Great Smoky Mountain Book Trailer

Here is a short trailer for the new book Great Smoky Mountains National Park: Five Decades of American Landscapes which will be in our hands shortly! After 10 years of not changing anything in this best selling book in Great Smoky Mountains National Park stores I thought it would be good to change up this third printing by adding new work. I’ve added 55 new images and redesigned which images are where in the the book. The printing by ArtBookPrinting who worked with us on this version. The print quality is the best I’ve experienced! Each image has more detail than beofre, I went through each image in Lightroom/Photoshop and pulled out more details than before which the presses could now handle.

I also want to thank my designer Rich Nickel, John Manos for editing the copy and of course Steve Kemp for writing the foreword and chapter pieces. A book like this is truely a work of collaboration! Thank you to all who worked with me on this book.

Rember you can pre-order the book on QuietLight Publishing website! http://www.quietlightpublishing.com

Quiet Light Publishing releases eBook versions of our books

Now as PDF eBooks!

Quiet Light Publishing is pleased to announce the release of our three beautiful coffee table books as eBooks! The Lewis & Clark Trail: American Landscapes and Great Smoky Mountains National Park – Thirty Years of American Landscapes by photographer Richard Mack along with Their Love of Music by photographer Stephen Azzato are now online in our shop. While we still believe there is nothing better than holding a real book in your hands and turning the pages to appreciate the images and delve into the book in a very personal way we understand many people like to have everything at their finger tips. The eBooks are Adobe PDF’s so you will need the free Acrobat Reader to read them on any platform.

The multiple award winning first edition of The Lewis & Clark Trail AMERICAN LANDSCAPES which chronicle’s the landscape along the trail of The Corp’s of Discovery. This book has won over a dozen awards, including two Silver Medals in the Benjamin Franklin Book Awards for Best Coffee Table Book and Best Nature Book. Photographer Richard Mack has brought the vistas and majesty of the Lewis & Clark Trail to life in a magnificent set of 248 color photographs. Richard spent two years visiting key locations along the Lewis & Clark Trail by plane, auto, and on foot, shooting specific locations at the same time of year as was originally experienced. The result is an extraordinary set of images capturing the incredible diversity of the American landscape in different seasons. ISBN: 978-0-9753954-0-0 Hardbound 11″ x 13 ” edition, 256 pages with 248 color images.

In Richard’s book Great Smoky Mountains National Park – Thirty Years of American Landscapes he trained his camera on the beauty in Great Smoky Mountains National Park photographer Richard Mack has assembled his images into a collection of exquisite images. This book showcases the park’s various sections and includes text by the park interpreter about each area. These images also trace some of the changes in the park which have occurred over the last thirty years. This is a great addition to anyone’s library, but especially this year – the 75th Anniversary of the park. Winner of multiple awards including the 2011 International Book Award for Photography – Nature!

The ultimate photo book of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. If you love the Smokies, you need this book on your coffee table. It’s the ultimate photo tribute to the park. It’s all here: landscapes, flora, fauna, four seasons of glorious nature.”, Great Smoky Mountains National Park website.

In Their Love of Music photographer Steve Azzato has captured the essence of the creative spirit in the faces and words of the musicians themselves. Featuring portraits of 117 artists, the book takes a slightly different approach to music photography than typically seen. “The beauty of this project for me was being able to sit with a huge range of musicians and explore what drew them to their art”, says Azzato. “I was able to hear it in their voices and record it visually in their images”. In the simple quiet of a green room, without the crowds or bandmates or tour managers, Azzato’s photographs transcend the chaos of the stage and the intensity of the studio to reveal the inner spirit that drives each of his subjects. Winner of the International Book Award for Photography – People. ISBN: 978-0-9753954-3-1   11x 13″, 252 Pages, 117 artists images

Get these three eBooks here: Quiet Light Publishing Books

Independent Book Publishers Association article about QLP

In the September issue of the Independent Book Publishers Association magazine Linda Carlson wrote an article about me and how Quiet Light publishing came to be and how it has grown. It also outlines some of the things we did right and some we did wrong. Here is the article:

Get the Picture? Valuable Lessons Quiet Light Learned

Linda Carlson
September, 2010

  The White Cliffs on the Missouri River, Montana.

This photograph of the Missouri River is one among many images included in Richard Mack’s first book, The Lewis & Clark Trail: American Landscapes. In the book, it’s in color.

BUILDING THE BUSINESS 

Get the Picture? Valuable Lessons Quiet Light Learned

by Linda Carlson

Richard Mack chuckles about his career path to publishing being circuitous, but it’s easy to see how the past 30-some years have prepared him to create the high-quality coffee-table books offered at QuietLightPublishing.com, among other places.

The proprietor of Quiet Light Publishing started off as a forestry major at Oregon State University, but, scared off by high unemployment in forest resources, he returned home to Illinois after a year and earned a degree in photography and advertising. Along the way, inspired by a grandfather who designed commercial buildings, he took some architectural courses. Before Mack established his own photography business, he did a stint with the Santa Fe Railway, which he describes as “mostly printing old train pictures for rail fans.”

