DJasonFleming
Books • Movies • Writing
Amazon Woes and Paths Forward
November 07, 2023
post photo preview

The geniuses at Amazon have outdone themselves.

They have suspended my account for not breaking any rules.

Seriously.

Late last week, I posted Invaders From The Dark by Greye la Spina (directly available as an ePub here for paying subscribers). I was prepared for the usual nonsense, "this book that you declared to be in the public domain appears to be in the public domain, please provide us with proof that it is in the public domain by giving us information irrelevant to that status," which is what their boilerplate emails tend to amount to.

This time was different. This time the email said:

During our review, we found that the following book(s) causes a disappointing customer experience because the content is freely available on the web.

I replied that, well, the book is in the public domain, and since I followed Amazon's rules for public domain content, like I always try to do, I did not see a problem.

On Saturday, five hours apart, I got two emails that were in complete contradiction of each other. (I saw them at the same time, because I was busy all day.) The first opened with:

Thanks for your message. We've reviewed the book(s) listed below and can confirm that it meets the content guidelines we previously messaged you about on
11-03-2023 . However, an additional concern was identified and will need to be addressed before we're able to publish the book(s).

 

During our review, we found that the following book(s) appears to be in the public domain[....]

(Emphasis added.)

So, yes, my defense was that it was public domain, and they agreed that I had not broken any rules, but that the book appeared to be in the public domain, so [insert usual boilerplate here].

And the second began:

We have temporarily suspended your account because we found content freely available on the web in the title(s) listed below:

Invaders from the Dark (Annotated): The weird pulp classic- [...]

You must hold exclusive publishing rights for books that closely match content freely available on the web.

To have your account reinstated, please take the following steps:
1. Reply to this message with the following declaration: "I confirm that I have read and will comply with the Content Guidelines (https://kdp.amazon.com/help/topic/G200672390), and I will unpublish any previously published titles for which I do not have the exclusive publishing rights."; and
2. After reinstatement, review your catalog and unpublish any titles that do not comply with the Content Guidelines or for which you do not have the necessary publishing rights.

 

Until we receive a response from you, your account will remain suspended.

 

As a reminder, finding additional violations of our Content Guidelines may negatively impact your account status and could result in the suspension or termination of your KDP account.

 

If you have questions or believe you've received this email in error, please reply to this message.

This is what I see when I try to log in to my publisher's account:

Since then, there have been several email back-and-forths in which, on my side, I have quoted them telling me I followed the guidelines, and on their side, they restate the "you must copy-paste this sentence and essentially promise never to publish public domain content ever again" without any acknowledgement of the email I quote repeatedly.

Since the guidelines include a section on public domain content, and since I follow their rules and they have affirmed that I did not break any, I will not say that I will only publish things to which I have exclusive rights, because that excludes public domain content, which their guidelines allow.

I have since learned, from people who would know, that Amazon recently fired essentially all of its Kindle Content staff, and their jobs are being done by foreign nationals who have no training at any aspect of the jobs they suddenly found themselves fulfilling. I have also complained through a different set of backchannels, but have heard no result as of yet.

As might be imagined, I am less than thrilled. This not only prevents me from publishing public domain books, but from even planning release of my own writing.

What are my plans going forward? I've been giving as much thought to that as my anger at this injustice is allowing me.

I will keep arguing with Amazon until they unilaterally declare that they are right, without evidence or reason, as they have done that in the past, and I might as well expect the worst. If they reinstate my account, then... well, there will still be changes. But how much they will align with what follows, I don't know.

In the very near term --- this week and next --- I will post new books for paying subscribers here. I've got one Max Brand western ready to post, I'm at the tail end of proofreading a Malcolm Jameson science fiction novel today, and have two hard-boiled noirs in the early stages of proofing.

Not too long after having those ready, I should have the complete collection of everything Charles Cloukey ever wrote (all SF), a Manly Wade Wellman SF adventure novel, another couple of Max Brand westerns, a long-lost espionage adventure novel from a mystery pulp in the 1930s, a French Foreign Legion novel, and more. And that's just the "catching up" part of my reading schedule.

