Amazon is excluding spicy romance & LGBTQ books from the affiliates program. It's Bezos obeying the fascists in advance. And it highlights how, with the flip of a switch, they can easily shadow-ban whatever books they want.

I'm removing all my Amazon affiliate links & will deprioritize Amazon links

#writing #publishing #selfpublishing

READERS need to lead the way by moving to retailers other than Amazon:
@bookshop.org has ebooks now.

AUTHORS need to get their books over there too (via @draft2digital.bsky.social ).

I'm already on 4 other retailers (plus print, audio, libraries), but I'm working on getting my books on Bookshop.

@susankayequinn Sadly, D2D is not great for spicy books either and will not send any of mine to bookshop.org. Like, they will publish to other places, but two of my books they will only publish to Smashwords.

Like I feel you, they are better than Amazon, but there is a strong chance that if it's spicy they will block it from bookshop.org.

@rubyjones do you mean spicy or erotica (I think both should be distributed but they are distinct)? I've only distributed my SF so I should distribute some of my spicy romance to test this.

(it has to be D2D not bookshop because I already distribute my spicy romance paperbacks to bookshop via Ingram)

@susankayequinn Both, but because you said spicy, I was referring to spicy romance. As these are my genres, I do know the difference. My tamest sweet spicy romance was blocked alongside less tame spicy romance and straight up erotica.

Your books might get through, or they might not, D2D uses an algorithm to detect 'issues' and does not perceive nuance. D2D has blocked all my books from distribution to bookshop.org. Amazon only blocked the straight up non-con erotica.

@rubyjones UGH great. thanks for the heads up, tho

@susankayequinn Thanks for amplifying this terrible change at #Amazon.

I also posted the other day a report from here:
https://iheartsapphfic.com/2026/02/17/how-ihs-is-responding-to-terrifying-changes-at-amazon/
(#SROP books have never been on Amazon, a point of pride for us secretive rodents.)

How IHS is Responding to Terrifying Changes at Amazon - I Heart SapphFic

How IHS is Responding to Terrifying Changes at Amazon - TB here. This is going to be a long post, but it's worth reading. The gist of it is that Amazon is up to a bunch of terrifying nonsense, and IHS is

I Heart SapphFic
@susankayequinn Several years ago, I decided to boycott Amazon. Haven't bought or sold anything there since then. Explained my reasons to my publisher, who agreed to remove all my books from there, and the books I've written since never get put on. It hit my sales like a truck, as I knew it would, and they've never recovered, but for me it was the right thing to do. I'm not claiming any sort of moral superiority here. Everyone to their own path. All I can say is that I sleep better for it.

@DavidBridger @susankayequinn I haven’t used Amazon for anything in fifteen years.

In the UK they were always undercutting other companies, putting them out of business, while not paying their taxes and offering poor employment terms and conditions to boot.

The right choice isn’t often an easy choice. But it is the right choice.

@DavidBridger @susankayequinn It can be a hard choice to make when they are the market leader for your line of business so huge credit to you. 💚

As a customer, where possible, I choose who, where and how I spend my money. That and how I vote are two givens in my life.

@Broadfork @DavidBridger

I do think people are, more and more, understanding that their choices in shopping are really holding THEM hostage as well as having all the negative impacts. Finding a way for readers to still be able to get books and work their way off dependency on Amazon is tough... but the environment is ripe for it. Sometimes people just won't leave... until they do. Until there's just one terrible thing too many.

@susankayequinn @DavidBridger Yes, that’s very true. One minute the customer thinks they’ve got a good deal from the options available to them. The next there’s only one offer on the table because the competition has folded or been assimilated.

But sooner or later Empires always fall. And when they do, they crumble quickly.

@Broadfork @susankayequinn Thank you. I share those two givens of yours.

@Broadfork @DavidBridger @susankayequinn
I can't remember exactly when I stopped using Amazon, but it was quite a while back, when I heard about their terrible employment practices. I wasn't going to support a business which penalized their workers for taking breaks (and other relentless, ruthless and callous practices).
I have not regretted it. For books, I go to Fishpond.com.au; and that was the only thing I bought from Amazon anyway.

(I wish I could put a permanent setting on all my search engines to exclude results from Amazon; it's a bit annoying to have to add the "-site:" string every time I'm looking for shopping stuff...)

#CorporateGreed

@DavidBridger I respect that choice, but yeah, it's brutal.
@susankayequinn It effectively stalled my career. Not my love of writing for my readers. I've kept going, and my established readers have stayed with me. But commercially it was a head-on collision with a truck.
@DavidBridger @susankayequinn that leaves me only one thing to say… Respect!!!
@susankayequinn bezos is part of the fascist agenda
@susankayequinn I hate this timeline we are in, where fascism is appreciated and promoted on the Internet more than kissing and gender or sexuality expression.
@andrew @susankayequinn Keep in mind Bezo is no longer the CEO of amazon so you guys can't blame this on him.

