E-Reads™ is
...a trail-blazing reprinter of out-of-print genre and general fiction and nonfiction by leading authors. Our books are available in all e-book formats and paperback. Read the latest publishing news and provocative blogs by top commentators in the traditional and digital publishing fields.

Thin Air
George E. Simpson
It's a mystery that dates back to World War II--what happened to the USS Sturman and its crew. For Naval Investigator Nicholas Hammond, the search will challenge him…and the answers will, like bodies floa...


Shadow of Ashland
Terence M. Green
“THE BOOK YOU HAVE TO READ”–Entertainment Weekly
"Things have to be settled, or they never go away."
Only weeks before she dies in March, 1984, Leo Nolan’s mother shows her son a rose she says w...

The Longest Way Home
Robert Silverberg
"What wonders and adventures he has to tell us," is how Ursula K. LeGuin characterized the world of Robert Silverberg, and in The Longest Way Home, he takes readers on another dazzling odyssey.
Joseph, ju...


Marriage Is a Bad Habit
Ruth Dickson
When Ruth Dickson released her 1967 book MARRIED MEN MAKE THE BEST LOVERS, it went off like a bombshell. Defenders of the “sanctity” of marriage rose up to dismiss her frank, innovative, thoroughly resear...

Orion's Dagger
Paula Downing King
With ORION’S DAGGER, Paula E. Downing presents the thrilling final installment of THE CLOUDSHIPS OF ORION trilogy, which Starlog magazine called “special...a thoroughly engrossing story.” The trio wa...


Fair Warning
George E. Simpson
America is set to finally end World War II with a devastating act--dropping the atomic bomb over Japan. But what if a secret mission was set in place to alter the course of history? In this fast-paced, and i...

Rogues of the Black Fury
Travis Heermann
When a band of shadowy fanatics abducts Javin Wollstone’s little sister, Bella, from his care, his only hope to bring her home is turning to a hard-bitten band of special warriors, the Black Furies, led by C...


The Sudden Star
Pamela Sargent
The appearance of a white star bathing the world in a deadly glare turns Earth into a nightmare of fear and death. Rape and murder are as common as suicide. Medical help is allowed only for certain diseases, a...

Philosophy and the Challenge of the Future
John Lange
The sciences, as opposed to politics and religion, have their roots in philosophy. Philosophy has been spoken of as the mother of the sciences, although she is, in many cases, more of a grandmother or grea...


The Man in the Moon Must Die
Jeff Bredenberg
What do a cunning old man, a code-slopper gone rogue, a pair of lowlife tech-runners, a sexually frustrated AI, and a hermaphrodite underworld boss have in common? They're all out to get Benito Funcitti, ow...
FEATURED TITLES

Tangled Vines
Janet Dailey
Elegant 90-year-old Katherine Rutledge runs her family's Napa Valley winery. Her estranged son runs a rival winery and an alcoholic neighbor, Len Dougherty, lives on 10 acres of the Rutledge vineyard given...

Quad World
Robert A. Metzger
John Smith began that morning a perfectly healthy man, but before he knows it time freezes during his morning staff meeting and he thinks he's dying. Has his body stopped or has everything around him? When th...


The Coin-Giver
M. M. Buckner
In the 23rd century, the Earth's surface is devastated by global warming, and corporations exploit billions of poverty-stricken employees whose lifetime contracts they own? Richter Jedes, the rich powerful C...

In the Beginning: Science Faces God in the Book of Genesis
Isaac Asimov
In the Beginning: Science Faces God in the Book of Genesis Creation. The beginning of time. The origin of life. In our Western civilization, there are two influential accounts of beginnings. One is the Bibli...


Gather, Darkness!
Fritz Leiber
GATHER, DARKNESS! is a science-fiction classic. It tells the story of Armon Jarles, a man on the edge, living amidst the disputes of two rival powers at large in the world. 360 years after a nuclear holoca...

Seas of Ernathe
Jeffrey A. Carver
Millennia after the skills of starship rigging have been lost, can Seth Perland find the key to rediscovery on the world of the mysterious sea people, the Nale'nid? Seas of Ernathe was Jeffrey A. Carver's fi...


