Monday, March 12, 2012

MARRIED TO THE HIT MAN

Hello World.

  Recently a writer friend called and, with jolly sarcasm,  asked me, "How does it feel to be married to the hit man?"  I had to sit down on that one. Then I had to backtrack.  Several months ago,  Businessweek Magazine ran a lead article and photograph of Larry Kirshbaum,  once powerful and well-liked Chairman and CEO of The Warner Book Group in New York City. The article was headlined "AMAZON'S HIT MAN."

Back in May, 2011, Amazon  announced they had hired this same Larry Kirshbaum to run Amazon Publishing,  their new New York based imprint aimed at publishing fiction and non-fiction books which would hopefully rival traditional (or legacy) publishers, i.e., the Big Six. Well. Kirshbaum was instantly  reviled as a "turncoat,"  a man who had "sold out,"  who had "gone over to the dark side."  The venom and rancor  and name-calling will no doubt volley back and forth for several years, as we are in the midst of a major battle while the tectonic plates of publishing heave and shift, and change the industry, and perhaps our lives, forever.

Insiders are  calling it the Legacy Wars,  pitching Amazon – the upstart, the innovative toughie – against the century-old NewYork publishing world, so lagging behind in foresight,  efficiency, in equitable author's rights.  So sadly in need of CHANGE.  This  escalating bloodbath has left writers with the sensation of a temporal-spatial deficit disorder:  Unsure of where we stand in this, we don't know who to root for, who to condemn,  or where to turn. We don't know our right foot from our left. Yes, it's war. And Kirshbaum, the penultimate New York publisher, has gone over to Amazon, the "enemy. "

(In his defense, the forward-thinking  Kirshbaum was  predicting the advent of electronic books – even attempting to launch an electronic reader – a decade before anyone else in the industry.)

So, what I wonder is this:  if he is a turncoat,  a traitor, what does that say about  authors like me, and Joe Konrath, and Barry Eisler, and a dozen other authors formerly published by the Big Six, who have crossed over  and contracted for their next book (digital and print)  with...Amazon.  Eisler,  a perennial bestseller, says he is now accused of "shilling" for Amazon. Joe Konrath, another bestseller,  is a millionaire (or very close), thanks to his self-published books and to Amazon.  He's smart and hilarious and supports Amazon, and doesn't give a damn what the world thinks.

But some of us are not  yet that successful, not that well-known. Nancy Pearl, the librarian/author  who had signed with Amazon talks of the outpouring of vitriol on her Facebook and Twitter. Some of my acquaintances  have stopped talking to me,  legacy-published diehards who see Amazon as a drooling succubus that will ultimately devour  all of publishing,  then all of human civilization as we know it. A former friend called me a sellout and a slut.  Oh, my.

  In fact, I did not exactly cross over;  I was catapulted.  I will not reiterate the whole sordid story of how,  against their contractual obligations,  Penguin Publishing terminated my book contract  for my forthcoming novel,  simply because I self-published two story collections, HOUSE OF SKIN and CANNIBAL NIGHTS on Amazon Kindle, their arch-enemy (the editor's words.)  This, in spite of the fact that  several years back Penguin had  turned down these same  prize-winning stories as a collection.  For those of you unfamiliar with the background of this  psycho-drama, please see my blog post "SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY."  August 25, 2011.

I  had, in fact, stopped giving interviews about this fiasco. How I ended up on the front lines of this legacy war, I  still do not know. Surely, I am not the first author to be fired by a publisher.  I wanted it behind me.  If there was media-attention to be had, I hoped it would be focused on my forthcoming novel.

 Alas.  Reporters have their own  agendas. They continue to write articles about my struggles with Penguin,  speculating  on why it happened,  who was right and who was wrong, and would we go to court.  Erroneous facts  are reported. Wrong assumptions made. Wrong conclusions drawn.  So... in answer to  the  hundreds of queries sent me and the  amazingly supportive  responses to my 8/25/11 blog (from as far away as Scotland, Sweden, Ukraine)  asking how this tragi-comedy played out, did I pay back the  advance?  what happened to my book?  here  is my response, my  attempt at closure.  Only now am I able to discuss it publicly. And then I hope I can put it to rest. (Though I will answer any queries.)