@sapphireangel you're... you're kidding, right?

@andrew

@susankayequinn @andrew Andy Jassy became amazon president and CEO July 2021.

@sapphireangel I know I'm just amazed that you think that's important to point out

@andrew

@susankayequinn @andrew I don't agree with what they are doing, but people need to stop tossing everything at the founder when he's not the one making the decisions now. He was and that can be faulted.

@sapphireangel Bezos empowered Trump, donated to the ballroom, funded the Melania movie, in every way has used HIS AMAZON MONEY to put the people into power who are enforcing Project2025 at every level they possibly can, OF WHICH THIS IS PART. Amazon is absolutely kow-towing to the fascists and Bezos is *making that happen*.

Your "people need to stop"... is an insult at best, at worst, it's making excuses.

@andrew

@sapphireangel

Does he not still own the company? 🤔

I mean, the Washington Post has someone else running it too but come on 🙄

@andrew @susankayequinn

@crcollins @andrew @susankayequinn Do you also avoid using microsoft, walmart, google and apple? They are all guilty of the same type of behaviors and support of the state of this country. If you are going to go after one why not all? All of these rich people have done awful things.

@sapphireangel @andrew @susankayequinn

True. But the OP was discussing one specific thing. People have the right to boycott anyone they want. Or not 🤷

@crcollins @andrew @susankayequinn Yes that is also true. I just don't understand the hatred directly at amazon all the time, and just one person, when many are at fault. That is what I don't get.

@sapphireangel @andrew @susankayequinn

It's not directed at one person. There're a core of billionaires equally complicit in supporting fascism. I see plenty of condemnation to go around. There are plenty of reasons to hate Amazon in particular, of course. I don't understand how you've missed all that.

@sapphireangel @crcollins @andrew @susankayequinn I'm just going to gently point out that you're posting that question on the Fediverse, and it's a fair bet that many of the people reading it will be doing exactly that
@susankayequinn what non-amazon ebook shops do you suggest- looking for those which let me download.
@peribotsarah Bookshop.org is carrying ebooks now. I'm working on getting the rest of my books over there. Kobo is good. Nook is decent. I'm also on Google Play and Apple but they're big tech too — not as horrible as Amazon (maybe) but yeah.

@susankayequinn

I knew they would come for those books. I knew it. And that's only the beginning. (Although their greed may keep romance alive.)

I never used the affiliates program and never will. In fact, I stopped using Amazon ads this year (and yes, I see a loss of sales).

You can re-order links in Books2Read, and I have put my PayHip on top, followed by Bookshop org and Smashwords (which now pays 75% royalties), before I list Amazon.

Same on my website.

And I'm going "wide" with Print.

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn About ten years ago now (time flies), I did some research on costs, on how to set up an alternative to the POD system from Amazon, which leaves brutally little for authors or small publishers. In my opinion, this is holding back growth of small publishers more than so many other factors, because it's a complaint I heard over and over.

The TL;DR of it is, it doesn't seem impossible. The harder part is that the printers I spoke to were fearing an uberization of...

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn ... their services, i.e. where I provide a platform on which they compete, which ultimately drives down their price. I guess the experience with Amazon had burned them badly.

At the same time, mid-sized printers have invested heavily into POD-style printing solutions (TL;DR), so they are ready for this kind of thing, by and large.

I dropped that whole line of thought for a number of reasons back then, but I still feel it is missing. And more precisely, I think...

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn ... what is missing is a co-op style organization for this rather than a market-driven one.

Perhaps it is time to dig out my notes and have more serious conversations about this? 🤔

@jens

I definitely lean towards a co-op rather than market-driven. I would even be willing to share in the cost.

Indie Authors Unite! or something along those lines. 🙂

@susankayequinn

@Firlefanz Oh yeah, I mean, definitely a Co-Op. As it so happens, my day job has given me a bunch of insights there as well, so I feel way better prepared for this than I was when I first had the idea.

It's more that back then I was thinking of barriers to growth for indie publishing. Now I think about it more are "keep civilization running in the face of the threat the fascist-capitalist-complex poses". Both, really :)

@susankayequinn

@jens @Firlefanz
I will be interested to hear more of your thoughts on this, esp coops

@susankayequinn

What I have been thinking of is basically a Store List Central, where indies can list their stores or websites. A place where readers can go to find books and authors by genre or such.

Organizing this to keep out spammers and AI sloperators will be a bit tricky, but maybe a membership fee will help (possibly staggered according to income).

Members will have to provide the genres and keywords for their listing, and possibly volunteer some hours to keep the List clean.