Once on his own in Evanston, Mack specialized in location photography for architects and major corporations: photographs for annual reports, especially shots of facilities (everything from factories to luxury resorts), were his mainstay until September 11, 2001. His business took a significant nosedive that autumn, and Mack made what he considered at least a 90-degree career turn.

Fascinated by the stories of Lewis and Clark’s expedition west, and aware that the centennial of their 1804–06 trip was approaching, he decided to combine his interests in the outdoors and in history with photographs that retraced the expedition’s route.

Starting in early 2002 in wintry North Dakota, Mack documented the Lewis and Clark trail as the explorers would have seen it, taking two years to read the expedition members’ journals, journey to the right spots in the right seasons, and continue his commercial photography business.

“None of the book publishers I approached was interested,” he said, “and many of the other photographers I knew had self-published. They all said, ‘It’s the only way to make money.’”

But, Mack said, chuckling again when we talked, “no one told me the downside!”

Initial Errors

Nor did anyone mention the most common mistake that publishers make: overprinting. “How many are enough, how many are too many?” says the publisher, philosophically chalking up his large print run as “not disastrous, just a bit of an expensive lesson.”

As he warns others, “It is always tempting to say, ‘This book is so great, everyone will want it!’ Not so. New publishers can easily get caught in the ‘print more to keep the unit cost down’ mindset. Avoid that at all costs!”

Mack also made what he now recognizes as key marketing mistakes.

One was assuming that this truly American tale would sell better if he could say the book had been printed in the United States. Printing here rather than overseas increased the unit cost by at least a dollar and was apparently of no importance to reviewers or buyers.

A second mistake was underestimating the complexity of selling to the National Park Service, an important customer for this book. The 11 states along the trail all have NPS visitor centers with gift stores, and 5 additional Eastern states have federal visitor centers with material on the expedition. But buying for the centers is decentralized and slow-moving.

Four other common issues:

Missing an important tie-in date. Quiet Light published The Lewis & Clark Trail: American Landscapes in March 2005, after the celebration of the expedition centennial had been in progress for a year.

Overpricing. Mack launched the book at $90 because he knew how high wholesale discounts would be, but he quickly reduced the retail price to $60 after the original price met resistance.

Not preparing retailers and wholesalers for major publicity. In November 2005, Mack knew the book was scheduled for an NBC Nightly News story, but he didn’t know when the story would run. Without a date, it was hard to get his wholesaler and Amazon.com to order books, especially given how busy they were with holiday inventory.

The story ran the Sunday night before Thanksgiving, generating sales of 2,500 books the next week. Quiet Light’s wholesaler and Amazon.com immediately sold out, and they continued to show the book as “out of stock” until after New Year’s Day.

There was a silver lining, though. Would-be buyers had to track Mack down to get copies, which meant that he sold more than 1,000 books nonreturnable and prepaid at full retail price.

Underestimating the importance of target markets. “Figure out who you’re going to sell a book to before you start work on it,” Mack emphasizes. “Publishing a book is the easy part—the real work is the marketing of it.”

Selecting New Subjects

Despite the downside of publishing, Mack was hooked: “I love doing books: you’re your own client!” So as he was marketing the Lewis and Clark book, when people asked him “What’s next?” he looked again to his background.

Since age 19, he’d spent vacations in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which straddles the border between North Carolina and Tennessee. He’d seen the existing photo books about the park and noticed that the text in most did little more than describe where the pictures were taken.

“I wanted to emphasize the fine art of park photographs,” he says. Mack already had many beautiful Great Smoky Mountains photos, but he saw gaps in his photographic coverage of the park, which covers more than 800 acres. That meant another two years of work, traveling to every part of the park in each season, gathering historical photos, and working with a park interpreter to create the minimal text. This scope is what distinguishes Great Smoky Mountains National Park: Thirty Years of American Landscapes, which came out in 2009 and is the park’s bestselling book, even at $60.

Today, Mack again has reached to his roots for a new book—this time on the five Great Lakes. “I’ve lived on Lake Michigan my entire life, and I’ve never circumnavigated any of the Great Lakes,” he exclaims. Besides providing nature photos, this volume will document the industries of the lakes and the challenges inherent in preserving them and their water quality.

“Did you know,” he asked when we spoke, “that the five Great Lakes comprise 20 percent of the fresh water in the world? And that it is said that a drop of water in Lake Superior will travel for 1,000 years before it reaches the ocean?”

When the Author Isn’t You

But before he can finish his travels around and on Lakes Michigan, Superior, Huron, Erie, and Ontario, Mack will be taking delivery of his first book by another author/photographer, Steve Azzato’s Their Love of Music. It features 117 photographs of musicians of all kinds, and their comments about the commitment to music that keeps them playing night after night, even into what are usually retirement years. (The oldest, Pinetop Perkins, is 97.)

Scheduled for an October 1 launch, Their Love of Music resulted from that NBC Nightly Newsinterview; the producer referred author/photographer Azzato to Mack. From a series of casual conversations, they moved eventually to a publishing contract.