All of those will be posted here, first, regardless of anything else, for paying subscribers. And if I get them done by the end of the month (no promises on that) it will catch me up to my planned publishing schedule.

But what then?

Yes, there are books on the schedule I really want to publish, come what may. And there are books not on the schedule that I've been using to jump start my reading interest which will also show up here.

But in addition to that, I need to get my own writing going again. Even if Amazon blacklists my account, I've got a friend who is a publisher who already knows I may need to rely on him to put things out there.

I've also toyed with the idea of writing things in a real pulp mode --- generate cover art on Midjourney, then write a story to fit the cover. (Ray Palmer did this a number of times when he edited Thrilling Wonder Stories and Amazing Stories, for example. "Here's the cover we're using for next issue, write a novella to fit it in ten days.") I haven't decided on that for sure yet, but if I do it, chapters will show up here, then the final book, and then, maybe, the full book will go out to ebook sites.

Another possible outlet might be crowdfunding books outside of Locals. To begin with, I won't run a crowdfunding campaign on a book that's not written. If and when I do, the first place I want to go is Unglue.It. I remain committed to Free Culture, and writing a book, then running a crowdfunding campaign to set it free on the world appeals to me.

I'm going to explore posting ebooks for sale on Ko-Fi. And I'm going to look at SmashWords for the first time in a decade, and other ebook vendors, too. But the fact that I'm publishing public domain books means there will be headwinds, because any idiot can copy-paste from Project Gutenberg, and each vendor will have different requirements to keep lazy jerks from doing that on their platform. (That is manifestly not what I do, with few exceptions. Indeed, William MacLeod Raine's Ironheart, which I published long enough ago that it has had two different covers, only went up on Gutenberg this week, nearly three years after my first edition.)

I will also try to figure out how to make the iktaPOP.media site a vending site, because why not? If I do that, cryptocurrencies will be a payment option.

And marketing will become important, too. I may have to start a Rumble channel, and/or a podcast. While I have a good voice, I'm not sure I can yammer about public domain, pulp fiction, free culture, and so on in an interesting way for an hour every week.

All of these things (along with several novels, and series) are crashing together in my brain right now. We shall have to wait and see how the future unfolds.

community logo
Join the DJasonFleming Community
To read more articles like this, sign up and join my community today
0
What else you may like…
Posts
Articles
Inspiration

Here is the Table of Contents for an issue of Western Story Weekly from 1932.

Can you see what's funny and inspiring about it?

No?

The first three authors are all one author. Max Brand, Peter Henry Morland and George Owen Baxter were (just a few of the) pen names of Frederick Schiller Faust. That magnificent so-and-so was not only one of the best pulp writers, he wrote so stinking fast that he could take up more than half the issue of a weekly pulp, and do it on the regular.

post photo preview
Free Culture Art

I generate a lot of AI art for potential book covers. Much of it will never get used, so I'm sharing things here that I have no plans for, under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ ) International License. One a day, every day, for as long as I feel like it.

(Cross-posted to Minds (https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1591570775834365956 ).)

post photo preview
Free Culture Art

I generate a lot of AI art for potential book covers. Much of it will never get used, so I'm sharing things here that I have no plans for, under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ ) International License. One a day, every day, for as long as I feel like it.

(Cross-posted to Minds (https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1591570380860952586 ).)

post photo preview
post photo preview
All hook, no substance

I chanced to listen to the radio the other day, something I haven't done often in over twenty years. The radio in the car I was driving happened to be tuned to what used to be called an oldies station, but these days is kind of the same mush on every radio station—a blend of stuff from the '70s up to now, with recordings of the same "DJ" everybody probably hears across the country on some stations, because local broadcast radio is basically dead.

But that's a rant for another day.