In the end - after reviewing contracts and all correspondence – a brilliant attorney, Jan Constantine,  Legal Counsel for the Author's Guild,  agreed that  I had fulfilled all my contractual obligations to Penguin.  I had done nothing illegal.  Therefore  they had no grounds to terminate me.  If I were rich and brave, I would have dragged them into court and sued them.  (Which would have taken years, huge sums of money,  and possibly left me brain-dead.)  Instead, I took the high road and repaid the $20,000 partial advance Penguin demanded back,  until which time  they were holding my novel  hostage.

As a result of that blog posting, "SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY," Amazon Publishing approached me and invited me to consider publishing my novel with them.  Several other Big Six publishers  also approached me, offering to publish the book.  One was an editor I have corresponded with and like very much.  But here is the thing:  they were still offering the same old, outmoded book contract, with the same  anachronistic  terms and royalties that have kept authors in bondage for decades. The same old 15-page contracts written in micro-script (that even under a magnifying glass weirdly resembles Urdu) to intentionally befuddle authors and keep them ignorant and infantile. The same old twice-annual royalty statements that are often illogical,  erroneous and require auditors.  (After such an auditing, one friend found her publisher has shortchanged her on her royalty statement by...ten thousand books.)

So this is why I chose to sign a contract with Amazon Publishing.  Because the Senior Acquisitions Editor, Andy Bartlett,  is extremely articulate, a lover of books, with a Ph.D. in Literature. Because he carefully read my manuscript, then spent hours (literally) discussing with me what  he loved about the book,  and how he envisioned marketing it in the U.S. and globally.   And because...Amazon's royalty rates ( especially for ebooks) are  exactly TWICE what New York publishers offer. And because they consulted me every step along the way while drawing up my contract.

Because...they discussed with me  when to release my book digitally (before or simultaneously with print.) Because... of their swift production time.  Because...they have consulted with me on pricing, packaging, the title,  the cover.  Because...their non-compete clause allows me to continue self-publishing on Kindle if I choose.  Because...their contract is only  six (6!) pages long,  and completely comprehensible.  Because...of their  incredible global marketing push. And again, because of a constantly accessible, articulate, compassionate editor.  In short, they made me an offer I could not refuse.

 My novel, THE SPY LOVER,  will be  published by Amazon's Thomas & Mercer in August, 2012.

Sound too good to be true?  Perhaps. In spite of all of the above,  I am still holding my breath. Why?  Because Amazon IS a goliath.  It's exclusive, and  potentially threatening to the livelihood of  bookstores, to competitors,  and even the publishing  industry as we know it. Yes, Amazon is radically and ingeniously innovative,  it's considerate of its authors, and its readers. It does not overprice its books. Still, it's in danger of becoming a monopoly and needs strong, healthy competition. Which is why, in spite of being axed by Penguin, in spite of having felt temporarily desperate and futureless,  I do NOT  wish to see  traditional publishers, the Big Six, fail.  I do not wish to see them collapse as many people, even industry insiders, predict.

When I look at New York publishing right now,  it's like watching the crew repainting the deck chairs on the Titanic.  What publishers  need to do is wake up, save themselves! Adapt to the new demands of consumers and authors.  In short, they desperately need to REFORM.  Reduce their outrageously high digital and print book prices,  radically edit and alter their book contracts so they no longer resemble the Dead Sea Scrolls, so incomprehensible and insulting to  authors.  Improve their digital royalties to authors, give authors more control over packaging, titles, book covers. Yes , I would like to see the Big Six publishers give Amazon a run for their money. We live in a democracy, we THRIVE on healthy competition.

For some things it's too late. I see  bookstores across the country back-flipping into bankruptcy,  and I mourn. Wherever I have lived,  Hawaii,  New York City,  bookstores have always been my sanctuaries, my oases.  And I still love the printed page, curling up with  novels swollen with age and weather.  I love highlighting passages, and writing in margins, arguing with the author.  I cherish a first edition of JANE EYRE  that still smells of my mother's perfume and transports me to the happiest year of my childhood. But - when I need a book or a reference fast,  I turn to my Kindle reader.  It instantly grounds me, informs me, and places me solidly in this digital time-warp state of mind we call the Present. We have all emerged from the vortex as hybrids and pragmatists. (Except for twenty year-olds who don't remember the printed page.)

What, you might ask, have I learned from  my recent, daunting experience in publishing, my personal Ground Zero?  Until Penguin fired me I was incredibly naive. I looked upon writing as a 'holy calling,' forgetting that it was also a business, MY business, my only source of income.  Now I look upon writing  with a rather  jaundiced, wary eye. I look for the bottom line. I now know that writers need to  be quicker, shrewder and, most importantly, contractually and technologically hip.  And I know that I will never be caught on a publisher's hit-list again. In short, I suspect  I've gone  rogue:  the dreamy writer with the  'holy calling,' has morphed into a quasi-savvy entrepreneurial techie-nerd with attitude.

