Lisa
Moore. . .
RedBone Press
When I started RedBone
Press, I didn't think that's what I was doing. I actually just
wanted to get these stories—the stories in does your mama
know? An Anthology of Black Lesbian Coming Out Stories—out!
I'd put out a call for submissions in 1995 after looking for a
book like does your mama know? and not finding it. I came
out in the early 1980s, and I hadn't really read much coming out
literature since then. At that time I read books like The
Original Coming Out Stories edited by Julia Penelope Stanley and
Susan J. Wolfe, which is still on my bookshelf. Come to think of
it, there are quite a few Persephone Press books—and Diana
Press, Crossing Press, Naiad Press—still on my shelf, and I
thank the universe for that.
Anyway, I put out a call
for submissions, sending it out as a classified ad to nationally
distributed publications such as Sojourner, Washington
Blade, Lesbian Connection, BLK Magazine,
Common Lives, Lesbian Lives, and Sinister Wisdom. I
gave a deadline of six months from the time of the call. Of
course, I should have known that writers are notorious for
missing deadlines – I mean, I did it regularly at my editorial
assistant job for HealthQuest Magazine and at the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, where I was a clerk and,
later, a copy editor. (That was after graduating with a degree
in journalism in 1995. It was my second bachelor's; I'd gotten
one in accounting in 1987.) When the six months were up, I'd
only received two submissions, so I renewed the ads and then
sent the call to all the women's bookstores in the U.S. –
addresses courtesy of the Feminist Bookstore Catalog, which
lists them in the back. Those bookstores put the call up on
bulletin boards or passed it on to writers they knew; I know
because I always asked respondents how they heard about the
book. I even got a few email responses; one of the contributors
had posted the call on an electronic bulletin board.
My new deadline was one
year from the second call, so by the end of a year and a half,
I’d gotten quite a few stories, poems, and essays. During that
time, I also went through my collection of Common Lives, Lesbian
Lives and Sinister Wisdom and tried to contact writers of
certain stories so I could reprint them. I also obtained
permission to reprint Becky Birtha's and Jewelle Gomez's
stories. I received 62 pieces and chose 49 for publication. Then
I began the editing process.
Once I actually had all
the stories, the project took on a life of its own. I had
already begun researching how to publish, but I wasn't sure if I
wanted to do it myself or submit the book to another publisher.
One character fact/flaw: I'm a control freak (the euphemism is
“detail-oriented”). That helped me decide to self-publish, since
I wanted to control how the book would look, who'd design the
cover, how many copies would get printed, and how it would get
marketed and sold.
I hired an artist, Kamela
Eaton, who lives in Sacramento, to do the cover. She came
recommended by my editor at HealthQuest Magazine. I knew
the cover had to be striking enough to grab the reader from
across the room – or so all the literature says – and once I saw
Kamela's work, I knew she could do it. Kamela and I swapped Fed
Exes regularly, she drawing possible cover and spine ideas, me
approving a few of them, until we gradually narrowed it down to
one image, which is the present-day cover. Neither of us had
ever designed a book cover before, and I'd never negotiated for
one, so for two neophytes I think we did a really good job.
One day I realized I had
all the makings of a book but no money to print it. I'd been
working three part-time jobs to pay contributors as I contracted
them and to pay Kamela. I found out much later that it's
customary to pay "upon publication." (Believe me, every contract
since that day has had those specs!) Then, as I was bemoaning my
fate to a friend, she announced that she had the money; indeed,
she'd been saving it for me, knowing that I really wanted to
publish this book myself. Such good friends-with money to
lend!—are hard to come by.
Now I had no excuses. The
cover design was done, the stories were edited, the contracts
were all signed. I contacted a print broker who got quotes for
me while I sat at my computer and did the book's layout. Within
a month, I had typeset pages and a printer to print them.
Five weeks later, 3000
copies of my first baby were delivered to my kitchen – I mean,
inventory storage. From the research I'd done, I knew that books
typically need a six-month lead time for publicity, and I didn't
have that. So while the book was at the printer, I created color
flyers with the book's cover and mailed them to all the women's
bookstores, gay bookstores, Black bookstores, and Black lesbian
social groups I could find, not to mention every friend I'd ever
had. I also sent notices to women's studies departments at
universities. Within a week of the books' arrival, I was sending
out 100-plus review copies to gay media, women's media, library
media, and Black media – but not the mainstream. I knew from
working at the newspaper that the mainstream rarely pays
attention to a fringe book like mine, so I didn't bother letting
them know about it.
Within a month after
publication, I'd set up readings at women's and gay bookstores
in major cities where the contributors lived: 18 stops in all –
including Atlanta, New York, Boston, Chicago, Toronto,
Philadelphia, Detroit, Minneapolis, Austin, Oakland, and
Washington, D.C. – in a single summer. I became quite handy at
tripping through airports with a case or two of books as
carry-on luggage. The book's sales enabled me to pay the monthly
travel bills and shipping and handling. Thanks to the
word-of-mouth publicity generated, I got lots of single orders,
and women's bookstores discovered that a $19.95 book as singular
as mine sold, repeatedly.