As I drove, the unmistakable opening notes to a song I remembered fondly from my childhood started, and I thought something like "Man, I loved this, but I was a kid, rarely listened to the words, and can't even remember what the second or third verses might be." So I listened.

Turns out, there was good reason for that. The song doesn't go anywhere. There's the verse, the chorus, repeat, and done. It's literally three great hooks, some "deep" lines that don't add up to anything, and nothing more.

Now, the purpose of the song was to support a movie about a band, Eddie and the Cruisers. The song wasn't important, per se, to the movie except to have something cool, rocking, and distinctive for the band to play. Those hooks, that feel, was what was important, really. But as a song, it falls apart because it's not about anything, and the melody doesn't go anywhere.

In a way, the song is quite good for what it is supposed to be. It's supposed to be a minor hit from the early 1960s, pre-British Invasion. As that, it actually fits some standards of the time. Short. Emotional. Uncomplicated.

But even there, the shortest songs of the era had a feeling of going somewhere. "Stay (Just A Little Bit Longer)" by Maurice Williams & The Zodiacs is about a minute and a half, but even though it's static in a storytelling sense (it ends with the same plea that opens it), it has real emotional movement to it. "On the Dark Side" tries to do this with the (wonderful, if brief) sax solo.

This is why the song is a nostalgia piece, not something that new generations discover and embrace as their own, in spite of the cult status of the movie for which it was created.

This is a good thing to remember when writing a story (of any length), too. Yes, you need a great hook, something to grab the reader and make him think "Whoa, that's cool!" And if you can do three great hooks, that's even better. but you need more than just hooks. The story has to be about something, and has to have some kind of movement to it, even if you wind up right back at the beginning.

Read full Article
post photo preview
Ephemeral
Even things that suck should be preserved

In August 2024, a new video game was released called Concord. Two weeks later, due to disastrous numbers, Playstation announced the game would be taken down, and all players would be fully refunded.

Why and how the game sucked, which it clearly did, is not important here. What is important is that it is, as far as I can tell, going to vanish from all human knowledge. The game, being an online sort of a thing, will cease to be, or at least, playing it will never be an option for anyone.

Something similar happened a year or two ago when Disney+ cancelled, then removed, the Willow series from its service. They did it for a tax write-off, but what they are doing is removing a creation, however awful, from the sum total of human endeavor.

This is not remotely Disney's first memory hole rodeo. The Song of the South has been locked away in their archives, the copyright renewed for the sole purpose of denying its availability to the public.

This deliberate vanishing of creations bothers me deeply.

Heck, I get grouchy about some pulp magazines from the 1900s, like (for example) issues of Railroad Man's Magazineapparently not being extant, meaning the world is missing out on early short stories by Johnston McCulley (and possibly even a serialized novel or two by him) and others. I still retain hope that Lon Chaney's film London after Midnight will turn up in an attic somewhere, because all we have are still images, and a loose remake from some years later. The fact that it was apparently not good is beside the point. It existed, and should be preserved. 

But the deliberate removal of a creation from human knowledge is another thing again. Those old pulps, and films, disappeared because of neglect. The idea that something can be disappeared by intention is haunting to me.

And not only to me. There are at least two novels about this idea.

Paul Auster's The Book of Illusions is an excellent book (don't hold Auster's NPR fan club, or his being an Important Author, against it) about a man who becomes obsessed with the life and work of a silent film comedian, Hector Mann, whose work disappeared for decades, until copies of his two-reel comedies began appearing anonymously in the mail to various university archives in the 1980s. His obsession leads him to discover what happened to Mann after his disappearance in 1928, and to learn of the existence of a list of films made, but never released, with tantalizing titles. He even gets to view one of them before... well, before what happens.

I've not read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón, and I should correct that. It's another "literary" book that may overcome its pretensions by sheer force of premise. A boy whose father owns a book shop takes him one day to the Cemetary of Forgotten Books, where he discovers a novel called The Shadow of the Wind by Julian Carax, and takes it home. It turns out to be the very last copy of that novel that is known to exist, and the author disappeared under mysterious circumstances. (And the implication, which might be wrong, is that the author made the books disappear when he did.)