Now, it is virtually a given that  books as we know them are passe. Electronics rule. A very scary concept for traditional publishers unless they adapt,  and soon.  But (to quote Joe Konrath) books and electronics are only delivery systems. The important thing is still CONTENT. And writers are still the ones who provide the content. So it seems to me that there are two supremely important  elements in  publishing that have  been ignored in this elitist, tragi-musical-comedy called the Legacy Wars.

1) The writers, who provide the content.  And  2) Our blessed readers, who purchase the content.  Publishing is NOTHING without  writers and readers, and publishers seem to have forgotten that, or intentionally ignored it.  Perhaps  because they are the middlemen, the ones who are most  dispensable.  Larry Kirshbaum has  said  that his goal at Amazon is to innovate in ways to help everyone in the industry. "We are trying to create a tide that will float all boats."

A noble goal. I hope he succeeds. And, yes, I do support him.  But let's leave boats and tides and ego-stroking battles to the middlemen, and concentrate on one cardinal, time-tested truth:  

Whether we are self-published,  Amazon-published, or legacy-published,  the axis of the planet  still shifts in our favor. Writers are not the ones caught in  the crosshairs of irrelevance. Civilizations still depend on us to fire up their synapses, they still depend on our  intensity, our intelligence, our  personal decodings of  truth and beauty and horror and hope.  No matter who wins the  publishing wars, or any war, THE WORLD STILL NEEDS, WILL ALWAYS NEED, WRITERS.

We are still the recording angels, the divining rods. We are still sitting in the catbird seat. God bless us all.

(And thank you all for your support!)  Kiana

18 comments:

  1. Amazing story. I suspect we'll all look back on this period of publishing as the time when the sheep were literally driven from the goats.

    And we all win. Thanks for sharing!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wonderful "Odessey" to avoid wrecking on the rocks of the publishing world, Kiana! And I can't wait to read the book.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Robert, I've missed you. But I keep up with your brilliant reviews. Email and tell me how you are, and did you move? Thanks for reading my blog! Kiana

      Delete
  3. Thank you bit of earth. Writers need to keep reminding each other how important we are. We need to keep supporting each other, paying it forward. However this 'war' plays out, writers are still the reason publishers exist.
    Kiana

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wow. This post comes at a time when we are all trying to figure the pub biz out. I just met
    with two San Francisco writer friends on Sunday to talk about this very topic. One of the
    writers with two historical fiction novels out has just converted one of these books to
    Amazon Kindle format. My friend and I are poets/short story writers, so we are a little
    hesitant to put our books on Kindle because line breaks are so important to poetry and you
    can control any of that in the conversion. We are both, however, working hard to finish
    novellas which we may self-pub and convert to Kindle. Oh, it gives me a headache.
    I just wanna write. You seem lovely and I love your ancestry. Great, great post!
    Mary Kennedy Eastham www.RP-Author.com/MKE

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Dear Mary Kennedy...you are so spot on. The whole thing is a distraction, writers just want to write! But somehow we've gotten wedged into the cracks of this massive publishing shift. There are companies like Telemachus Press (see website) who do formatting, editing, uploading and cover design for you. They're fabulous, and did my last collection, CANNIBAL NIGHTS. If you look at the format of that ebook, it is pristine. They also do poetry. But they are pricey. Call them. And Talk to a techie, you CAN convert and upload poetry as ebook. You just need guidance. I have not learned how to do all this myself. But more and more writers ARE doing it themselves. Thanks for your good words, and your support! Will check out your .com and wish you great success!.
      Alohas, Kiana

      Delete
  5. Bravo to you for signing with Amazon! I do not have your track record but I currently have 16 books published through Amazon digitally and a 5 are also in paperback and, regardless of what other publishers/distributors say, I'm selling thousands of books and see no reason to work with anyone but Amazon.

