book in two months, Miller ventured to find a
publisher. Having been undaunted by numerous rejections, Miller says,
"I couldn't find a publisher, so I self-published it." With
the support of her daughter and brother, Joe Quinones (a Philadelphia
real estate developer), she released the first paperback edition of Satin
Doll in 1999.
Miller and Camille then went on a relentless promotional campaign.
They plastered posters all over Philadelphia and visited dozens of
bookstores whose owners they convinced to carry the book. They even
persuaded a barbeque truck on Broad Street to pass out a "Satin
Doll" flyer with every order of ribs.
The inventive and unconventional marketing approach paid off. The
novel sold 3,000 copies in six weeks and 24,000 copies nationwide in
eight months. "And all the publishers who turned me down, then
wanted to publish me," explains Miller, who is now smiling
recalling the outcome, adding, " I actually held an auction." Satin
Doll, along with I'm Telling (Simon and Schuster, 2002) and Using
What You Got (Simon and Schuster, 2003), have all made the Essence
Magazine best-seller list.
Like Regina Harris, Miller dropped out of school at the age of
thirteen and returned later to achieve literary success. She graduated
with a B.A. in journalism from Temple University. Her humorous nature is
revealed as she details her achievements on her website, "Karen
graduated magna cum laude from Temple with a B.A. in journalism,
confirming her belief that the only thing she missed by skipping high
school was the senior prom." Before returning to school, she served
in the United States Navy for five years, wrote for the Philadelphia
Inquirer and worked as a correspondent for People Magazine.
Miller also married, had a child and then divorced in a two-year span.
"The truth is much stranger than fiction. I just chronicle it.
Change the names to protect the innocent and even more so to protect the
guilty," she laughs. To illustrate this point, Miller gives an
anecdote about her beginnings as a reporter for the Philadelphia
Inquirer. "The first murder story I went out on," she
begins, "[it] turns out that it was an old friend of mine who had
murdered the guy," adding, "I just write about real life going
on in the inner city [and] things that we really go through. It's not
fantasy."
At the Black Women's Arts Festival (BWAF), Miller deviated from her
original plan to read excerpts from her books, in order to hold a
question and answer session with the audience. After watching other
artists' presentations, Miller explained that her position in the
artistic community is to act as a facilitator. She gave tips for
aspiring authors about self-publishing successfully. At "Third
Thursdays," an ongoing Philadelphia event at Club Beyond that
promotes reading interests within the black community, Miller, gave tips
for overcoming writer's block. At "Third Thursdays," the
crowd, whose members, via eye contact, nods and compliments, appeared to
identify with the characters she described from her book and appeared to
be disarmed by Miller's softening of her literary suggestions with an
occasional stroke of humor.
"I remember being an aspiring author and not having any
help," she acknowledged, adding, "I try to treat [aspiring
authors] as I wish I was treated."
Miller also has also been a panelist on seminars whose topics range
from self-publishing to working with literary agents. On November 6, at
noon, she will host a four-hour publishing/self-publishing seminar in
San Luis Obispo, California. She believes that although writing is a
competitive field, the competition is unnecessary. "Why be
competitive?," she asks, adding," The only thing that a good
book does, is make you want to go out and buy another good book.
Currently, Miller is working on a coffee table book, I've Known
Rivers, inspired by Langston Hughes's poem, A Negro Speaks of
Rivers. The book will contain pictures and profiles of
African-American centenarians. She is also working on her fifth novel, Timing
the Moon and is planning to write a biography on Harlem gangster,
Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson. And it's possible that in a few
years, the vision for Satin Doll may come full-circle.
Miller's college-bound, seventeen year-old daughter, Camille, who is
planning to major in film, says she intends to release an adaptation of Satin
Doll as her first movie.
|
|