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#676 | |
Wizard
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#677 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I could put forward a case that a library patron who requests books be purchased, borrows them, puts reviews on Goodreads (etc), and enthuses about them on social media, is "carrying" an author far more than a person who buys their book on release day, reads it, then sits it on their shelf for the rest of their life.
But I don't think attempting to judge people in that way is useful or productive. Enjoy your reading. Spread the word to people who you think will enjoy it too. Pay your taxes. Advocate/vote in a way for your community that has the greatest potential to spread books and literacy and writing and creativity to all, not just to those who can afford a roomful of new hardbacks or giving up their day job to write fulltime (and I won't be any more specific or invite any more specificity than that, because this isn't P&R). Books and stories are for everyone. Last edited by meeera; 09-06-2019 at 08:27 AM. |
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#678 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#679 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Some treat their authors fairly (BAEN is generally held up as a publisher with very good author relations) though they tend to be small and midsized publishers not "Ten thousand titles a year" monsters. And, then, successful Indies come with established fanbases. No real work needs doing building the brand so their agents have the leverage to demand better terms than the "Industry Standard". Like guaranteed payola support. Or, like the big boys; big enough advances the royalty rate doesn't matter. (For a guy like Patterson, "selling" a manuscript is *selling* the manuscript. The upfront payment is bigger than most books make in 100 years of copyright. It only applies to maybe a dozen authors but for a big enough Indie... Andy Weir, for example, got the movie deal *before* the Tradpub deal: the movie tie-in justified big bucks. Tradpub loooves tie-ins. Again, no promotion required. Not even payola.) It's doubtful they can match KOBO/KDP rates on ebooks but they *can* match the old APub Scout 50% rate. Most authors are willing to accept that though few publishers have shown interest in it. Main drivers would be print, audio (expensive up front) and library sales. Ebook sales would be a wash or lower, both because of higher prices. The single biggest problem with Tradpub for established Indies isn't necessarily the money or even IP control but rather the pacing of releases and the scheduling; one release a year (occasionally two) and limited sales reporting every six months, a year to 18 months apart, is a far cry from KDP and Kobo daily monitoring and monthly reports and payments. It's not as life bills arrive twice a year, a year late. ![]() Different strokes for different folks. The key word is "established". That generally requires a back catalog of 5-20 titles, depending on genre. Indies can do that in three-five years, even without instant success at launch. Few tradpub newcomers get there without a "black swan" which is why there are so few newly-established tradpub authors and so many one hit wonders, despite (or because) the lower sales needed to hit the list in this age of diluted reader spending and the eternal backlist. (Readers have more choices of older, known good, books and they exercise those choices.) If you check the financial reports and insider stories, backlist is the main driver of big trade publishing these days, making up over 50% of the net. Frontlist has been declining steadily since 2014 and most noticeably since 2016. (The election did it!) You may have seen this, last week: https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/...f-of-2019.html The reported growth was driven by folding in sales of previously independent publishers, and one-time political books, one-time deals, etc. Notably: Quote:
https://publishingperspectives.com/2...consolidation/ Finally, the numbers of successful Indies going Tradpub aren't really all that big. Certainly way lower than tradpub authors going Hybrid or full Indie. But the establishment media doesn't report the latter as breathlessly as the former. Wouldn't do to highlight how tradpub authors supplement their declining (their words, not mine) tradpub revenues by doing Indie releases in between their slotted tradpub releases. The transition continues and it hasn't yet stabilized into a viable balance between tradpub and Indie. It looks to be a generation wide change that won't settle down for another decade or two, when the last of the pre-2010 authors retire. By then the business might indeed be randy Penguin on one side and a horde of Indies and small presses on the other side. Last edited by fjtorres; 09-06-2019 at 07:51 AM. |
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#680 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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You last point first, yes, I've read authors say that because of the breakout of their sales (print, audio, ebook), they thought that going indie would simply be leaving money on the table. I suspect that the pros and cons of indie verse traditional publisher tends to vary from writer to writer. As far as not paying the writer if he doesn't earn out, I think you are simply trying to play semantics games to make it sound like the author gets no benefit if I buy his book. I buy the book from a merchant and the purchase is eventually credited to the account of author. Advances are based on expected sales. Authors who don't earn out, either don't get new contracts or get lesser advances. A sale is a sale. POD - print cost are really a small part of the actual price of a print book. Someone in the publishing business broke out the cost a while back in one of the threads that I read on this forum. If I recall correctly it came to perhaps a couple of dollars. I suspect that print cost of POD is a bit higher than that, but the equipment prices have really come down a lot. It's the same reason that many musicians have their own recording studio at home now. The prices have come down to a point that it's affordable. If I recall correctly, Jim Baen mentioned a number of years ago that he, like most publishers sub contract out the actual printing and there are a handful of printing companies that handles most of the book printing. This was part of the explanation of why it took so long from when an author handed in the finished manuscript to when it was actually published. They had to schedule the print run some 6 months in advance. I suspect this hasn't changed all that much. Of course, boutique printing, i.e. custom printing a book and having it hand bound, is much, much more labor intensive and expensive. (A friend of mine's daughter working in such an operation in NYC as an intern one summer) Last edited by pwalker8; 09-06-2019 at 07:54 AM. |