The Black Gondolier and Other Stories
Fritz Leiber
Announcing a new collection of stories by Fritz Leiber. Assembled here is a selection of Mr. Leiber's best horrific tales, many of which have been virtually unobtainable for decades. From the riveting "Spider ...

Destiny in the Ashes
William W. Johnstone
Ben Raines and his army won a war on two fronts, bringing law, peace, and prosperity to the Southern United States of America. But SUSA's northern neighbor and erstwhile enemy, the United States, is in chaos...


Find This Woman
Richard S. Prather
Shell Scott. He's a guy with a pistol in his pocket and murder on his mind. The crime world's public enemy number one, this Casanova is a sucker for a damsel in distress. When a pair of lovely legs saunters ...

Monster Island
David Wellington
Welcome to New York City, Population Zero? The power grid has collapsed. There is no running water, no light, no heat. The massive neon signs of Times Square are dark now, and the subway trains crouch silent ...


Daughter of the Reef
Clare Coleman
From Jean M. Auel's THE CLAN OF THE CAVE BEAR to Linda Lay Shuler's SHE WHO REMEMBERS, novels set among pre-historic cultures have shown a very strong appeal to readers of all types from fans of genre fant...

EMT: Beyond the Lights and Sirens
Pat Ivey
This book takes the reader to the front lines of medicine, from a serious automobile accident on a dark country road to a woman in cardiac arrest to a young man with near-fatal gunshot wounds. For these patie...


Nebraska - Boss Man From Ogallala
Janet Dailey
Does heartbreak last forever? Casey could only hope that time would ease the pain. Falling in love with Flint McCallister had been a cruel twist of fate. It was ironic, actually, because Casey initially ...

The Hunger of Time
Damien Broderick
Technology has started to accelerate at a terrifying rate. By mid-21st century, we might see a Singularity: a convergence of artificial intelligence, advanced nanotechnologies for building things at the atomi...


No, He's Not A Monkey, He's An Ape and He's My Son
Hester Mundis
This book answers the question that’s on everybody's mind: “What’s it like to raise a chimpanzee in Manhattan?” Hester Mundis’s hilarious memoir NO HE'S NOT A MONKEY, HE'S AN APE AND HE'S MY SON is t...

Chaining the Lady
Piers Anthony
The CLUSTER series of SF adventures is set in a future focused on colonization of distant planets. Sphere Sol is about 100 light years in diameter, centered on the Earth’s sun. Surrounding this spher...
Book Pricing & royalties
Laura Hazard Owen, writing for Gigaom.com, reports a unique strategy for combating the practice known as “showrooming”.
In showrooming, customers enter a bookstore, browse, then select (or scan the barcode of) the book they want to purchase, walk out of the store and order it from an online bookstore. Which makes the independent store a mere display space for customers to order books from its competitors. Last Christmas Amazon actually promoted the practice, outraging indy stores. One got so mad it stopped doing business with the behemoth. (See Can You Survive without Amazon?)
Barnes & Noble, the highest-profile target of showrooming, is now in a position to fight fire with fire. Microsoft’s investment in B&N’s Nook business gives the bookstore chain the potential for a showroom that loops back to its own inventory via the Nook.
“B&N CEO William Lynch says that the company plans to embed NFC (near field communication) chips into Nooks,” reports Owen. “Users could take their Nook into a Barnes & Noble store and wave it near a print book to get info on it or buy it.”
It’s an interesting concept, but there’s a big flaw in the reasoning. Showrooming enables customers to scan a high-priced book in a brick and mortar store, then buy it at a discount on an Internet store. In other words, if you scan a $20.00 book in a Barnes & Noble bookstore, then go to B&N’s online store, you’ll be able to buy it for, say, $16.00. Then why, you will ask, can’t I pay $16.00 inside the bookstore?
For a showroom to work properly you need two components: a physical space with physical books to browse; and a virtual space to actually buy them. Think of a library where physical books are on display for browsing only. Customers choose the titles they want, swipe a credit card, and wait a short time while the book is printed on an Espresso-type printer.
We’ve been buttonholing readers with this mad scheme for years, and you can see some of our postings about kiosks here.
Richard Curtis
This blog post was originally published on Digital Book World as Showdown for Showrooms