    Your writing is so fabulous and you already have a following. You will do very well. The world of book publishing has changed forever, congratulations on getting onboard ahead of the pack!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Kathleen...You are such an inspiration. Now that I know your writing and your books, I understand why you have such a devoted following of readers I said this in my review of THE OLD MERMAID'S TALE. To paraphrase: 'Kathleen Valentine is a shining example of how beautifully written, quality fiction is now being offered by self-published authors." I wish you continued success and all the happiness in the world.
      Imua! Press on! With my alohas, Kiana

      Delete
  6. I too have run into a lot of resentment for my decision to self-publish. More than a few of my large group of online writer "friends" dumped me over it. Does it sting to receive often public criticism? Yeah, of course. But last month, nine months after my first self-pubbed book hit the shelves) Amazon deposited nearly five grand into my bank account. I remember a time in the recent past I would have done a dance for days at the prospect of being offered a $5000 *advance*. I'm not a millionaire like Joe, but I'm paying my bills, and that feels incredible. Like you, I realised that I needed to treat writing as a business. When I decided to self-publish, I wrote a business plan and realised that for me, it really is about making a living, not about clinging to the fantasy about the glamorous life (ha!) of being a "real" published author.

    And now those same "friends" that looked down their noses say things like, "Well, yeah, she's doing okay, but most indies don't make that much." As if that means it's somehow not legitimate.

    I'm actually looking forward to the time when all this settles out. I don't like the division among authors, the feeling that we have to pick sides and are set against each other. I honestly don't understand why all the rancour. If I've found a way to make a living doing what I love, you'd think people would be happy for me.

    By the way, I came here because of your thoughtful post on Joe's blog today. I wish you all the success in the world, no matter where you find it. =)

    India Drummond
    http://www.indiadrummond.com/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dear India...I totally agree. I hate this division among authors, though by nature artists are competitive. The rancour should be directed at 'those in power' who kept us under their collective thumb for too long. But things are happening, the natives have become restless.' There will always be revolutions which bring change. Change is life. Stasis is death.

      Sending you big congratulations on your success as an indie-author. Not everyone hits it big that fast. Keep at it! I will look up your book. My alohas to you across the seas, from Hawaii to Scotland! Kiana

      Delete
  7. After all you have been through, you came out victorious. We are pleased and proud and can't wait for the book. Your old friend from bill's gay nineties...!
    aloha

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Lorraine. I'm not sure about the word 'victorious.' I definitely came out wiser and by some miracle, still sane. But with a new, exciting publisher, so I guess victorious applies.

      The important thing is to keep reminding writers how important we are! There is no industry without us.

      So mend that shoulder and get cracking on that brilliant book! alohas, Kiana

      Delete
  8. Kiana, you have the support of real writers everywhere-- the ones who want to get published and get their words to readers, and to control their own careers.

    We admire your courage in dealing with these trolls, and are glad you are taking the best revenge-- leaving them behind while you keep writing!

    How sad there are people who would insist you remain in an abusive relationship-- they're not friends, and not writers who care, or matter.

    It's a brave new world where writers now have real options-- and woe to those who demand everyone follow a particular narrow path. Especially one that has proven so problematic.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Dale thanks so much for your comments and your support. We are truly in an evolution/
    revolution...a scary and exciting time. The main thing I always try to stress is that writers need to WRITE, no matter what. In the dramas of these massive changes and 'legacy wars' people forget that this entire industry still depends on WRITERS! If we don't continue to create, there will be no industry.

    It is hard, most writers incomes are some-where around the poverty level. I always encourage writing students to get a trade...teaching, carpentry, or even waiting tables, a way to garner income, so they can live like normal people while they write. (Plus, having a job where you network with other humans is always a source of good material!)

    If a writer is driven enough, they will find a way. Meantime, we must remember to support each other, always paying it forward when we can. Thanks again for your support. Now go write something brilliant! Imua! Press on! With my alohas, Kiana

    ReplyDelete
  10. Just found this post, Ms. Davenport, as a link from Passive Guy's blog (http://www.thepassivevoice.com/05/2012/on-self-publishing-and-having-a-chip-on-ones-shoulder/).

    Amazon would have had me at:

    "Because...their contract is only six (6!) pages long, and completely comprehensible."

    Thanks so much for sharing your story.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Hi Dana, thanx for your comment!

    Plus it reminded me to check out the passive voice, I sometimes forget, there are so many blogs to read. But he makes a good point: difference between 'indie' authors and 'self-published authors.' We're all throwing those two words around like crazy and inter-changeably. when in fact they mean two different things. "Indies' are small, independent presses, whereas self-pubbed are just us individual writers with our own small cottage industries. PS are you in Homer? I've got friends there, one a published writer. Her name will come to me! Alohas for now! A very windy day in Hawaii. Happy writing! Kiana

    ReplyDelete
  12. I am in Homer. I've spent many wonderful days in Hawaii. Aloha backatcha!

    ReplyDelete