Pages

Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

3/12/13

On Howey Changed Publishing

Full Disclosure: I know the guy and like his stuff.


Hugh Howey has changed the publishing industry. Sort of. Perhaps a more accurate statement is: Hugh Howey has dug away at a corner of the business model of the modern publishing industry. It was a slow process and he describes it in detail here. This is an exciting time in the publishing industry, here’s why:


The publishing industry has long maintained tight control of the works they publish, not out of a desire to turn authors into content-producing slaves, it is simply how everyone got paid. Authors have usually sold the rights to their books to publishers in exchange for a large advance followed by royalties once sales of the book have paid for the advance. This isn’t an unusual relationship, and is a valid way of doing business. Content creators work for hire all the time in every industry. They produce works that will be owned by the publisher and in return receive a paycheck. It has worked for TV, film, video games, and comic books, but even that is changing with self-publishing avenues like You Tube (Geek and Sundry and Machinima), Netflix (House of Cards), and even Kickstarter where consumers become the money behind content.


The system was shaken up when Amazon and others began selling ebooks. Self-publishing has now turned the industry upside down and we are still discovering where all the bits and pieces will settle.


One way the traditional publishers have adjusted is to treat the self-published market as a farm system for authors. Authors enter the minor leagues and when their stuff gets good enough they get called up to the majors. This works well enough: publishers get high quality content that has a proven track record and a solid fan-base and pay the author a substantial amount of money while authors give up ownership of their work for a large advance and royalties.


Now, though, there may be another way. Howey demanded a change in the traditional relationship between author and publisher. He wants to own what he writes. As he put it: “It was about the partnership”. Until now, that was a non-starter for publishers and it is easy to see their perspective. By not owning all of the rights, by making the author a partner, they leave money on the table. Publishers don’t want to be relegated to boutique status, they want to continue to be the gatekeepers to the the works that people read. There is a lot of money in being a gatekeeper.


As authors become more and more business savvy, as more and more authors become successful self-publishers, the number of authors willing to sell the rights to their works will drop. Howey has provided an example of how to maintain ownership of content and still get his works into the hands of his fans. This will not be the last deal of its kind. Publishers need to learn how to make money by putting self-published books onto bookshelves.


We’re living in a world where artists can reach their audience directly. It’s still hard work to build fans, and publishers can certainly provide a short-cut to them. But in this new world, publishers need to find where they fit. Maybe they do need to be the major leagues, maybe they need to be purveyors of great quality hardcopies, maybe they need to be promoters and buzz-builders. Whatever they case, the publishing industry is in flux and it will be exciting to see the direction that it takes.

6/22/12

On Tigana

Book Friday today sees us at the end (finally) of Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay. You can find a description of the book here, along with some decent purchase options, though it's still not available in the US as an ebook. You can apparently switch your region to UK, purchase the book, then switch it back to US without any negative repercussions. I haven't tried this myself so try at your own risk.


Tigana deals with some fascinating questions including how memory affects our daily lives, what happens when our memories are allowed to rule our lives, what does freedom mean, what does oppression do to our behavior and what means and ends are justified. Kay deals with these topics in an engaging story and by placing dynamic characters in untenable situations.


The language in Tigana is flowery. Kay spent time with Christopher Tolkien working on The Silmarillion after J.R.R. Tolkien's death and it shows. I thought the language fit the setting and the story that Kay wanted to tell, but that style can be distracting and difficult some readers. I found myself drifting occasionally through descriptions lasting several paragraphs.


I enjoyed Tigana thoroughly and plan to pick up some of Kay's other works next time I find myself in the mood for some fantasy. Next week we'll be back on science fiction; I recently picked up a book by Heinlein that was completed from his notes by Spider Robinson. It's called Variable Star. It's available for 7.99 in mass market and kindle editions and looks terrific.


 


Andrew


 


Reading:


Variable Star, Heinlein and Robinson. 0/318


Completed:


Tigana, Guy Gavriel Kay.

6/8/12

Fuzzies Everywhere

Not only is this Book Friday, this is my test post from the Squarespace app on my iPod. As far as soft keyboards go, I actually like this keyboard in landscape mode, I think it works quite well. So to the matters at hand.

I enjoyed Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper a great deal. There were some strange, almost anachronistic aspects to it (maybe the wrong word, but I think it conveys what I mean). For example, rather than sending an audio file, if someone wanted to transmit a recording to someone else wirelessly, they would play it for them at "60 speed" and the other person would record it and play it back at a normal rate later. This seems to be product of sixties tech combined with an author whose focus is on character interactions and plot rather than gadgets.

Piper also portrays the characters as having very "Colonial" attitudes towards other sapient races. This felt very much at odds with the contemporary paradigm surrounding First Contact scenarios and interspecies relations.

Another interesting note is that Piper seems to take a different approach to conflict than most of our modern stories. While today the heroes of our stories generally struggle and fight their way through the plot, the protagonists in Little Fuzzy seam to steamroll their way over the antagonists with only relatively minor inconveniences. It resulted in the protagonists eventual victory seeming a little less triumphant.

Despite these issues, and maybe sometimes because of them, I felt that Little Fuzzy is worth the read, especially since you can get it for free from the Amazon Kindle store. Sure there are plot issues and character issues and setting issues, but it's a fun book and fanboy can be (auto-correct correction) thought provoking if you come to it in the right mindset.

Next Friday should be a mini-review of Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay. It's been captivating so far. I'll add links to this post later.

Andrew

Tigana, Guy Gavriel Kay. Page 247/676

5/24/12

Fuzzy Nation: Thoughts and Comments

Fridays will generally be a day for discussing books, whether reviewing something I've read or talking about upcoming works. I'll be sticking quite closely to the science fiction genre, and occasionally adding in some fantasy and others. Today I have some quick notes about Fuzzy Nation(Amazon.com).


Fuzzy Nation by John Scalzi is actually a "reboot" of H. Beam Piper's Little Fuzzy, available free in e-book format right now along with many other works by Piper. I just noticed this on Amazon and they're listed as public domain works so I'm assuming they will stay free. I'll let you read the description of Fuzzy Nation of your own and spare you the book report.


Scalzi is a clever writer. He's funny without being silly; his writing is compact and straightforward. I was expecting something on the goofy side after reading the description and was quite pleased to find that he approached the book in such a way that I didn't feel like I was reading a YA novel. The book delves into some deep thematic elements including what it means to be sapient, what the exploitation of extra-solar planets will look like and motivations for making moral decisions.


I doubt the book should be read as a treatise on those themes, however. When it's at it's best, science fiction uses characters to grapple with our issues in a setting different from ours to give us perspective on those issues. Fuzzy Nation does this by being serious in theme without being serious in tone.


While it may not be the most important science fiction book ever written, it is in the upper echelon of the genre. Scalzi deals with some important issues in a clever, compact and well written book that I'd highly recommend. 8/10


 


Andrew