Pea OD
Richard Curtis, literary agent and founder of E-Reads, the independent ebook publisher, recently posted an article on Digital Book World about print on demand. He was subsequently interviewed about it by GoodeReader.
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“E-Reads has been using Lightning Source for its POD services since we began in 2000. LSI is the biggest in the industry, perhaps in the world, in print-on-demand. Because they are a division of Ingram, a book distribution company that has very successfully made the transition from a company that serviced print publishers to a company that now services the digital book industry, we feel that there are advantages to being with LSI that you simply cannot get with any other POD publisher. Among other things, their core source service enables us to reach indie bookstores, a great many of which we could not otherwise reach.”
One aspect of POD that Curtis mentioned in his recent blog post is the prohibitive cost per book when comparing a typical print run of a trade paperback with the cost of printing one title at a time per customer request. Lightning Source has countered that cost in a deal with EPAC, one of the largest POD suppliers in Germany.
“From speaking to executives at LSI and asking if there is any possibility in the future that the costs of producing PODs might come down, they have told me that there are developments that they cannot currently discuss that make them hopeful that the prices will come down.”
But why such a keen interest in print-on-demand? Isn’t the point of digital publishing and the surge in popularity of e-reading related to all the negative things that digital has stripped away, like eliminating paper and ink costs, shipping costs, and wait times to receive new books?
“Many authors want their books available in paper and many readers still want to read books in paper even though they are available in digital format. I’m considered somewhat of a trailblazer in the digital world but I still much prefer to hold a printed book in my hand than to read one on a screen. Even though POD used to represent about 50% of our income in the days when there were no Kindles or Nooks or viable digital readers, POD now represents about 8% of E-Reads revenue, the rest being from digital. Even though POD books are very expensive compared to those printed in the traditional way. A book that might have been $12 to $15 in a traditional print run might cost $20 as a POD, but people are willing to pay it.”
While POD might be a smart move for the indie authors and a certain demographic of readers, whether the publishing industry as a whole will adopt POD as a viable solution remains to be seen.
“I think the industry is being forced into it. The closing of Borders and of so many independent bookstores, the reduction of floor space in bookstore chains like Barnes&Noble, all point to a reduction to the space available to deliver printed books to the consumer on the street. This same segment of the population is going to have to turn to POD. The publishing industry for the last 100 years has distributed its books on a returnable basis. At the beginning of the industry 5-10% of books were returned; now we’re up to as much as 50% of books being returned by bookstores. It’s no longer possible for publishers to sustain 50% returns when POD is an alternative.
“My vision for POD is kind of the Espresso vision, where the Espresso Book Machine will come down in size and complexity to where it will be truly closer to desktop than refrigerator sized. When that happens, you’ll see bookstores with kiosks with thousands of books displayed where you can choose one, but they’re not on a bookshelf, they’re on a screen. You can browse electronically, pick one out, and have a cup of coffee while it prints. It may not be in the immediate future, but I would say within the next ten years you will be able to go into a space and print the book you want. Right now, you have that by simply going on Amazon, but if you prefer the experience of going into a store and browsing for a book that looks interesting, you will see that model evolving. And when someone predicts 10 years, it’s usually five.”
Print-On-Demand: The Future of Publishing? A Talk with Richard Curtis
By Mercy Pilkington
If you seek cogency on digital publishing subjects you’ll always find it in Laura Hazard Owen’s postings. A good example is a recent one on the implications for consumers of the settlement agreements with the Department of Justice in its conspiracy lawsuit against five major publishers and Apple.