Mack says they have a great working relationship, but he cautions self-publishers making the transition to publishing other authors: “The biggest change is that you can’t take anything for granted—from contracts to accounting to sign-offs on each step of the process.”

Nor can you overlook what you’re investing in a book created by someone else. When it’s your own work, you tend not to focus on the costs in time and money of everything you put into the project, he explains.

And marketing may be more stressful. Mack says he feels more pressure to ensure that Their Love of Music will sell than he would if it was his own book, although he adds that, in all cases, “You have to be on top of the game before you decide to publish a book; you have to know what it will take to produce this book, why it will make money, how you are going to get folks to buy it.”

Quiet Light has not had to confront one issue that often plagues authors and publishers of heavily illustrated books—quality of reproduction. That’s because of Mack’s background and his refusal to skimp on time or proofs.

He searches carefully for book manufacturers, but he also understands that quality reproduction begins with what he submits. “Once you let go of the notion that everything you captured on film can be reproduced, you can focus on what will be the best conversion of each image. Prints are always a compromise. It’s managing that compromise that is key.” 

Linda Carlson (lindacarlson.com) writes for the Independent from Seattle.

The Best Moment in Publishing.

 

Steve and the first copy of Their Love of Music

As a publisher there are many moments were you have a great sense of accomplishment, when sales are good, when great reviews come in, when awards are heaped upon a new release, but there is one moment which stands above all else. It only can happen once per book. It is that moment when the finish book arrives from the printer. You can only see it for the first time once. And I had that pleasure this morning. This time it was also compounded by the fact that I could watch Steve Azzato, photographer of Their Love of Music, see his work in finished form. The excitement on his face was beyond description. He has put in almost 5 years working on this project and this morning he was rewarded with his first look at his compellation of work in book form, for generations to be able to look over.

I’ve worked on this project for about a year, and having been talking to Steve about it for almost five years. So I too have in some small way grown up with this project as well. As publisher and designer on this book I have spent the better part of a year going over typefaces, images, quotes and every detail of this book. So for me it was also one of those moments, the time when even after you’ve seen all the images time and again and all the parts in proofs, now you see it as a finished book.

You put it on a table, walk around it, set it on a shelf, turn each page carefully and even though you’ve seen each one before in the proofs, now it is different. You can pick this up as one complete piece of work. It’s a book! Books, those tactile pieces we all love to hold, turn the page and see what is next whether in written form, or in portraits of musicians we may or may not know. To read the words, read the photographs and to understand the meaning of the body of work. Books have a place in all our homes and are sometimes handed down from one generation to the next. They are special pieces.  

And it this case one man has documented 117 musicians from all genres of music and helps you understand what makes them take to the road night after night to bring you their special talents.

Yup, one perfect moment in publishing. And I am pleased to have been part of it this morning.

Steve and I with the first copy of Their Love of Music

If you want to see a PDF of the book you can go to www.quietlightpublishing.com and click on the link there. Sorry you’ll have to wait until 10/10/10 for the release of this fine book which, by the way, makes a perfect holiday gift! And if you agree you have until September 30th to pre-order at a 30% discount – and have it signed by photographer Steve Azzato!

Yup, it was a fine day.

Peace,

Richard

Aerobatics and Publishing

Aeroshell Aerobatic Team

I took a few days off from publishing and marketing the new book last week to go up to the Oshkosh AirVenture 2009 in Wisconsin. It was great to get away from all that is happening here. The weather was great, there were new friends to be made and all in all it was a great time. The largest commercial aircraft was at the show – The Airbus A380 double deck airliner. The new Virgin Atlantic VMS Eve, the aircraft designed to deliver the first commercial spaceship to orbit. The spaceship will be suspended between the two fuselages of VMS Eve as it fly’s to altitude before releasing the spaceship to ascend into orbit.

Virgin Atlantics VMS Eve

I spent time on detail images of many aircraft, some worked, some did not, but that is photography! The air show and flights of planes like the A380, VMS Eve and the big C5M made for great images. I hope I have captured the air dances which the aerobatic pilot’s performed over the skies of Wisconsin. The weather was perfect, giving us all wonderful clouds to work with as our backdrop. You had to anticipate the pilot’s moves to frame the planes against the clouds. With speeds in excess of 200 miles an hour thinking fast and a steady hand made for a great time creating images of the show.

Now it also makes me think about how being an aerobatic pilot is a lot like anything else, but especially publishing, and photography. You have to have a plan. The pilot knows his or her routine backwards and forwards. You can see them walk through it on the ground, their arms and hands doing the maneuvers as they walk the pattern out. They must also anticipate everything, from wind adjustments to variations in the place they actually end a maneuver to get back to show center. Nothing is left to chance. It must be the same way in publishing. Lead times are critical for book stores, event and media planning must be done months ahead, in order for you to have that same dance the pilots have in the sky. Only planning out ahead will give you your goal, whether publishing a book, making a photograph, or dancing in the sky.

 

Aerobatics at the Oshkosh AirVneture 2009

To see more images use this link: http://www.mackphoto.com/blog/Oshkosh/

Enjoy!

Richard Mack