Friday 25 May 2012

Survey of Authors Reveals Widespread Dissastisfaction with Publishing Industry

A survey of professional authors has revealed serious levels of dissatisfaction with traditional publishers. One third of authors report that they were not consulted about marketing plans. Asked about marketing campaigns, 38.7% of authors chose the answer, ‘What marketing campaign? I never noticed one.’ Almost one-half of authors (45.8%) say that their publisher has never asked them for feedback.

When asked, ‘With your next book, if some other publisher offered you the same advance as your current one, would you move to the new house or stay where you are?’, just 37.3% of authors chose, ‘I’d stay.’ That implies about two-thirds of authors would prefer to move to a new publisher - or think hard about doing so.

The survey was commissioned by The Writers’ Workshop, an editorial consultancy. 323 authors responded. Those authors were generally much-published, typically by major publishing houses. The survey benefitted from the assistance of the Society of Authors, the Crime Writers Association, the Romantic Novelists Association and many others. We believe it to the the largest recent survey of its kind.

Harry Bingham, head of The Writers’ Workshop and himself an author, commented, ‘These results don’t surprise me, but they are sad. Authors want to love their publishers but there are key respects in which publishers are making that hard. Authors are underwhelmed by marketing that is too often ineffective. And standards of communication are miserable right across the industry.’

‘The problem with marketing is perhaps that publishers have not yet successfully migrated their marketing efforts to an increasingly digital world. As for the lack of communication, there is simply no excuse available. Publishers should seek to find out if their authors are happy and, if they’re not, they should seek to fix any problems. At the moment, our survey shows that only 1 in 5 authors is properly consulted.’

Other key stats included the following. Authors generally rated publishers excellent (43.9%) or good (30.5%) on editorial matters and either excellent (47.4%) or good (33.4%) on copyediting and proofreading. Still on the positive end of things, authors were generally highly (57.5%) or somewhat (35.5%) satisfied with cover design. Only 41% of authors achieved advances in excess of GBP5,000 (a finding which confirms the picture of a 2007 ALCS study).

Asked about whether their publisher consulted with them on marketing, only 19.7% of authors said that they had been ‘closely involved’. The other responses included ‘I was consulted, but my involvement was marginal’ (31.3%), and ‘There was no attempt at consultation’ (33%).

Asked whether they would ever consider cutting out their publisher altogether in favour of e-publishing, only 26.0% of authors responded, ‘No, I would always want a publisher to guide me.’

The full dataset, and a longer commentary from Harry Bingham, has been released on The Writers’ Workshop’s blog.

Tuesday 22 May 2012

Thursday 17 May 2012

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Thursday 10 May 2012

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Sunday 6 May 2012

That's Books: New from author Lee Baldwin

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How I wrote a story

The story "No Lips to Scream With" is a Science Fiction story I wrote.

How I came to write this story is different to how I write most of my fictional pieces.

An idea came to me for the end of a story: "...He tried to scream, but his lips fell off."

That made me laugh. I mean... how could that be? How could someone's lips fall off?

What if it was a dreadful alien disease for which there was no cure? A disease that made parts of the body (lips, nose, fingers, etc.) quickly start to fall off, once the infection had set in?

But how did the disease get out into the wild?

What if a kindly, gentle race was experimenting with a universal vaccine? What if this vaccine had somehow caused a plague that killed everyone it came into contact with? Then I thought that the world phage seemeds more deadly than plague, so the disease became a phage.

OK, then? What was this race called? Revilians. And they tried to stop the disease from spreading at home bgy sending out plague barge ships crammed with the sick and dying, spreading the disease far and wide.

A survey ship finds an Earth ship that was 500 years old. The crew had been killed by a virus, perhaps a variation of the Martian strain of flu that had killed the second Mars expedition, as theorised by the survey ship's doctor?

However, the doctor is certain that the Universal Mega Vaccine -developed in the meantime- would protect them. The only thing the Universal Mega Vaccine could not cure was the Revilian Phage, but as the symptoms of the disease were nothing like Revilian Phage, they knew it could not be that.


However, they realise that the 500-year-old ship had come into contact with a Revilian plague barge.


The ship's doctor was able to theorise that in its 'natural' state, Revilian Phage caused the deadly flu-like ailment, but with the addition of Universal Mega Vaccine it transmuted into the current form of the disease.


Readers will note that as the world is far into the future I took a guess on what the language would be like. If you do read it, please check at those words!
 No Lips to Scream With