What does the settlement mean for customers? Here’s a summary:
1. Let the Discounting Begin. “Readers are likely to see lower prices on e-books published by HarperCollins, Hachette and Simon & Schuster — at least at Amazon, which expressed its glee over the settlement. But you won’t see those lower e-book prices until at least June…I wouldn’t be surprised to see some shockingly cheap bestsellers from those publishers — think massive summer promotions where big titles by authors like James Patterson, Jodi Picoult and Nicholas Sparks are $1.99.”
2. Amazon rivals will discount too. “Other e-book retailers, like Barnes & Noble and Kobo, are likely to want to enter into new contracts quickly as well so that they are on a more even playing field with Amazon.”
Owen points out that Amazon competitors “may not be able to afford to discount a wide range of e-books as deeply as Amazon can.” But that has not prevented Barnes & Noble, Kobo, and even the struggling Sony from maintaining a healthy market share of the e-book retail business.
3. Bundling of e-books, and e-book/p-book combo packages. “Justice notes that agency pricing ‘prevented e-book retailers from experimenting with innovative pricing strategies…such as offering e-books under an ‘all-you-can-read’ subscription model where consumers would pay a flat monthly fee,’ bundles or buy-one-get-one-free promotions. The settlement opens the door for those types of promotions on Hachette, HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster titles.”
4. Less predatory loss-leader pricing. “When it comes time for Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins and Hachette to negotiate their new contracts, the settlement allows them to ‘negotiate a commitment from an e-book retailer that a retailer’s aggregate expenditure on discounts and promotions of the Settling Defendant’s e-books will not exceed the retailer’s aggregate commission under an agency agreement in which the publisher sets the e-book price and the retailer is compensated through a commission.’”
5. Will Apple now sell e-books at a discount? “If it simply removes Simon & Schuster, Hachette and HarperCollins titles from its shelves without negotiating new contracts — yes, this would mean Walter Isaacson’s Steve Jobs biography, published by Simon & Schuster, would no longer be available through iTunes — it will be losing a large part of its catalog. If Apple agrees to negotiate new contracts that don’t require agency pricing, it could also make agreements with the many publishers who have not been able to sell their books in the iBookstore before. That would mean a much wider book selection for iBookstore shoppers.’
Read details in What the DOJ e-book lawsuit means for readers now
Richard Curtis
This blog post was originally published on Digital Book World as E-Book Prices Must Come Down
When Amazon offered in December to reward customers who scanned book bar codes in bookstores and then bought the book on Amazon instead, we wrote “Amazon’s strategy could backfire.”
“When Amazon’s sales reps call for an appointment to pitch their list,” we pointed out, “they may find the owners’ phones turned off.” (See Please Shut Off Your Cellphones. This is a Bookshop)”
They did. Barnes & Noble will not carry books published by Amazon’s publishing imprints.
“In a sharp answer to Amazon and its expanding publishing efforts,” writes the New York Times‘ Julie Bosman, “Barnes & Noble said on Tuesday that it would not sell books released by Amazon Publishing in its bookstores. The ban includes books released by New Harvest, a new imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt that recently struck a deal to publish and distribute books released by Amazon Publishing’s unit based in New York.
“’Barnes & Noble has made a decision not to stock Amazon published titles in our store showrooms,’ Jaime Carey, the company’s chief merchandising officer, said in a statement. ‘Our decision is based on Amazon’s continued push for exclusivity with publishers, agents and the authors they represent. These exclusives have prohibited us from offering certain e-books to our customers. Their actions have undermined the industry as a whole and have prevented millions of customers from having access to content. It’s clear to us that Amazon has proven they would not be a good publishing partner to Barnes & Noble as they continue to pull content off the market for their own self interest.’”