Since publishing does
your mama know? I've learned that the hardest work of
publishing is marketing and distribution. Publishing may seem
like a lonely activity—just you and the computer—until you
realize you've got to get out and see who your readers are. You
also develop relationships with the bookstore owners, since they
know the women in their communities who will be interested in
RedBone books. It wasn't quite what I expected to be doing as a
publisher, but I've since developed a whole other side to my
personality: Lisa C. Moore, Director of Publicity.
My sister had worked in a
Black bookstore in Florida that fulfilled mail orders, so I
quizzed her on shipping. I found companies that deliver boxes
and padded mailing bags, packing materials and rolls of packing
tape by the dozen. Between my sister's knowledge and my
accounting background, I knew I could handle sales and
distribution. I bought QuickBooks and used it to keep up with
accounting, making sure I printed and included invoices and
packing slips when mailing books. From working with the
newspaper's book editor, I already knew how the press kits
should look, what is required in a press release, and how far in
advance calendar editors need it. I used that information to
design my own press kit and book readings. Every time the book
got reviewed, off to Kinko's I went to make copies to add to my
press kit. Whenever I booked a reading, I sent press kits to the
gay/lesbian, women's, and Black media and followed up with a
press release two weeks prior to the event. The book's
contributors really helped by getting me information on what
media contacts to target in their cities.
So the summer of 1997 was
my whirlwind summer. I was still working part-time at the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, traveling three to four days
at a time, and shipping out books when I got back home.
Libraries starting sending in orders. I even got a few college
textbook orders. Borders and Barnes & Noble sent single-title
orders, at the special request of women in places without
independent bookstores. (I've been pretty adamant from the
beginning that I wanted to focus my marketing efforts to the
women's bookstores, since they got me my contributors.) I was
still getting individual orders. And the book was reviewed in so
many places! Mama Bears' newsletter, Chicago's Blacklines,
the Lambda Book Report, the Bay Guardian, Venus
Magazine, and Sojourner among others, not to mention
the publicity from online bulletin board recommendations.
The first print run of
does your mama know? sold out in eight months, so I went
back to press for 2000 more in late November 1997. Those sold
out in another six months, and now there are 8000 in print.
I guess all the publicity
was what helped does your mama know? sell so consistently—and
get nominated for the Lambda Literary Awards. Actually winning
two Lammys—something I never expected; just ask the audience
when I got the second award!—helped get me a distributor. Quite
a few bookstores had refused to do business with me until I'd
gotten a distributor, but I was reluctant for at least two
reasons: Distributors take a huge (to me) percentage, and I felt
they didn't know my market as well as I did. I signed up with
LPC Group in 1998, but as of August 2001 I’m with BookPeople
Distributors in California, as well as Alamo Square for gay
bookstore sales.
So, the RedBone Press
story. The new book, the bull-jean stories by Sharon
Bridgforth, came out in October 1998. The first print run was
2000; it’s now in a second printing, with 4000 in print. It's
been excerpted in Girlfriends Magazine and won the 1998
Lambda Literary Award for Best Small Press Book, and was
nominated by the American Library Association for the
Gay/Lesbian Book Award. There have been readings in Austin,
Atlanta, New York, Chicago, New Orleans, Minneapolis, Los
Angeles, Seattle and Vancouver, among other cities. In 1999, I
produced the audiobook on CD of the bull-jean stories.
Sharon is well-known in theater circles, so we're tagging book
readings/signings with performances and workshops. Sharon also
actively publicizes her work; we check with each other to
coordinate and make sure we don't duplicate efforts. What money
comes in from does your mama know? goes back into publicity, and
to my second child, bull-jean.
Sharon out on tour with
bull-jean. (I’ll be traveling with her for some events to
see how the response is.)
What have I learned? That
there is a market for Black lesbian writing, that a distributor
does indeed help, that small print runs are good, that there's
nothing like a well-publicized reading to sell books, that
women's bookstores stick together, . . . that y'all like me, you
really like me! (I still can't believe I said that at the awards
dinner!)
And that I love this
business, so I guess I've been bitten by the bug. RedBone Press
is committed to publishing one book per year – unless a fairy
godmother comes along to subsidize. Until then, operations are
still on a small scale – though my computer has a room of its
own in my house now, instead of a place next to the bed. But the
smell of fresh ink still gets my adrenaline pumping, and the
incredible response from readers, booksellers, and other
publishers lets me know my work is worthwhile. Y'all really do
like me!
Source: A
version of this article appeared in Feminist Bookstore News,
Jan/Feb 1999 issue. Copyright © 1999, 2001 Lisa C. Moore.
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"Where were all the black lesbians?" Lisa Moore of
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