I did it. My urban fantasy novella made about $300 in its first year. Not quitting my day job money, but it felt real. The key wasn't magic; it was treating the book like a product. I spent $200 on a pre-made cover that looked professional, used free formatting tools, and spent more time workshopping my blurb than some chapters. I ran a few targeted ads on Facebook to a reader group for that specific subgenre. It's a numbers game with tiny conversions. For me, the thrill of someone in another country buying my story validated the effort more than the dollar amount. It's a side hustle, not a career launchpad, unless you get incredibly lucky or write like a machine.
Sure, it's possible, but the money's rarely in the first book alone. Most folks I see making a consistent income treat it like running a small business with a backlist. They write in a series, because book one is effectively a loss leader to hook readers for two, three, and four. The upfront costs can sneak up on you, too—a decent cover, maybe an editor if you're serious, formatting software. It's not zero investment.
You have to be brutally honest about your genre's market and your own stamina for the non-writing parts. Romance and fantasy readers are voracious, but competition is fierce. The algorithm on places like Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing is its own beast to learn. It's less 'write a book, make money' and more 'build a catalog, learn advertising, engage with readers, then maybe see some returns after the third or fourth title.'
Possible? Yes. Probable as a sole income? Not for most. The market's flooded. Your book is a single drop in an ocean. Making money requires a strategy beyond just writing something good—you need to find your specific audience and get the book in front of them, which is a skill entirely separate from writing. Many brilliant stories languish in obscurity because their authors don't know how to shout about them in the right corners of the internet. It's a hybrid creative-commercial endeavor.
Absolutely, but temper your expectations. The median income from a single self-published title is depressingly low—like, coffee money low. The folks you hear about hitting big are outliers, the lottery winners. The real model that works is volume and consistency: publishing regularly to feed the algorithms and build a reader email list. It's a grind. You're now author, publisher, art director, and marketing manager. If you love the process and storytelling itself, the extra work can feel rewarding even before the cash flows. If you're only in it for a quick payout, you'll burn out fast.
Yeah, you can, but treating it as a get-rich-quick scheme is a straight path to disappointment. The digital shelves are absolutely crammed, and visibility is the real battle, not just hitting 'publish'. I watched a friend pour months into a niche fantasy series, only to see it sink without a trace because she thought writing was the finish line. It's a marathon of marketing, cover design, blurb writing, and social media hustle.
That said, the control is intoxicating. No gatekeeper telling you your cozy mystery about a knitting detective is 'too niche'. You set the price, run the promotions, and keep a much larger slice of royalties than traditional publishing offers. The potential is there, but it's potential energy—you have to build the ramp to convert it into actual sales. My own modest success came from serializing a story first on a platform like Royal Road, building a reader base who then bought the compiled ebook.
2026-07-13 18:31:09
2
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
All The Ways We Sin: A Diverse Collection of Erotica Tales
Blue 💙
10
14.6K
WARNING: 18+ ONLY
This book contains explicit adult sexual content and intense psychological and erotic themes.
Not suitable for minors. Reader discretion is strongly advised.
------
Welcome to the filthy heart of sin, baby.
All the Ways We Sin is a raw and unapologetic erotica collection where passion doesn’t just burn : It fucks you senseless
From the thrill of your dangerous stepbrother pinning you against the wall while your parents sleep down the hall… to the shame of sneaking into your mother’s fiancé’s bed.
These stories don’t play nice. They’re supernatural, sci-fi, taboo, LGBTQ+, romantic, dark, obsessive, and so dangerously addictive you’ll be touching yourself before you finish the first page.
Every chapter is a brand-new sin. A fresh and wet craving. A whole new world where your desire ...always...fucking wins.
Some stories will lick you slow and sweet until you’re trembling. Some will drag you into the dark, choke you with lust, and leave you bruised and dripping.
Some are wild, strange, and so twisted they’ll make you cum harder than you ever have in your life.
But every single one answers the same dripping question:
If nobody was watching…
how fucking dirty would you sin
Zoe Oliver had been mistreated all her life ever since she got married to the billionaire family of the Meyers. She was used, abused, and miserable because they didn't see any good in her, and treated her worse than their maids because they felt that she was not deserving of her husband. She was crumbled and broken because she decided to love the only person she thought would give her a new life.