B&N’s decision may impact negatively on the authors and their agents contemplating selling their authors to Amazon Publishing.
Though some publishing executives may take a measure of satisfaction that B&N, now the victim of Amazon’s aggressive marketing strategies, is paying dearly for its own predatory practices when it was the ruthlessly dominant bookseller of the twentieth century, consumers will rally around it and its more helpless independent bookstore cousins. Publishing industry old-timers like to say “What goes around comes around” and for Amazon it has come around. We hope however that Amazon Publishing will itself come around – to an open policy of mutual cooperation in the fragile ecology called publishing.
Details in Barnes & Noble Won’t Sell Books From Amazon Publishing
Richard Curtis
If you’re a fan of Clash of the Titans you’re in for a real treat: two titanic lobbying groups are on a collision course. Ground zero for the impact is the United States Congress. The issue is piracy.
Bills currently being written in House of Representatives committees are aimed at curbing search engines like Google and Yahoo that link to illegal file sharing and bitTorrent websites, and stopping payment facilitators like PayPal that enable transactions for unauthorized books, movies and music. (In fact, you can use Google to link to free versions of Clash of the Titans here, but we urge you to be very careful clicking on links to free downloads as they may be phishing for your bank account information.)
Among the parties lobbying for passage of a tough law are the movie and music business, the US Chamber of Commerce, and the book industry (see Authors Guild President Scott Turow’s testimony before Congress). Even big unions like the AFL-CIO are pushing for passage, because piracy, particularly the offshore brand, steals American jobs.
On the other side of the issue are Yahoo, Google, Mozilla, the Tea Party and a lobby-full of freeists including, predictably, the Civil Liberties Union, all rallying under the banner of Down With Censorship. “Naturally,” writes Edward Wyatt in the New York Times (Lines Drawn on Antipiracy Bills), “the howls of protest have been loud and lavishly financed, not only from Silicon Valley companies but also from public-interest groups, free-speech advocates and even venture capital investors. They argue — in TV and newspaper ads — that the bills are so broad and heavy-handed that they threaten to close Web sites and broadband service providers and stifle free speech, while setting a bad example of American censorship.”
“Google itself,” Wyatt informs us, “has hired at least 15 lobbying firms to fight the bills; Mozilla has included on its Firefox browser home page a link to a petition with the warning, ‘Congress is trying to censor the Internet.’” Texas representative Lamar Smith takes a different view of the Silicon Valley pressure groups: “They’ve made large profits by promoting rogue sites to U.S. consumers,” he contends.
Last May, when Google’s executive chairman Eric Schmidt declared in unequivocal terms that he opposed any effort to curtail Google’s right to link to piracy websites like Pirate Bay, we declared “Game Over.“ Now, with US lawmakers taking up the issue, there’s a glimmer of hope that the game is back on.
But it’s only a glimmer, and if our legislators are true to form, the Right-to-Information promoters will either kill the bill or water it down to the same kind of joke that is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. That piece of legislation is ostensibly designed to punish pirates, but the Silicon Mafia prevailed on the lawmakers to create a “Safe Harbor” provision that gives accused infringers a period of time in which to respond to accusations. Safe Harbor also puts the burden of proof on rights holders, causing them to go through hoops of flame to prove they are the true owners of the stolen content.
We have been criticized for supporting tough antipiracy measures because they might lead to government censorship. The chances of the pendulum swinging from its current position to state censorship are so absurdly long they are not worth discussing. Meanwhile, the pirates continue to screw legitimate copyright owners while the search engines hold down their arms and legs.
Richard Curtis