@jens

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn Right, and that makes a lot of sense. We could actually use some ActivityPub magic here and federate content (TL;DR).

My thinking was a lot more along the logistics side of things. The basic problem is this: print on demand is great up to a certain number of printed copies. After that, the cost per copy becomes prohibitive compared to offset printing.

Which really means that the growth of indies is limited by their growth, and that's unsolvable in itself.

So.

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn Changing this for a smoother transition from one kind of print to the other, and/or sharing of costs to get onto offset printing faster, those are things one could look into *eventually*. They're complex to solve.

But what's simple - well, in comparison - is Kickstarter-like financing. It's pretty easy to precalculate costs per copy for N copies. What's harder to solve is the logistics: where to print, so that shipping is affordable?

There's a balance between...

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn ... trying to batch print runs into one location vs. having two or three across the globe, combined with regional distribution partners and warehouses, which is *really complex* if you want to do it yourself.

But as a service for a number of indies? It becomes tractable, moves from hair-pulling-out to something that spreadsheet wrangling or - wildest dreams - an algorithm can optimize for.

TL;DR:

a) get "crowdfund and print+distribute this book" solved
...

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn
...
b) move towards some sorts of systems where a small portion of the savings go to funds that help even smaller indies make that hurdle.

I spoke to a bunch of printers back then, and they're just worried such a platform will be used to set them in competition with each other and drive prices into the ground. OTOH I feel like they're pressured enough by Amazon, Bertelsmann, etc. that they wouldn't mind an escape route.

So offering them representation in a co-op...

@Firlefanz @susankayequinn ... might be the thing that'll get them interested. That way, the threat of bidding wars goes away, they will see more rather than fewer orders from an author/indie network, etc.

That's the hope, at least. It'd need to start with a few conversations.

@jens @Firlefanz

Very interesting. I have a friend who just finished a successful kickstarter who is doing print runs. I plan to bug her later about the details because I think it's more of an option than I suspected. I also know a couple local printers and people who have done surprisingly small print runs with hand-crafted books and those are very popular (again surprisingly so).

It's a different model but an increasingly popular one.

@jens

Ah, I never thought much about print (because honestly, I sell maybe two print copies a year), but one of the biggest problems for small indies is simply visibility.

And if we can persuade a portion of readers to look at buying from a co-op rather than big tech, it's easier to start with eBooks and whichever stores authors have already set up.

That brings to mind an author co-op that I remember (and even bought books from), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_View_Caf%C3%A9

@susankayequinn

Book View Café - Wikipedia

@Firlefanz @jens
conventional wisdom in self-publishing is that print doesn't sell, just ebooks

and that has been true

but print is having a moment and it's an entirely separate thing from regular selfpublishing

it's people buying at bookshop.org to support small bookstores

it's bookclubs

it's kickstarters with fancy paper craft for collectible editions with special art

@susankayequinn

Yeah, I have seen kickstarters go big with that, and Book Vault offers special editions even in combination with PayHip, quite a bit of what I se authors sell through Patreon, as well.

I just fear that all of that only really works if you have enough of a social media presence and plenty of followers/subscribers/fans.

I can't even sell my latest release. *sob*

@jens

@Firlefanz @jens

marketing is for sure challenging, and you're right that kickstarters and such will only work if you've got some audience already (and an attractive book/campaign)

I think the bookshop thing is different — I think people are preferentially shopping there to support indie bookstores so that if you're on there, some people will choose that as an option

@susankayequinn @Firlefanz My experience has been that print sells very well, but the clientele and reasons are very different.

The thing that made it work is a bit different, though: it works great as merchandise next to a reading engagement, gets gifted, and develops from there. Basically how bands sell shirts.

Then there are other kinds of books, like role-playing games, which sell mostly because people want to have physical copies for the gaming table, or because of the art.

This is not..

@susankayequinn @Firlefanz ... one size fits all, is what I'm getting at.

@jens @Firlefanz
oh, for sure, not one size fits all... I was speaking mostly about general changes in the culture wrt print. Whether that's going to help any individual author is very specific to their circumstance.

If you write romantasy or enjoy fine book craft and art in whatever genre you write, and especially if you've already got a fanbase (even a small one), then a kickstarter could be very lucrative (I have a friend who just did one).

If you like to attend book events...

@susankayequinn

Yes, bookshop org works *because* it speaks to people willing to support local stores and indie authors.

I have put their link first in the Books2Read lists. Should put it first on my website, too.

And I can market to that.

@jens

@Firlefanz @jens @susankayequinn Indeed. The Book View Cafe is one already, but it is very selective, but maybe worth looking at what they do well.
@susankayequinn A couplet of weeks ago I closed my Amazon account. It's Kobo or my local bookstore.
@susankayequinn It's not obeying in advance, Bezos himself is a fascist.