Last
week I attended the Society of Authors AGM in London. (As with all these
events, it was a great way to meet up with writing friends as well!) After
Philip Pullman welcomed us all, the Society presented its plans for a new
updated more user-friendly website, before holding a panel discussion. Publishing
expert Alison Baverstock chaired it and the panel members were Ian Skillicorn
of Corazon Books, who also runs the National Short Story Week in the UK, Gordon
Wise of the Curtis Brown agency and Nigel Wilcockson, a publishing director of Penguin
Random House. They each presented very lucid and entertaining insights into the
publishing industry and the author’s role within it, so I thought I’d share
some of those insights – and leave it to you to decide whether you agree or
disagree!
Authors
are constantly challenged to find the time to write – and to absorb
potential material to inspire their writing. Alison Baverstock said that ‘reading
is the engine of being able to write.’ So true. Nigel Wilcockson referred us to
the nothing-new-under-the-sun aspect of this writing malarkey. How can we
maintain creative integrity and still respond to the commercial terms of our
industry? He quoted George Gissing in New Grub Street, in 1891: ‘You have to be
true to yourself. You cannot write something you do not believe in.’ Well, you
can, really. People do it all the time.
Writers
are constantly adjured to write the book that’s true to them, the story they
believe in, heart and soul. So, they go ahead and write that book. Publishers
then encourage them to understand the market, and may well turn their work down because of market concerns – Nigel said, rather
quellingly, ‘Never assume that quality will out.’ Cue many audience members
wincing.
If
we understand our market, we pitch our work to better effect. If that work is
then bought and published, we still need to pitch it to the wider public. This has
to be done properly: Alison said ‘There is a massive difference between getting
attention and getting approval.’ There’s no point in using Twitter, Facebook,
Instagram or any other social media, if all you do is holler ‘Buy my book, buy
my book!’ We need to establish conversations and relationships – but doing this
takes up more of the precious time and psychic energy the creation of further
work demands.
How
to strike the balance? How can we get people to listen to us? ‘In a very noisy
universe, you have to make your own noise as well,’ Nigel says. Gordon talks of
social media usage as ‘drops into the pond’ – ripples go out from that drop. He
says that author and publisher are ‘business partners’, that ‘it’s pushing
water uphill to get any exposure’ and that if your genre is in trouble, you
should have a serious conversation with your agent and maybe consider changing
your name.
I’ve
talked about this in the past, this industry obsession with the new and
untried. Untried means hasn’t failed. Yet. So, if you’re the kind of writer who
needs to be nurtured over the course of several books, or if you want to switch genre, you may be in trouble.
The pressure is on to hit the ground running and stay running on the same track. If not, change
your identity. I find this such a depressing, defeatist way to go about things.
Even the great J.K. Rowling has to write as another person, even after we know
it’s really her – and as another male personage, at that. The shelves are full
of thrillers with initials rather than first names …. Well, that’s a whole
other blogpost.
Ian
Skillicorn sensibly pointed out that authors don’t just need to compete for
attention with other writers but with all the ways potential readers now spend
their free time, in this always-on digital age.
Practical
advice? Have a web presence, definitely. If you’re using social media, perhaps
concentrate on one or two rather than the scattergun effect of trying to use
all. I concentrate on Facebook, but have a Twitter presence and a Pinterest
account. I’m not yet on Instagram though it seems to be becoming more popular.
Be
clear with your publisher when it comes to the terms of your contract. This
includes knowing which rights they will exploit. Bring your book to the
publisher in as ‘edited’ a state as possible. Know your market. Fill out your
author questionnaire with useful information including possible publicity
opportunities.
Publicity
needs to come early and be properly planned. No good approaching a magazine in
the month before your book comes out when its lead time is more like six
months.
Be
focussed. Know where your book would sit in the bookstore. Know who your
potential readers are: ‘It’s not always about having the biggest splash, it’s
about being targeted,’ says Ian Skillicorn.
Timely
reminder: ‘It’s a business, writing.’ (Nigel Wilcockson)
Uplifting
thought: ‘There are more creators than ever, more opportunities than ever. You
can find a niche for your books that you couldn’t have had before.’ (Ian
Skillicorn)
Two-edged
thought of the day: Alison Baverstock reminded us that we don’t necessarily
need validation by publishing – ‘Some of the happiest writers I’ve met haven’t
published.’
I’ll
leave you to mull over that one!
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1 comment:
Thank you. A very helpful and interesting view of the publishing world. I'll pass it on to my writing friends.
best wishes, Marg Roberts
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