Posts tagged publishing

Amazon finds its books aren't welcome at many bookstores

“Care of Wooden Floors,” by Will Wiles, is the kind of novel you’d expect to see on a “staff picks” shelf at an independent bookstore. A slim but sophisticated farce by a relatively unknown author, the book is full of witty asides and snappy comments about modern life; its wry, endearingly hapless narrator feels like he might have stepped out of a Nick Hornby story.

But many local stores, both independents and chains, are refusing to stock it. They don’t want to promote what they see as a predatory publisher. “Care of Wooden Floors” was issued this month by New Harvest, a new collaboration between Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and the arch-nemesis of brick-and-mortar bookstores: Amazon. (click link to read the rest of this article)

[I know this sounds a bit vindictive, but given the way Amazon has acted toward the publishing and bookseller community, I for one am glad that community is responding this way. I feel for those authors though, they are merely trying to get their work out in the public eye. However, Amazon has done nothing but shit all over the book selling and publishing community to get their own way and dominate the competition. So, this is a nice turn of events on them. This is an excellent article.]

Being a publisher … hmm.

Being a publisher … hmm.

You soon lose the sense, in writing fiction, that you yourself are making things happen.

Larry McMurtry; Literary Life: A Second Memoir

[I know exactly what he means, this happens to me every time I write. The characters take over, they end up telling me what to write. It’s a strange phenomenon.]

Amazon vs. Publishers

Bloomberg Businessweek Editor Brad Stone looks at Amazon’s transformation from selling books to making books.

I’m not sure what to think about this. If Amazon wins the day on publishing I think it will make it much more difficult for new talent to be discovered. Amazon has always been focused on making money and nothing else. They could care less about indy bookstores, Barnes & Noble, etc. All they care about is ruling the market - like Wal-Mart (who has put hundreds of other businesses out of business).

The reason I think new talent could get lost in all this is the very fact that Amazon is in it to make money. Therefore, they will be focused only on those writers who are already established, leaving new talent to find its own way to “make it.” 

Moreover, look what happened to the music industry after Napster and Apple got through with it. New talent is much more difficult to find than it used to be, and the search has been reduced to reality television shows such as X-Factor or American Idol.

I could be wrong, and I hope I am. But this quest by Amazon makes me nervous for the book and publishing industry. Things like book signings and bookstores may, in the near future, be a thing of the past.

tykewriter:

Is Price the Key to the eBook Revolution?

A video short taken from a roundtable discussion hosted by UK Fast, Manchester.

I’m not sure what an eBook cost in Europe, but in the U.S. the average cost of an eBook is between $7.99 to $9.99, and that is a large savings over the cost of a physical copy. As a consumer, cost is an issue for me. I’m always looking for great deals on books, and will never pay the cover price. For me the medium is not as important as the content of the story. I have both a Kindle second edition and a Nook Color (and I think the Nook Color is far better than the Kindle device). I don’t think the physical book will ever die (I hope not anyway), but I do think it will eventually diminish, and eBooks will be the next “book.”

Debut novels are big business again. But what are publishers shelling out for?

oliveryeh:

Quick read, then back to work.

“I wish more writers wrote in a major key,” says Jonathan Karp, publisher of Simon & Schuster. “Why anyone would write a novel and not want everyone to read it is a mystery to me.” As for the big advances, he says, “when publishers swing for the fences, I think that’s admirable. Does anyone want publishers to bunt?”

Don’t know about you, but if an advance of six figures came my way, there’s a good chance I would decline it.

[Of course, my wife may have something to say about it.]

There’s no way in hell I would decline a 6 figure advance on my first novel.

Just keep swimming, just keep swimming …

I’m trying to finish off, and send to the printer … I should very much like to be edited by you … you will not only have to fix the length—you will have to be sincere, and severe … I shall respect you all the more for tearing me up and throwing me into the wastepaper basket.
Virginia Woolf in a letter to an editor.

Learning how to breathe

[P]ublishing, while far from dead, has not moved in one great big step from the world of ink and trees to that of pixels and tablets. Many small, sometimes halting, sometimes diverging paths are…