Happy May, writers! Time for the Insecure Writers Support Group, the brainchild of Alex Cavanaugh.

Thank you to this month’s co-hosts: Erika Beebe, PJ Colando, Tonja Drecker, Sadira Stone, and Cathrina Constantine.
Have you heard about the 7th annual IWSG Anthology Contest? I’m excited it’s a romance theme — specifically, first love. But I’m even more stoked to serve as one of the judges. So dust off your heartfelt, lovesick memories and submit a short story!
While you’re at the IWSG Anthology website, check out the brand new anthology, DARK MATTER. Congratulations to these contest winners:
Artificial – Stephanie Espinoza Villamor
Space Folds and Broomsticks – C.D. Gallant-King
Rift – Kim Mannix
The Utten Mission – Steph Wolmarans
Sentient – Tara Tyler
One to Another – Deniz Bevan
Resident Alien – Charles Kowalski
Nano Pursuit – Olga Godim
Resurgence – Elizabeth Mueller
Vera’s Last Voyage – Mark Alpert
~*~
Instead of answering the suggested question this month, I’ll discuss what I learned in creating my first audiobook, Rivals.
Do you like audiobooks? I’m more of a visual learner, so I didn’t think I’d have the focus required to track a story for hours. But once the pandemic hit, listening to audiobooks from the library while I walked for miles became my JAM. Now, audiobooks are the only way I read.
So when I planned to self-publish my latest sports romance, I just had to create an audio version in addition to ebook and print.

I’m so lucky that I know an audiobook narrator who guided me through the process, including these steps:
- Choose a publisher. Despite the problems of the monolithic juggernaut known as Amazon, I decided to go with ACX (Audible) to make things easier my first go-around.
- Decide on the narration. Most audiobooks use one narrator. Because I had chapters alternating first-person point of view between a female and male coach, I chose dual narration. (This differs from duet narration, where two voice actors narrate together.)
- Identify scenes for auditions that total five minutes or less.
- Select payment options. You can choose royalty share where the narrator gets 50% of the royalties, or per finished hour (PFH) rate, or both. For self-published authors, this can get pricey, but even offering $200-400 PFH may total less than $50/hour for the narrator due to all of the editing and technical aspects.
- Solicit auditions. I included information about the story and characters, my background as an author, and my marketing plans. I set a deadline for auditions.
- Review auditions. I received over 140 auditions (!), and many of them included the female and male narrators together. It’s a trip to hear so many versions of your characters. The talent was stellar! I sought narrators who sounded like the characters in my head, and I was thrilled to hire Laurie Carter Rose and Ryan Lee Dunlap.
- Make an offer to a narrator (ACX calls them “producers”.) With two narrators, I hired Laurie as the producer, and she subcontracted wth Ryan.
- Select 15 minutes of the novel for the narrator. This is the last chance to listen to the narrators’ takes on various situations and dialects before they produce the audiobook. I made sure to choose emotional scenes with young and old characters.
- Sign the contract between the author (“rights holder”) and narrator (“producer”).
- Edit and publish. Typically the producer edits as part of the per-finished-hour rate. Because my dual narrators recorded in different studios, I hired a third-party editor to help the novel sound cohesive. Eric West did a fantastic job!
The whole process took only two months or so, and now my baby is available on ACX here!
Audible gave me free download codes for readers in the US & UK, so if you’re interested, hit me up.
Also, please let me know if you have any questions about audiobooks. I still have much to learn, but I’m pleased by the outcome.
Happy writing, reading, and listening!
Hi,
I am glad audible worked out for you. I too have started reading by listening to audio books and it is the hammer..
I hadn’t heard about the next anthology but now that I know I will definitely consider it.
Shalom aleichem,
Pat G @ EverythingMustChange
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Yes, THE HAMMER! 😀 The genre for the anthology sounds right up your alley, Pat.
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Wow! That’s awesome that you had so many people audition. You had such a quick turnaround too. Thanks for sharing how you did it.
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It was a little overwhelming, Natalie. I thought the process would take longer, but my narrators were speedy and ACX was, too!
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That’s really cool you have two narrators. Works well for a book that alternates point of view. Congratulations!
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I think multiple narrators seem more common these days, Alex. It was a little tricky to figure out through ACX, but I’m glad I went that direction.
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Thanks for taking us behind the scenes of this process!
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My pleasure, Janet! Happy writing.
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Wow! Sounds like a load of work. Congrats on the audiobook. Much success.
Anna from elements of emaginette
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I didn’t quite know what I was getting in to, Anna 🙂 In retrospect, it was rather chaotic–maybe that’s why I uploaded the wrong ebook file on Amazon for my release day!
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I love audio books too as long as the voice resonates with me on some level. That’s the best way I can read the classic books these days. I love the cover to your new book! The fonts and colors are fantastic 🙂
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Hi Erika, yes, the voice is important in many ways. Thank you for the compliment about my cover!
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Hi Jennifer. Haven’t been able to leave a comment, so I’m piggybacking on a thread to see if that works. I really appreciate your checklist for creating an audiobook. It’s so helpful.
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