A Rant of Possible Merit
Saturday, June 11th, 2005 10:35 amThe abscessed tooth, she's still a bitch; I've caught
kinzel's con cold; it's hot -- and muggy -- and the ants are winning.
But that's not what I wanted to rant about. I wanted to rant about the decline of publishing, and the writers who buy in to their own destruction.
I've been off and on away from email, but as near as I can tell a call for submission for a particular anthology went out on two different writing lists of which I'm a member (at least for a little while longer) some time the middle of last week. The subject matter of the anthology doesn't really matter, nor does the publisher's name, actually. The important points are these: Projected pub date is some time in '08; cover artist, layout person, and of course the printer will be paid; all proceeds will go to a charity (it has not yet been decided which charity); the authors will not be paid, nor will the editor, who is reported to be doing the antho because they've always wanted to do an antho with this theme. But wait! All is not lost. The publisher is willing to sell copies of the anthology to contributing authors at cost+$2, so that the authors can sell the books at cons and book fairs and whatnot, and thus earn money for their work.
I gave as my opinion that the antho publisher was Taking Advantage of their prospective authors, which was ...not a popular viewpoint.
To her credit, the person who had posted the Call did try to clarify matters. Her press is usually a royalty-paying publisher, acquiring novels, which it then publishes in electronic and paper editions. Paper editions are produced via POD. She justified not giving authors an advance by stating that the house only buys the rights it intends to exploit, leaving the writer with the rest. She also pointed out that the publisher had not named a charity in its Call because it did not as yet have a charity in mind; they wished to remain flexible, should there be another disaster such as the recent tsunami near the publication date that might benefit from the profits earned by the antho. She even said that it was entirely possible that the publisher would have enough money to pay the authors by the time the book was published, and if that were the case, why then, of course they would do so.
All very nice. All very reasonable.
Except.
I am co-owner of SRM Publisher, which by any measure is a teensy-tiny press. We do publish some work by authors who are not Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, and we are a royalty-paying publisher, i.e. we pay a percentage of cover price to the author up-front when their book goes to press. Should the book go back to press, we cut the author another check, and so on. We only acquire works we can pay for. If someone comes to us with a project we'd really like to do, but we're in a cash-flow crunch -- we don't acquire the project with a promise of paying later. Life is uncertain, and until the money is in the bank, we can't know that we'll be able to make good on our promise. We have in the past raised money for projects by selling subscriptions, the money collected to be returned should we not gather enough to get the project off the ground. These are the sorts of things that small presses do, in order to stay viable.
Consider: The anthology in question isn't even going to be published until '08. Surely, there is some way the publisher can raise a tiny bit of money to make a token payment -- fifteen bucks flat; a penny a word; something -- to the person without whom there would be no project. After all, they're paying the artist and the layout person and the printer. A bake sale or two at a couple cons ought to be enough to cover the authors' piece of the action.
Two: The charity-to-be-named-later. What if the publisher, after it accepts my story, chooses a charity which is anathema to me -- the Republican Party, say?
Three: The issue of the house's general policy of not paying advances for the properties it acquires, justified by the fact that they allow authors to retain all the rights the house does not intend to exploit. On the face of it, this seems reasonable; those rights do, in theory, have value and ought to be exploited to the benefit of the author. But, how many of this publisher's authors go on to sell their foreign language, movie, game, or audiobook rights? Furthermore, the sale of those rights is, in the usual way of things, extra income, not meant to replace an advance withheld by the primary publisher.
Note that I am not throwing stones at those presses which pay royalties only. That would be hypocritical, since SRM is also a royalty-paying publisher. I mean only to point out the logical flaw in the argument: "We pay no advance because we allow authors to retain the rights we don't want to use." "We pay no advance because we're a micro-press and we can't afford it" may be lame, but it's at least intellectually honest.
As I said, these views and comments were not appreciated. So much so that one list member took it upon herself to write to me off-list, informing me of my ignorance; and stating that the publisher in question -- which was (surprise!) her publisher -- was a wonderful publisher, very author-friendly, with a beautiful contract. All of which may be so; I honestly don't know.
The list member went on to say that my comments regarding the anthology project had not only hurt the feelings of dozens of this house's authors, who were also on the list, but were an attack on the publisher which should never have been allowed into the list by the moderator. This now begins to get scary. A writers list which forbids discussion/criticism of publishers and their antics? What good is that to anyone?
My ...correspondent, I guess I'll have to call her, also allowed me to know that there are many anthologies out there nowadays which give the proceeds to this or that, and make a point of not paying their authors. My correspondent found nothing wrong with this; indeed, she considered placing work in such anthologies to be "good PR" which only cost her a day's work.
She then produced the phrase "people like you," and I'm afraid I stopped reading, kill-filed her, and went no-mail on that particular list. I'll give it a few days before I decide if I'll leave entirely.
Remember poetry, folks? People used to get paid for their poetry; nowadays, it's tougher to sell a poem (note: sell a poem, as opposed to place a poem) than it is to sell a novel. It seems to me that short stories are going the way of poetry. If enough people are willing to give away that "day's work" in the hope of garnering "good PR" or some other intangible goody, there will be no reason for anyone to buy short stories. Obviously, this will be good for publishers, who will have their choice of free content, but for authors and for readers -- not so good.
Here endeth the rant.
But that's not what I wanted to rant about. I wanted to rant about the decline of publishing, and the writers who buy in to their own destruction.
I've been off and on away from email, but as near as I can tell a call for submission for a particular anthology went out on two different writing lists of which I'm a member (at least for a little while longer) some time the middle of last week. The subject matter of the anthology doesn't really matter, nor does the publisher's name, actually. The important points are these: Projected pub date is some time in '08; cover artist, layout person, and of course the printer will be paid; all proceeds will go to a charity (it has not yet been decided which charity); the authors will not be paid, nor will the editor, who is reported to be doing the antho because they've always wanted to do an antho with this theme. But wait! All is not lost. The publisher is willing to sell copies of the anthology to contributing authors at cost+$2, so that the authors can sell the books at cons and book fairs and whatnot, and thus earn money for their work.
I gave as my opinion that the antho publisher was Taking Advantage of their prospective authors, which was ...not a popular viewpoint.
To her credit, the person who had posted the Call did try to clarify matters. Her press is usually a royalty-paying publisher, acquiring novels, which it then publishes in electronic and paper editions. Paper editions are produced via POD. She justified not giving authors an advance by stating that the house only buys the rights it intends to exploit, leaving the writer with the rest. She also pointed out that the publisher had not named a charity in its Call because it did not as yet have a charity in mind; they wished to remain flexible, should there be another disaster such as the recent tsunami near the publication date that might benefit from the profits earned by the antho. She even said that it was entirely possible that the publisher would have enough money to pay the authors by the time the book was published, and if that were the case, why then, of course they would do so.
All very nice. All very reasonable.
Except.
I am co-owner of SRM Publisher, which by any measure is a teensy-tiny press. We do publish some work by authors who are not Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, and we are a royalty-paying publisher, i.e. we pay a percentage of cover price to the author up-front when their book goes to press. Should the book go back to press, we cut the author another check, and so on. We only acquire works we can pay for. If someone comes to us with a project we'd really like to do, but we're in a cash-flow crunch -- we don't acquire the project with a promise of paying later. Life is uncertain, and until the money is in the bank, we can't know that we'll be able to make good on our promise. We have in the past raised money for projects by selling subscriptions, the money collected to be returned should we not gather enough to get the project off the ground. These are the sorts of things that small presses do, in order to stay viable.
Consider: The anthology in question isn't even going to be published until '08. Surely, there is some way the publisher can raise a tiny bit of money to make a token payment -- fifteen bucks flat; a penny a word; something -- to the person without whom there would be no project. After all, they're paying the artist and the layout person and the printer. A bake sale or two at a couple cons ought to be enough to cover the authors' piece of the action.
Two: The charity-to-be-named-later. What if the publisher, after it accepts my story, chooses a charity which is anathema to me -- the Republican Party, say?
Three: The issue of the house's general policy of not paying advances for the properties it acquires, justified by the fact that they allow authors to retain all the rights the house does not intend to exploit. On the face of it, this seems reasonable; those rights do, in theory, have value and ought to be exploited to the benefit of the author. But, how many of this publisher's authors go on to sell their foreign language, movie, game, or audiobook rights? Furthermore, the sale of those rights is, in the usual way of things, extra income, not meant to replace an advance withheld by the primary publisher.
Note that I am not throwing stones at those presses which pay royalties only. That would be hypocritical, since SRM is also a royalty-paying publisher. I mean only to point out the logical flaw in the argument: "We pay no advance because we allow authors to retain the rights we don't want to use." "We pay no advance because we're a micro-press and we can't afford it" may be lame, but it's at least intellectually honest.
As I said, these views and comments were not appreciated. So much so that one list member took it upon herself to write to me off-list, informing me of my ignorance; and stating that the publisher in question -- which was (surprise!) her publisher -- was a wonderful publisher, very author-friendly, with a beautiful contract. All of which may be so; I honestly don't know.
The list member went on to say that my comments regarding the anthology project had not only hurt the feelings of dozens of this house's authors, who were also on the list, but were an attack on the publisher which should never have been allowed into the list by the moderator. This now begins to get scary. A writers list which forbids discussion/criticism of publishers and their antics? What good is that to anyone?
My ...correspondent, I guess I'll have to call her, also allowed me to know that there are many anthologies out there nowadays which give the proceeds to this or that, and make a point of not paying their authors. My correspondent found nothing wrong with this; indeed, she considered placing work in such anthologies to be "good PR" which only cost her a day's work.
She then produced the phrase "people like you," and I'm afraid I stopped reading, kill-filed her, and went no-mail on that particular list. I'll give it a few days before I decide if I'll leave entirely.
Remember poetry, folks? People used to get paid for their poetry; nowadays, it's tougher to sell a poem (note: sell a poem, as opposed to place a poem) than it is to sell a novel. It seems to me that short stories are going the way of poetry. If enough people are willing to give away that "day's work" in the hope of garnering "good PR" or some other intangible goody, there will be no reason for anyone to buy short stories. Obviously, this will be good for publishers, who will have their choice of free content, but for authors and for readers -- not so good.
Here endeth the rant.
no subject
Date: 2005-06-11 09:28 am (UTC)I always wonder about writers who defend situations in which writers are treated like crap. I get the sense that they have never gotten over the 'gee, I'm actually being published' stage,
no subject
Date: 2005-06-11 09:51 am (UTC)A list of which you were never a member, I believe.
I always wonder about writers who defend situations in which writers are treated like crap.
It's maddening. Sort of like the folks who will defend the known scam agents. We watched one of Penn & Teller's Bullshit DVDs last night; they had some fascinating things to say about the ability of people to delude themselves. I suspect it's the same dynamic in play...