Okay, all you street corner prophets. Given the depressing if not depressed economy, last year’s dismal holiday retail sales, the meteoric triumph of e-books, the advent of bookstore showrooming that drives customers out of bookstores, and the bankruptcy of Borders, how do you think bookstore sales will fare over the 2011 holidays?
If you said Down the Crapper, go back to Prophecy 101 and relearn the first two principles: #1, Never Give a Specific Time Line. And #2, The Odds That a Prediction Will Be Correct are 50-50. Julie Bosman, covering the book beat for the New York Times, reports that “The initial weeks of Christmas shopping, a boom time for the book business, have yielded surprisingly strong sales for many bookstores, which report that they have been lifted by an unusually vibrant selection; customers who seem undeterred by pricier titles; and new business from people who used to shop at Borders, the chain that went out of business this year.” Sales are up as much as 16% over the same period in 2010.
One of the biggest surprises is that “glossy, expensive hardcover books have emerged as sleeper successes,” says Bosman. There’s a brisk trade in books of $75 and more. To what can we attribute this counterintuitive if not perverse surge in consumer commitment to print? Our guess is that now that consumers have had a few years of e-books, they are starting to distinguish between books they merely want to read but not own, and those they want to read and own.
But that raises another question: why aren’t they buying them on Amazon and BN.com to take advantage of heavy discounts? Many book lovers we’ve spoken to have said they would rather pay list price and support their local bookstore than get a high discount that may lead to the demise of that store. If you thought writers were strange, what can you say about readers?
One book we think you will want to read and own is The Oxford Companion to Beer by Garrett Oliver, arguably the world’s authority on the beverage.
Here is Oxford University Press’s product description for the book:
For millennia, beer has been a favorite beverage in cultures across the globe. After water and tea, it is the most popular drink in the world, and it is at the center of a $450 billion industry.
The first major reference work to investigate the history and vast scope of beer, The Oxford Companion to Beer features more than 1,100 A-Z entries written by 166 of the world’s most prominent beer experts. Attractively illustrated with over 140 images, the book covers everything from the agricultural makeup of various beers to the technical elements of the brewing process, local effects of brewing on regions around the world, and the social and political implications of sharing a beer.
Garrett Oliver is the Brewmaster of the Brooklyn Brewery and author of The Brewmaster’s Table: Discovering the Pleasures of Real Beer with Real Food. He has won many awards for his beers, is a frequent judge for international beer competitions, and has made numerous radio and television appearances as a spokesperson for craft brewing.
RC
Coming soon to a bookshop near you: a sign that says “Cell Phones Prohibited.”
“Bookstore owners everywhere have a lurking suspicion,” writes Julie Bosman in the New York Times. “that customers who type into their smartphones while browsing in the store, and then leave, are planning to buy the books online later — probably at a steep discount from the bookstores’ archrival, Amazon.com.
“Now a survey has confirmed that the practice, known among booksellers as showrooming, is not a figment of their imaginations,” she adds, citing a survey confirming that a quarter of those who’d bought a book from an online store had scouted it while browsing in a physical shop.
As if that isn’t upsetting enough to the shops’ proprietors, Tricia Duryee, writing in AllthingsD.com, tells us that brazen showrooming is actually being incentivized: “Amazon is offering consumers up to $5 off on purchases if they compare prices using the online giant’s mobile phone application in a store.” The offer is for all kinds of products but it feels aimed particularly at bookstore owners. “While Amazon’s applications and its $5 incentive can be viewed as friendly to consumers, physical retailers will see it only one way — as an attack,” says Duryee.
Amazon’s strategy could backfire, however. The company’s recently created publishing imprints will need the good will of bookstore owners. But when Amazon’s sales reps call for an appointment to pitch their list, they may find the owners’ phones turned off.
See Book Shopping in Stores, Then Buying Online.
Richard Curtis

