Glimmers of hope

Recently I was asked to speak to a group of graduating English majors about possible careers in publishing and as part of my talk to give an overview of the industry. Here’s an excerpt from what I told them. Do you agree?

“I’d like to start things off with a question. Who knows who Amanda Hocking is?

She’s a 26-year old author who very successfully self-published her novels on Amazon as digital downloads and e-books and ended up landing a four book deal with St. Martin’s Press for more than $2 million.

Here’s another question: Who has heard of Barry Eisler?

He is a best-selling thriller author who recently turned down a half million dollar deal (from the same company, no less) to self-publish his work. In several long blog posts he made what seems like a very convincing argument that he could end up, in the long run, making more money by self-publishing his work rather than going the traditional publishing route and in addition be in control of how his books are published.

These two events occurred in the same week. To me they epitomize what’s going in the industry right now. An author who self-published her work digitally, available only via download, was able to generate sufficent revenue to prompt a publisher to pay millions of dollars for the right to publish her next work. And an author whose books routinely hit the print bestseller list and who gets six-figure advances for his novels has decided he no longer needs a publisher. He’s decided he can publish, market and promote his books on his own and in the process retain control over his creative output. Five years ago no one in the industry would ever have imagined that this could have happened. Publishing is an industry going through seismic changes, which is both confusing and also exciting. It means that it’s an industry in upheaval. It means also that there are opportunity for people who are creative and willing to take risks and are not sentimentally attached to the old ways of doing business.

As you probably know, two years ago the industry all but collapsed. Editors were laid off in droves and budgets were being cut. Now, even though things have stabilized and many publishers are hiring again, the after-effects linger. Borders is in bankruptcy and is closing hundreds of stores; indie bookstores are continuing to close, from a high of over 4,000 stores nationwide to about 1500 today, and sales of print books are still declining. Barnes & Noble has transformed itself from a bookstore chain to a content provider and gift and stationery store. If you’ve walked into a Barnes & Noble lately, you’ll notice that front and center of each of their stores is a Nook boutique. Their inventory of gifts and games is growing while they’re carrying fewer and fewer books. And newspapers have shrunk or done away entirely with book reviews.

But there are most definitely bright spots on the horizon. Digital sales are exploding – in some genres they are surpassing print sales – along with sales of the devices that deliver reading experiences. The market for YA books, that is books targeted at readers in their teenage years, is extremely dynamic which is a wonderful and hopeful thing because it means those prophets of doom and gloom who have proclaimed that young people are no longer reading were wrong. And the internet is helping authors do their own marketing and to connect directly with their readers rather than having to depend on the marketing and publicity efforts of publishers. Authors are blogging and engaging in dialogs with readers on twitter and facebook along with a plethora of reading sites like Goodreads, shelfari and others. There has been a proliferation of book bloggers who have filled the gap left by the closing of the reviews. There are many lively discussions about books online. As a result vibrant communities of book and literature lovers have sprung up, as well as start-ups that are delivering content in many different ways. Some examples are Red Lemonade started by publishing renegade Richard Nash, in which he is seeking to entirely revolutionize publishing’s business model. Then there is The Awl, a quirky online magazine, which has befuddled everyone by drawing so many readers that it has been able to attract enough advertisers to generate millions in revenue. In short, The business model for publishing seems to be changing completely but no one yet has any idea how it will end up. As someone who embraces change and has long believed the industry was in dire need of it, I am excited about what the future holds and I intend to be a part of it.”

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Apr 13, 2011 / Blog

Another great PW: The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives

Yay! Congratulations, Lola! “Gripping…masterful..”

The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives
Lola Shoneyin, Morrow, $23.99
Blind acceptance splinters a polygamous marriage in Shoneyin’s gripping debut set in modern-day Nigeria. Bolanle Alao, the newest and youngest of Baba Segi’s wives, threatens to upset the balance of power–she is educated and beautiful, though naïve about the relationship dynamics among the other three wives in the house. Raped at 15, Bolanle considers herself disgraced and unwanted until Baba Segi, an overweight, malodorous businessman welcomes her into his family, no questions asked, until it seems she cannot conceive. Like the other wives, she feels she has been saved by Baba Segi, who accepts all of them politely, but beyond brief mentions of his sexual encounters and visits to the toilet, Baba Segi is a peripheral character. When greedy Iya Segi and Iya Femi plot to run young, sweet Bolanle out of the family, the result is disaster. It is Bolanle’s unexpected submissiveness that leads her and her husband to uncover a secret that forces him to assert his control over the family. Shoneyin masterfully disentangles four distinct stories, only to subtly expose what is common among them. (July)

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May 17, 2010 / Blog

Tip #2 for Aspiring Writers

Know who you are as a writer. Have a vision for your work. Don’t think about who the audience for your book will be until you’ve finished it. Your choice of agent, your subsequent relationship with your agent, and with your editor, will be the better for it. The role of your agent and editor is to guide you and encourage you to produce your strongest work. But unless you have a really clear sense of what you want your book to be (even if it is not quite there yet) it is easy to start second-guessing yourself when someone with a lot of experience in publishing makes suggestions about which direction your book should take. It may very well end up being the very best thing for it, but you’ll also know when you feel they’re pushing you in the wrong direction, away from the vision you have for your work. Do you know what makes you distinct as a writer? Do you have a clear sense of your voice?

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May 3, 2010 / Blog

Tip #1 for Aspiring Writers

I gave a talk to some students at an MFA program and they appreciated it so I thought I’d share it here on my blog. It was called Ten Tips For Aspiring Writers and I’ll post the tips one at a time.

Inform yourself: Understand the publishing process, what goes on and what you can expect from the moment you send out that query letter. Know what publishing houses publish what kinds of books. Understand the trends. Read the trade blogs, including Publisher’s Lunch, PW Daily and Galleycat. Understand that publishing is in essence a trend-driven industry; even if your book may not be a part of whatever the current trend is – vampire romances, for example – that’s ok. Of all the genres, I would say that literary fiction is still the most deeply affected by the recession and the change to the digital landscape. Publishers seem to be at a loss how to publish books for which sales used to be ‘review-driven’. Newspapers are dying, review space is shrinking. And yet more people than ever are writing about books. It’s a new paradigm, one in which publishers are trying to figure out their place. Staying informed gives you more control over the process.

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Apr 22, 2010 / Blog