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#681 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#682 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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In my local system, for both paper books and ebooks, everyone who places a purchase request also has a book reserve placed in their name in the system, and the number of reserves is visible to logged-in library users when the book goes onto the Ordered list in the library catalogue. So I in fact have an extremely accurate idea of how many people also placed a purchase request for a book I have requested. It's usually 1; sometimes 2 or 3. The pbook library is not a small-town library, it's a standard suburban one; four B&M branches in one LGA, joined into a single book/catalogue pool. The ebook library is a State one. Are you trying to change the goalposts to some hand-waving "total book spend" rather than "ways to support your favourite authors" now? Last edited by meeera; 09-06-2019 at 08:25 AM. |
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#683 | |
Guru
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It's true that most of these books are not newly published but they are not consistently over a decade old either and a very few, such as Sea People: The Puzzle of Polynesia by Christina Thompson were actually put on sale shortly after publication (Release date was mid-march, I bought the book for $1.99 Can in June). |
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#684 | |
Wizard
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Of course, most "indies" don't put brand new books on sale for $1.99-2.99 either, any more than the traditional publishers do. (Note that I am not counting the indie books that are regularly priced at those levels in that statement) When they do put new books on sale, it is more akin to what happens in book stores when they put new bestsellers on sale for 10-25% off. As I've said in other threads, I've *never* paid full list price for a hardcover book, not even when I bought the last 2 Harry Potter books on release day. Shari |
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#685 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#686 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I think it's pretty rare for anyone to pay list price for hardcover fiction books. I've seen some non fiction that weren't discounted from the list price. Certainly, established indies with a fanbase don't put their new books on sale for one or two bucks. Five bucks seems to the normal price at the moment. At least most of the indie authors that I read price their new books at that price point. |
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#687 |
Karma Kameleon
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I think some of us are missing the forest for the trees. From my perspective anyway. Buy a hard back, borrow a friends book. Fine. Just keep in mind that this isn't milk and butter and bread. Spend a LITTLE of your mind space on "am I supporting the art" or am I just being cheap.
Am I borrowing a book from the library because "I paid taxes" or is it really just a free way to read a book. And MAYBE....since you like Mary McBook Writer's stories that you buy your own copy to help keep Mary in the business of writing books. Or perhaps you think Alan Indie Author writing in his spare time is worthy of your purchase so that he can leave his day job and write full time. Some of you seem to get this. When it comes to "not buying a book from the Big 5 because you don't like xyz business practice"....that's the SAME THING. It's understanding that you are not just reading, you are voting with your wallet. Vote with your MONEY....support your authors. |
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#688 | |
Gentleman and scholar
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I get emails from Bookbub and those $1.99 books get me to sample a lot of authors I otherwise wouldn't try. There's also a lot of authors I enjoy well enough, but they aren't favorites and I get their books on sale. But then there's writers like Stephen King who's work I enjoy tremendously. He's entertained me for years and I'm glad he's still writing. I've already pre-ordered The Institute for $14.99. I understand at this point Stephen King doesn't need my money. But he got to where he was because so many people bought his books when they were new, rather than waiting for them to appear at the remainder table. Then there's Dennis L. McKiernan. I've been surprised his most famous book, The Iron Tower wasn't available as an ebook. Finally, after years of waiting it was released a month ago. Once I saw it was out, I bought the book at asking price rather than waiting for the price to drop. Because I wanted to support him. No, you aren't obligated to buy every book you read at full MSRP. You aren't even obligated to buy every book you read. You aren't a monster for borrowing from a library. But if there's a writer that you consider a favorite, particularly if that writer is a midlister who likely doesn't support themselves purely by their writing income, buy their books. Tell them that their hard work is worth more than $0.99 to you. Why is that controversial? Last edited by ZodWallop; 09-09-2019 at 03:15 PM. |
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#689 |
Grand Sorcerer
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It isn't.
When it's voluntary. When choosing not to do it comes with adjectives or it's set up as a virtuosity test there will be pushback, though. Or when it's set up as a virtuosity test. Not everybody can afford to (or chooses to) feed their reading addiction at full price. Different strokes for different folks. Do as you please but don't present it as a standard. Others have different opinions. |
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#690 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Very few books I buy cost as little as 1-2 bucks. Some indies are $2.99, but most of my purchases fall between 4-9 dollars/euros (depending on where I buy them). Nevertheless, because I'm not willing to pay more than 10 € for any ebook, I got the label "skinflint" along with many other posters here. Yeah, that's insulting.
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