Jennifer Weltz
If, at any time after the effective date of this Agreement, US trade publishing industry electronic media royalties paid to authors are a higher percentage of the amount received by Publisher than those paid to Author under the terms of this Agreement, upon written request from Author this subparagraph will be deemed amended to such higher percentage.
The above text is an amalgam of boilerplate provisions found in the contracts of many publishers. It is a compromise reached in negotiations between publishers and agents as they hammered out a modus vivendi between the former’s wish to lock in a low e-book royalty and the latter’s insistence on a higher one. With such language installed into contracts, agents can monitor royalty rates in the book industry and, if it appears they are rising above the current threshold of 25% of net receipts, invoke the language entitling authors to the higher royalty promised in the contract.
Jennifer Weltz, a leading agent, thinks the time has come to invoke that provision and gives her reasons on AARdvark, an online forum of the Association of Authors’ Representatives. She has kindly agreed to let us reprint it here.
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Alert – E-Book Industry Standards have Changed!
Dear Colleagues in the industry, remember all of those clauses we have in our contracts regarding e-books? The ones that say that when Industry standards change we will all be renegotiating new e-book rights? Well that time is now. E-book industry standards have changed.
Why have we not heard this news from our publishers?
Think of the number of contracts you have with that clause and then multiply it by x. This is the number of clauses that would have to be modified by publishers if they admitted to this obvious change. From a publisher’s perspective, the only possible change they would concede would be one where they would be raising the 25% royalty rate and overnight their profits would plummet. As you can imagine, this is not an attractive prospect.
Have industry standards changed? Yes
Will we first hear this from the publishers? No
What are these changes?
Well, there are, of course, the many emerging publishers doing business in the publishing world who offer much more lucrative e-book royalties. But they offer low advances or no advances. However we are starting to see that when publishers want a project enough, they find workable solutions with agents that are not the straight 25% we were given to believe was the 11th commandment. We are even seeing, the big publishers, developing creative e-book royalty solutions where rights were not clearly delineated in the original contract. And we are seeing authors make drastic choices, especially if they know that their books perform well in the e-book format – jumping ship, and working with the new publishers on the block who offer them a fairer piece of the pie.
What else has changed?
We are now often at 50% or more of total books sold for a particular title. When e-book royalties were first set at 25%, e-books were a fraction of the market (please refer to the many analyses that have been done over the years on the growth of the e-book industry). E-books are no longer a fringe subsidiary right but an essential format, just like print paperback and hardcover. I would even argue that e-book is the predominant format in the US, because, regardless of whether a book is published in hard cover, soft cover or in print at all, you can bet that practically every single US publisher acquiring rights to a new book today, will be releasing it as an e-book. The e-book format is the one guaranteed format for all of our future books. It has arguably swallowed up the custom of multiple print formats. In other words, whatever the print format for your first publication of a book may be, the future will see e-book as your second and possibly the only other format for your book. This is a major industry shift that has happened this year and publishers are now debating how best to handle it. Does this mean that we should only publish in Hard Cover and E-books or just Trade paperback and e-books? Forget about mass market! What we are seeing here is clearly an industry shift. This is a changed industry. Industry standards have changed.
Now what about the problems our publishers face if they admit to this change? Should we care?
I say yes, because, when we all agreed to these delightful industry standard clauses, we neglected to realize how we were painting ourselves into a corner. As Paul Aiken from The Author’s Guild pointed out in his article “Inertia, unfortunately, is embedded in the contractual landscape. If the publisher were to offer more equitable e-royalties in new contracts, it would ripple through much of the publisher’s catalog: most major trade publishers have thousands of contracts that require an automatic adjustment or renegotiation of e-book royalties if the publisher starts offering better terms… Given these substantial collateral costs, publishers will continue to strongly resist changes to their e-book royalties for new books.”
Should we then accept the status quo and abandon hope of ever effecting change with the big publishers?
This is not a solution because, by not demanding change, we not only create an unfair structure for our authors, we also allow authors to more easily abandon traditional publishers when we know this means losing out on the editorial, marketing and publishing help that these professionals do so well when they try.
Many have examined the e-book royalty math extensively and so I will only say that we must look at the origins of the Hard Cover 15% of list royalty. How did publishers, agents and authors come up with this percentage? Well, when you deduct the discount given to booksellers off the list price and the cost of producing a print book, half of the remaining proceeds roughly comes to 15% list. In other words, 50% net.
Consequently, the concept of offering 50% of the revenue is a long standing industry standard for Hard Cover royalties.
What is the solution?