Clearly, the idea of creative works being destroyed haunts the minds of creators, and not just me. 

There's a bit of a fine line I am willing to draw. I made attempts at being a screenwriter, years ago, and none of my screenplays remains extant. J. Michael Straczynski, creator of Babylon 5, destroys his notes and outlines so that all that remains available for anybody is the final, completed work. (He explicitly does this to make it difficult for academics to be able to impose their theories on his work after he is gone.) So: if there is a single creator, and they are destroying something never released to the world... it still makes me itchy (despite me being guilty of it myself), but I can sort of accept that.

But for a company like Disney to take completed work, released to the world (no matter how disastrously) and then vanish it for a tax write-off, of all things... that I cannot accept.

It would be better to allow the tax write-off, but instead of disappearance or destruction, encourage the company to release the unprofitable creation to the public domain. Would it not be better to release the Willow series on a Blu Ray set (without DRM), marked with a Creative Commons Zero license, and include the score on companion CDs within the set, also marked with the CC0 license, give them the write off, and let anyone who wants to make use of any and all of the assets as they see fit? I say it would. It goes against everything Disney currently stands for, but the law could be rewritten to encourage such an action.

And Concord? There I'm less sure how to go about it, since I'm less well versed in video games and how online, multiplayer games could be preserved and/or released to fans to remix. But I should think a similar thing could be done. Upload the source files to the Archive, maybe, and make the game engine public domain, too. Look at what's been done with the Unreal Engline, for example.

But there has to be a better path than destroying that which has been created. Has to be.

Read full Article
post photo preview
To monograph, or not to monograph
A pinch of angst, a dash of navel-gazing

I've been wrestling for several years now with the idea of writing at least four monographs, two on film directors, and two reacting to works of applied philosophy.

The two reacting to books should be relatively easy. The initial idea for this whole thing began with Jeffrey Tucker's essay "Live Blogging A Book Makes You Smarter". Although I've wavered back and forth on doing it as actual blogging (you may have noticed that consistency in posting is not one of my strengths), keeping a journal of sorts as I react to a book chapter by chapter is well within my capabilities. It still feels pretentious to publish a book, but why the hell not? I've published a hundred or so by other writers.

The two on filmmakers are more daunting, given that I have little academic background, and despite having a coherent thematic approach for each (and that only some analytical writing has been done on either director), I'm more lost at sea for those.

There are two basic problems, and I should ignore both of them.

First, I've never done book-length nonfiction, let alone of an academic nature (and have zero desire to join the academy as it currently exists, frankly). Trying to organize my thoughts on the filmmakers' books feels like intellectual whack-a-mole, where I lay out any kind of an outline, and a voice in my head says "but what about [insert twenty-five things that are tangents, at best, from what I'm trying to say]?" The solution to this is to Just Write.

Second, imposter syndrome. I have no credentials, no outside validation. I'm not dumb, and indeed, know what I'm talking about to such an extent that when I discuss one of my obsessions with someone who does not share them, they tend to be intrigued and interested rather than bored.

The solution to this, also, is to Just Write.

Of course, there is also the issue of free time. I've got my indie editing. And editing for Raconteur Press, two lines of novels. And iktaPOP's public domain pulp. And iktaPOP's public domain line for homeschoolers that I need to start doing. And my own fiction writing. And, and, and.

The filmmakers are Jess Franco and Albert Pyun. The philosophers are Lysander Spooner and Ayn Rand (and the Spooner book will also be published by iktaPOP, partly because there is currently no good ebook edition of it available).

Chapters from any or all of these may get posted here, though once the books are ready for publication, the posts here will go behind the paywall to conform to Amazon's publication requirements.

Read full Article
See More
Available on mobile and TV devices
google store google store app store app store
google store google store app tv store app tv store amazon store amazon store roku store roku store
Powered by Locals