Malcolm Meyer, her husband, couldn't care any better for his wife, and let his family do whatever they wanted to her because he didn't love her. One sudden night, he dropped a divorce paper before her eyes and told her to sign it so that she could get out of his life for good.
"I do not want your alimony!" She spat at him with anger.
Everyone thought she was crazy to have refused millions as alimony to compensate for her miserable life.
Through the spotlight in the gathering of elites, a lady emerged and sauntered through the crowd in million of dollars worth dress, and heels. She held everyone in a collective gasp as she smiled charmingly and was introduced as the Multi-Billionaire heiress. Everyone could not believe their eyes. The Meyer family almost lost their minds.
Now, she would make everyone in the Meyers pay in double and triple folds for every hell and torment they made her go through.
Zoe Oliver was back to rule!
Forbidden dreams : A collection of short steamy stories
Ehmie writess
10
11.9K
THIS BOOK CONTAINS EXPLICIT SEXUAL CONTENT and is rated 18+ .
Forbidden dreams is a collection of fast paced, drama filled, pleasure stimulating stories that ignites that spark and passion for sinful desires that knows no bounds. Get to read stories in your favourite genres—billionaire, mafia, werewolf, fantasy, college sports, age gap, forbidden love, M×M, fetishes, and more.
Sinners & Saints: A Collection Of Dark Romance Stories
Mary Samantha
10
470
This author once failed as a heroine… and returned as something entirely different.
Not as a savior.
But as the villain.
And she didn’t come back empty-handed.
She brought secrets.
She brought sins.
She brought a story that was never meant to be read.
Sinners & Saints is not just a collection of dark romance stories—
It is a confession.
A warning.
And a door best left unopened.
Within these pages lie twisted love stories where desire and destruction walk hand in hand, and every choice comes with a cost.
So the question is simple:
Will you turn away…
or step inside anyway?
Liam Patrick Owen, a 17 year old gay young man, who has been homeless for the last two years of his life; living on the streets and doing what he has to do to survive in life from day to day; moment to moment and second to second.
Riley Aegon Grayson, a 23 year old bisexual man who is the president of the motorcycle club, The Gray Rebel's since he was 18 years old. Most people view these clubs and the members as bad but that isn't true for all. Once of Riley's Patch holders finds Liam and brings the young man to his brother to figure out what should be done with Liam.
Liam is usually terrified of everyone especially men but he has an instant connect with Black Jack and one of the women in the club. What will Riley do with Liam and will Black Jack allow it.
The self-publishing world is a wild ride, but man, it’s rewarding when you crack the code. First off, you gotta treat your book like a business—cover design, blurb, and keywords matter just as much as the writing. I spent months researching Amazon KDP’s algorithm before my fantasy novel 'Shadow of the Inkwell' took off. Paid ads on Facebook and BookBub helped, but what really moved copies was building an email list through free short stories. Newsletter swaps with other authors? Gold. Patreon for bonus content? Even better.
Don’t sleep on wide distribution either. Going exclusive to Kindle Unlimited nets you page reads, but branching out to Apple Books and Kobo tapped audiences I’d never reach otherwise. Oh, and audiobooks—ACX royalties are slow but steady. The trick is diversifying income streams while keeping production costs low. Canva for graphics, beta readers instead of expensive editors, and learning formatting in Vellum saved me thousands. It’s not overnight success, but seeing $3K months after two years of grind? Worth every late-night writing sprint.
Absolutely! Self-publishing can be a lucrative venture if you approach it strategically. I’ve seen many authors turn their passion into profit by leveraging platforms like Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) and IngramSpark. The key is to treat it like a business—invest in professional editing, eye-catching cover design, and targeted marketing. Building an audience through social media and email lists is crucial.
Some authors earn a full-time income, while others make supplemental earnings. It’s not a get-rich-quick scheme, but with persistence and quality content, the potential is there. I know writers who’ve made thousands monthly by serializing their work on platforms like Patreon or Radish before releasing full novels. The indie author community is thriving, and opportunities abound for those willing to put in the work.