Kevin, I agree with every point you make about the drawbacks to POD and e-books, including that it was ever thus, and including my own jealousy of writers like James Sallis and Mordecai Richler. Yes, I really, really, really wish I wrote like them and everybody knew it.
So what?
Best,
Kerry
----- Original Message -----
From: Kevin Burton Smith
To: rara-avis-l@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, November 14, 2009 11:32 AM
Subject: RARA-AVIS: Re: state of NY publishing
Jon wrote:
> It is certainly true that the chasm between the "stars" and the
> midlist writers is getting wider and wider, but I think that there
> are also some positive trends in the publishing world. Although it
> is often derided, the advent of Print-on-Demand technology has
> started to change the rules of publishing and will continue to do so
> in the future. And I think that it is a good thing.
For writers who can't find a publisher, maybe. And for those who use
the technology to start an "independent press" to publish themselves,
like Quiet Storm (and others) did.
But for readers all POD represents is an often increasingly
bewildering morass of choices. The high cost per unit of most POD
books, and their generally non-returnable policy, means they're
unlikely to pop up in bookstores, unless the author is local or has a
good in with the store owner. And the advent of self-published ebooks
merely means the bar will be set even lower, as to what will be made
available.
By the way, it should be noted that POD books are not derided for
purely whimsical reasons, as anyone who's read a variety of them
knows. For far too many years, the technology has been used by too
many writers with more ego than discipline, talent and patience (and
the vanity presses and fly-by-night author mills that prey on them) as
a go-round to traditional publishing field's increasingly strict
vetting process.
I know. I've got a room full of POD books I've been sent (mostly
unsolicited) that I've been trying to dump for years. Nobody wants them.
(Of course, POD is just a technology, so not everything POD sucks. POD
is used to print everything from books to curriculum notes and Chinese
restaurant menus).
As Dave points out, "on a purely democratic matter, yes, these new
technologies allow anyone to be a publisher or to be published with
very little to no investment, but it also means that it will be near
impossible for writers to make a living at this." And merely being
published doesn't mean much if nobody can easily find your books.
The disappearance of a shared pop culture (and a common denominator
consensus on what is "good") is a much bigger threat to non-superstar
writers than anything New York publishers can come up with.
AM Top 40 has turned into 200,000,000 satellite stations. The number
one TV now wouldn't have cracked the top ten in 1973. Goodbye
broadcasting, hello narrowcasting.
As Pete Townshend might have said, "Put on your eye shades, plug in
your iPods, you know where to put the cork."
Mind you, making a living as a writer has always been hard; a
privilege resigned to a relative few. It's amusing to hear 20, 30 and
40 year olds talk about the good old days, but it isn't so much the
chasm between the "stars" and the midlist that's growing wider. The
stars are about where they've always been. But the so-called "midlist"
is growing so much wider, thanks to technology, that it's sinking
lower, a victim of its own weight.
Most readers (as opposed to genre freaks and niche riders like us)
don't want to prowl the internet and dig among the endless BSP that
pervades it just to discover what to read next. Especially if the only
source for recommendation is the author him or herself.
When most normal people go to a bookstore, they WANT to find a book to
read, preferably from an author/publisher or in a genre they know and
think they can trust, or based on word of mouth from trusted sources.
The constant bleating about the much derided star system would be
more interesting if it weren't from writers who are dying to be stars
themselves. Their resentment is obvious.
But the star system isn't new, and no doubt even back then there were
Elizabethean cry baby Joe Blows moaning about how unfair it was the
Shakespeare was getting all the big bucks and attention. And insisting
that their play which nobody wants to produce or see, is just as good
as HAMLET, and that the system just isn't fair.
Poor Joe.
Same as the perpetual "New York" publishers rag. That tune's been
playing a long time, and it's always smelled a little like sour
grapes. Nor is general bitching about the state of publishing new.
Even from successful writers. Read Hammett's letters. Read Chandler's
letters. Hell, read the correspondence between Franklin W. Dixon and
Carolyn Keene. Bitch, bitch, bitch.
Yes, the publishing industry has problems, and huge challenges to
face. On numerous levels: technology, distribution, retail, editorial,
etc. But failing to publish Joe Blow's crappy little book isn't the
root cause of their problems. There have always been writers who don't
get published, and resented it. And bitched about it.
The big difference is that technology has now given these writers a
way to bleat globally. And a couple of new ways to publish without any
danger of becoming a star.
Gosh, they should be happier.
Kevin Burton Smith
Editor/Founder
The Thrilling Detective Web Site
"Wasting your time on the web since 1998."
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