Let’s take another look at Hard Cover royalties. While the lucky few are able to get a straight 15% hard cover royalty for their authors, this has not become the industry standard. Escalators are the standard and it is in escalators that we find the solution to the e-book royalty dilemma. With escalators, we can at last accommodate books whose sales do not justify a big piece of the pie and should stay at 25% as well as rewarding those authors whose major sales are happening in e-books. Escalators would allow everyone, including the authors and creators of the work, to share in success once the justified overhead costs are amortized.
This should be our new industry standard for e-books and it should not cause a massive shift in revenue for our publishers except for books that have earned it.
Now is the time to call our publishers and let them know. Remember that clause about e-book industry standards changing? Well now they have. That time is now.
Let me know what you think. Send me a Tweet at either @jvnla or @digitaar
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As Vice President of JVNLA [Jean V. Naggar Literary Agency], Jennifer Weltz has sold books domestically, internationally, and for film for nearly two decades. Coming from a mediation background, Jennifer sees herself as a liaison between her author and the editor and publishing house that acquire her author’s work. This role takes on a myriad of forms — business manager, confidant, task master, preliminary editor, and matchmaker — to name a few. Since Jennifer takes up an author’s career and not just a project, she is very careful and selective about signing on new authors.
Amazon and Barnes & Noble collided recently in a fearful clash. A lot of damage was inflicted but predictably the biggest victim was the customer.
The first shot was fired when Amazon acquired e-book rights to a trove of superhero graphic novels from DC Comics. Some one hundred volumes featuring Superman, Batman, Green Lantern, Watchmen and Neil Gaiman’s Sandman were secured to promote Amazon’s newly released tablet, the Kindle Fire.
All well and good – except that Amazon’s e-book rights were exclusive. Meaning that rival Barnes & Noble would be deprived of the right to carry the titles on its Nook e-reader. B&N could still sell the print editions, however. But that’s a big however. B&N told DC that if they couldn’t have e-book rights they didn’t want anything. Whereupon they pulled the print editions of those DC graphic novels from 1300 stores.
The result was a lose-lose-lose-lose-win situation. DC lost sales – as well as face for “placing greed over its fans.” in the words of New York Times‘s David Streitfeld. Barnes & Noble lost bookstore and Nook sales too, plus the nose it lost to spite its face. Customers and fans lost access to the books in Nook (and Sony and Kobo and Apple iPad). And at least one author is unhappy – Neil Gaiman, who was blindsided by Amazon’s ploy. ““I was very excited when I heard that Sandman was coming out as an e-book, but was heartbroken when it was announced that I and my kids won’t have it on our readers.”
It will come as no surprise that the lone winner was Amazon, which nailed the exclusive and got a boost from B&N’s abandonment of the print edition.
This is just the first of many such battles. Says Streitfeld: “As Amazon seeks over the next few years to expand its tablet line, these collisions over content are likely to become routine.”
Details in In a Battle of the E-Readers, Booksellers Spurn Superheroes
Richard Curtis
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“Authors are like mushrooms,” a writer once told me. “They’re fed a lot of horseshit and kept in the dark”
That observation served as my slogan when I launched a campaign in the 1980s to make royalty statements more transparent. Authors today take for granted that their publishers’ royalty statements will provide vital details such as the number of copies returned or royalties withheld as a reserve against returns.
But thirty years ago that information was not provided unless an author or his agent or lawyer made a colossal pest of himself. A typical statement simply reported that you had sold, say, 1000 copies and here’s a check for $1,000. When you asked how the publisher arrived at that figure you were given no explanation. I likened it to being told that a baseball player had 150 hits without being told how many times he had been at bat.
After other agents joined in the assault on publishers’ accounting practices the barriers finally crumbled and publishers at last started telling authors what they needed to know in order to assess the performance of their books.
I am telling you this because we are about to enter a new phase of transparency in royalty reporting. To their great credit, Simon & Schuster,Random House and Hachette Book Group announced initiatives to open their sales database to authors and agents, who will be able to access the publishers’ websites and view recent and cumulative activity in their account.
You would imagine that I greet this new as the fulfillment of a lifelong dream. Yet I wonder if it’s such a hot idea. I’m thinking of the burden it puts on the publishers.
Authors as a whole are more enlightened about royalty accounting than the mushroom people of a few decades ago. Nevertheless there is a great deal of data to understand, and if an author cannot penetrate such mysteries as reserves against returns, net-price versus list-price royalty rates, or the effects of high discounts on royalty calculations, he or she is going to hit the phones or emails and demand answers. Multiply that by hundreds if not thousands of perplexed authors and you can imagine that the bookkeeping departments of publishers could be besieged.
This is a Law of Unintended Consequences just waiting to happen.
Publishers should not be punished for the good deed of offering transparency, but before they lift the veil on their accounting they must make sure that their statements are crystal-clear and every term unambiguously defined. That said, we wish Simon & Schuster Random House and Hachette the very best of success in this commendable initiative.
Read Authors to Get Sales Data Online From 3 Big Publishers by Julie Bosman in the New York Times.
Richard Curtis