

About SoulJourn Books
I created SoulJourn Books in 2011 to fill a niche for historical plots and dynamic figures that convey spiritual and mystical themes. SoulJourn Books aims to illuminate the past to inspire the present. SoulJourn brings traditional, professional publishing into the modern age by taking advantage of sustainable print-on-demand and eBook technologies.
Thanks for stopping by! ~Kathryn Gabriel Loving
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My Road to SoulJourn Books
Johnson Books in Boulder, CO, published my first nonfiction book, Roads to Center Place, in 1991 toward the end of the industry's heyday when most readers eagerly paid list price at their choice of many brick-and-mortar stores. Roads stayed in print for some twenty years, while my next book with Johnson, Marietta Wetherill (1993), is still in print though on its third publisher. Gambler Way (1996) received global attention for many years after it went out of print, with invitations for giving papers at conferences and writing chapters for academic anthologies. Once the digital revolution hit the print world at the turn of the century, mom-and-pop bookstores and popular chain stores began pulling up stakes with the advent of online-discount booksellers, causing the industry to experience mergers, bankruptcies, and drastic editorial attrition. Thus, shortly after seeing two more books in print, Country Towns of New Mexico (1996) and 100 Best Wedding Destinations (2006), their respective publishers went out of business.
It was the proverbial door-closing/window-opening scenario. The digital upheaval for the print industry created opportunity for the writer entrepreneur. Self-publishing began developing a legitimacy that surpassed vanity press by offering the individual more editorial, design, and marketing control without sacrificing quality. The online-discount stores developed print-on-demand and eBook options that allowed for better and quicker access to reading material while killing fewer trees. I knew before writing my novels, The Logos of Soul and A Day in Eternity, that I would create my own publishing company to launch them.
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