MMWUC: The answer is blowing in the wind
Involuntarily, I got dragged into an argument over
self-publishing vs. traditional publishing. Some days I get tired of this
discussion. Bottom line: every writer needs to go the best path for him or her.
"Chatting with the same friends over & over is great, because I forget after about ten seconds what they say." |
Yes, we all know that the traditional publication
business favors massive block busters and celebrity one-shot wonders. The
business is in disarray and the big houses are collapsing into each other. Soon
they will be a BLOB with only smaller presses hovering around it like small
moons around a giant gaseous planet. However, like in all walks of life, there
are still honest and reputable persons in this industry (agents and editors and
publishers) sniffing around for that writer who has that something else, the
zing to their words, that style to their prose, that story that rises above all
the other barely retreaded tales with a fresh perspective on humankind. If you
have that, you should really, really look for an agent despite the miserable
returns they offer--the potential national exposure far exceeds what most
writers get from hobnobbing with the same people over and over again on the
social media marketing circuit.
"It's Marvin Gaye. 'What's going on?'" |
Conversely, self-publishing is not the panacea to
literary stardom or financial independence that people shout about. Sure there
are those exceptions who make it, and immediately sign with a big traditional
publishing house, but, in general, most self-published writers are too
impatient with their wares, unwilling or unable to deal with the soak time and
editorial bitch-slapping necessary to make their story rise above the average
story that is 5-rated by friends and family and then sits, after about six
months, on the shelf like another can of beans (thanks for the image Billy Joel). But it can be fun. It can be exciting to try different styles and genres
without the gate-keepers. I'm publishing a book of poetry in April, after
having put out a short story anthology, which was preceded by three mystery
novels of considerable length. Would happen in the traditional publishing
world. It makes me happy to do the side projects. Just wish it made me money...I'm
honest.
"Murder! Murder! I'm outta here." |
I remember taking a fiction writing class with Lee Smith
in 1988 at NCSU. A well-respected agent was brought in as a guest lecturer one
week to talk about her job. Like lap dogs, we all asked the normal questions,
but the tone got a bit more contentious when Lee asked why the agent's share
(and many other agents) had recently gone from 10% to 15%. The agent seemed a
bit offended by the question, but slapped on that professional smile and said,
"Well, I have to work a bit harder now to make a sale." End of
lecture.
Well, I have to work a bit harder now too, and it didn't
seem like a good reason for her or the industry to pick the pocket of the
person producing the goods at the time. Why is it always the producer (writer,
artist, farmer, fisherman, etc.) who always seems to get screwed the worst? I
guess it's because we love what we do the most regardless of how we find those
who appreciate it.
5 comments:
This is a really good and timely post, Rick. I think I shall share the link. :-)
Ms. Dolittle does a lot by sharing. Thanks mucho.
Well said, Rick. While we love what we do, the dollars (incoming-if and when they arrive) are a bonus. Hearing from readers who enjoy our work is the motivation and reward, or else we wouldn't be writing.
Whether published or self published, the bottom line is how we love to share our words.
Great post.
Thanks Rosalie...Gotta love the words or the words won't love you back.
You bring balance and perspective to what is often an acrimonious partisan debate. Thank you.
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