Selena Kitt | |
---|---|
Born | January 22 Michigan |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Period | 2006 - Present |
Genres | Erotica, Erotic Romance, Romance, Paranormal, Contemporary |
www.selenakitt.com |
Selena Kitt[1] is an American author of erotica and erotic romance who writes in a variety of genres including Contemporary, Menage, BDSM and Paranormals.
Selena began writing for the popular free website Literotica[2] in 2004 and eventually became one of their top three "favorite" authors.[3] She was also voted Literotica's Most Influential Writer of the Year in 2006,[4] 2007,[5] 2008[6] and 2009.[7]
Her first ebook, "Christmas Stalking," was e-published by the now defunct StarDust Press[8] in 2006, followed by her award-winning and critically acclaimed e-book, "The Surrender of Persephone" in 2007. Samhain Publishing[9] e-published her short story "Rosie's Promise." Whiskey Creek Press[10] e-published her short stories "French Lessons" and "I'll Be Your Superman" in a collection entitled Torrid Teasers #49. Selena also contributed to several Coming Together[11] charity anthologies. Phaze Publishing[12] later e-published Selena's books, "Christmas Stalking" and "The Surrender of Persephone," as reprints, as well as her book, "The Song of Orpheus" and short stories "Sacred Spots" and "Happy Accident."
In 2008, frustrated with industry content restrictions in erotica, she established and incorporated eXcessica Publishing,[13] an innovative, independent publishing company, and decided to publish all of her work through them. Her books and stories are now available in ebook form through eXcessica, and her longer novel-length works are available as print books.
A pioneer in publishing, Kitt's company was the first to begin distribution with Smashwords.[14] Her own personal book sales numbers have been noted several times in Joe Konrath's A Newbie's Guide to Publishing,[15] and she has been reported as making upwards of $10,000 a month on Amazon Kindle and was reported to have sold 20,000 books on Amazon Kindle in December 2010.[16]
In December 2010, three eBooks by author Selena Kitt were removed due to violations of Amazon Kindle's publishing guidelines. For what Amazon describes as "a brief period of time," the books were unavailable for redownload by users who had already purchased them. This ability was restored after it was brought to Amazon's attention; however, no remote deletion took place.[17]
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