This website uses cookies for traffic monitoring, to record your preferences and to check for abuse Close notice
See privacy policy
This is Rosen's site for adults only. Children please see SmellyTrolls.co.uk. (close)
Rosen Trevithick

About Rosen Trevithick

Rosen was born in Cornwall. She studied psychology at Oxford before moving back to the West Country.

Readers have downloaded over a quarter of a million copies of Rosen's books. Several titles have broken into the Amazon charts, including a number 1 humorous fiction bestseller.

Read More



Praise for Rosen Trevithick

"Brilliant."
- The Independent
"I was reading this aloud to my 4 year old niece when waiting for hubby to finish with a doctor's appointment. She was totally enthralled! When we were ready to leave, the gentleman across from us had been listening and said, "Ah! Man! Do you have to go? I was really enjoying that!""
- DW
"Fun, lighthearted read and well written. Children who enjoy Roald Dahl and Horrible Histories may like this."
- Kew (Amazon Top 1000 Reviewer)
"It is that famous sarcastic, British wit that I could eat all day. London, the Doggy and Me is simply another winner."
- N. Blackburn

My Granny Writes Erotica Official Website


How Not to Self-Publish Official Website


14.10.2013 23:52

WHSmith and Kobo Stab Indies in the Back

WHSmiths and Kobo have messed up and indie authors are paying the price. They are quite clear that they disapprove of erotica concerning rape, incest and bestiality, yet allowed such books onto their site. As soon as they came under fire for their abuse themed titles, Kobo pulled all self-published books. They plan to reinstate them after they've conducted an investigation.

Why this is very wrong

- Kobo should have had an effective vetting system in place to begin with, if they want to practise censorship.

- Kobo should have the resources to isolate problem books on some axes other than how the book was published.

- Authors who haven't embarrassed Kobo are paying the price for the minority who have, and for Kobo's lack of foresight.

- Authors schedule promotions, sometimes investing hundreds of pounds in advertising, in the faith that vendors will deliver their books on the chosen day. Often investments are huge relative to the amount an auhor earns. This decision could set hardworking indies back by months.

- Targeting indie books sends a negative message about self-publishing to the world, propagating a stereotype that we're fighting to rebuke.

For goodness sake Kobo, I took a risk publishing some of my titles with a relatively small eBook vendor. It took days to jump through your formatting hoops and I lost my bonuses for being exclusive to Amazon. I did this because I wanted to support an alternative to the market leader. You reward me by stabbing small publishing companies in the back. I'll think twice about publishing with you in the future because you clearly aren't ready to earn a larger share of the market.

+

Be the first to comment


Your name:
URL:

Spam check: write 6 as a word: