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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

This article is relevant to all authors

It takes a strong spine to be a publisher - appeared in the Willimantic Chronicle of 5/24/2011

By MICHAEL LEVIN Commentary The publishing world gathers next week in Manhattan at BookExpo America, its annual trade show, but the one subject attendees won’t be discussing is the coming collapse of publishing and the inevitable disappearance of books.

It’s not just that books are going to Kindles and iPads. It’s that books are going away, and the publishers have no one but themselves to blame.

The traditional New York publishing busi­ness model — publish a ton of books, fail to market most of them, and hope that somebody buys something — worked well when publish­ers had a hammerlock on the distribution and marketing of books. Publishers essentially faced no competition and enjoyed complete control of what books people could publish and sell.

In today’s world, however, anyone from John Grisham to John Doe can put up a book online with Smashwords, Lulu or Kindle Direct and bypass publishers — and bookstores — all together. Authors can use Google AdWords or social networking strategies to market their books far more effectively than publishers ever could. So who needs New York?

Yes, Kindle and iPad are game-changers. When you read books on a device, a few things change. You’re moving into an envi­ronment where you typically don’t pay for content — almost everything online is free. So publishers won’t be able to charge $10 or
$12 for an entire book when people only want a chapter’s worth of information. So much for e-books as a revenue stream for the publishing houses.

Publishers can also blame Amazon for the collapse of their industry. When you went into a bookstore, you typically browsed and bought a handful of books, each from a dif­ferent department. Amazon killed browsing. You go on, you find the book you wanted, you pay and you leave. So instead of buying five books, you buy just one.

But the real reason why books are going to vanish is the remarkably un- businesslike busi­ness model of the publishers. Think of General Motors — decades of inefficiency but without the federal bailouts.

In no other industry do producers actu­ally wait passively to see what products are suggested to them, instead of doing market research to see what people really want to buy. Yet publishers seldom generate book ideas; instead they wait for literary agents to submit proposals. Houses decide which book to publish based on little more than a gut feel­ing that says, “I think we can make money selling this” Yet the books that publishers choose are almost entirely of zero interest to actual bookbuyers. After 9/ 11, there were a ton of books about 9/ 11, which nobody bought. Same thing with the Iraq War, the rise of
Obama, the economic meltdown and the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Or the books are rehashed business lessons, religious truths, sports clichés, motivational babble, exercise fads, weight loss techniques or pandering to the political left or the right. Who wants these books? Almost no one.

Most of the major publishers today are owned by international conglomerates who, at some point, will awaken to the realization that English majors in their employ are spending millions of dollars on books that no one wants to read.

As a result, few trade books earn real money for the publisher (and certainly not for the author). That’s because the publisher bears the entire risk of buying, editing, printing, and shipping copies of the book to bookstores all over the country on a 100 percent returnable basis. If your local Barnes & Noble doesn’t sell a particular book, it goes right back to the publisher, at the publisher’s shipping cost, for a full refund. Especially in the Internet era, you can’t make money putting books on trucks and hoping someone buys them.

At the expo next week, the attendees will solemnly discuss the latest trends, discuss how to get 70-year-old authors to use Twitter, and generally party like it’s 1989. But for traditional publishing, the party’s over. They just don’t want to realize that it’s time to turn out the lights.

Levin is a best-selling author and a former member of the Authors Guild Council.

How to Break the Rules and Get Published

I saw this article on Writer's Digest. It seeks to balance writers' efforts to seek publication without compromising their artistic qualities.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Agents

I sent my latest query letter to an agent and received a request for the first chapter of my first novel. Apparently the promise in my novels' synopses did not translate to a favorable evaluation by the agent. I was rejected for not having a good enough hook.

In discussing this with my editor, she said, "Don't be discouraged. It's a good book. I know you'll find a home for it!"

I reworked the first chapter of the first novel and sent it off to another agent.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Writers Workshop

I attended a writers workshop today at the Hartford Public Library. Agent Jan Kardys presented an all-encompassing review of the publishing world from sending a query letter to agents through self-publishing as an option. I learned some new and interesting information and hopefully it will help me in my quest to become a published author.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Query Letter Out

I mailed my query letter to an agent on Monday pitching the three completed novels in the Jim Buchanan Series. Now I have begun working on my fourth novel in the series, Secrets of the Bob Marshall Wilderness.

In this latest novel, the rumor of an abandoned gold and silver mine brings together a group of young friends in search of lost riches. However, greed, misplaced trust, a murder, an early winter storm, and a 19th century legend lead to their downfall. Jim risks his own life to find and save them, sort out the evidence, and pull all the pieces together.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Query Letters

Today I'm mailing my latest query letter. I met with an agent last year at a writers conference hosted by the Connecticut Authors & Publishers Association. She said I selected the right agent and offered positive feedback on 'Mystery at Little Bitterroot' which I used to finalize that novel. With all three novels now professionally edited I am extending the courtesy of letting that agent review my novels before I query other agents.