The public is not typically
aware that bookselling is essentially a consignment business. (Not all authors
are aware of this, either, though they should be.)
Here’s how it works, in a nutshell.
Bear in mind there are others that handle much of the logistics, but what’s
here is the core process.
·
The publisher issues a catalog of what books are
available to bookstores this quarter.
·
The bookstore orders the books it wants.
·
Customers buy those books from the store.
o If
they buy more than the store ordered, the store orders more.
o If
they buy fewer than the store ordered, the bookseller may return the unsold
copies at the publisher’s expense.
·
Booksellers build the ability to return books
into their business plans.
·
Publishers go along because they have to.
There are four major publishing
houses that operate like this. Don’t be confused by the number of “publishers”
that have their names on the spines of books. Those names are generally what
are called “Imprints,” and a single house may own multiple imprints. For
example, the Hachette Book Group owns Grand Central Publishing; Basic Books
Group; Hachette Audio; Little, Brown, and Company; Little Brown Books for Young
Readers; Orbit; Running Press Group; and Workman Publishing. Each of these has
imprints of their own. If you buy a book published by any of these, the
publishing company that runs the show is Hachette. The others in the Big Four
are no different.
Since the big publishers can
afford to accept returns and pay for display space dedicated to their books, theirs
are what you see in your local bookstore. Since the local bookseller depends on
this financial support to stay open, they do not as a habit stock books that
·
are put out by publishers that cannot afford to
accept returns or pay for display space.
·
are self-published.
Rest assured, if you go into
your local bookstore and ask for a specific title by an author not connected to
any of the Big Four, your bookseller will order it for you. This is much
appreciated, but it also means no one – literally no one – will find such a
book by browsing the shelves, nor will it ever appear as a staff
recommendation.
Where does this leave the small
press or self-published author?
Shit out of luck.
Though it may sound like it, I’m
not complaining. I accept this is how things work. I returned to
self-publishing because I chose not to swim in the publishing business’s
version of the Seine River during the Olympics. I have made my peace with it.
I’m writing here to encourage
others to look clear-eyed at their prospects. Examine why you write. What do
you want to get out of it? Money? How much? Fame? How much?
Or will the respect of those
you would like to think of as your peers be sufficient? The joy you get from
crafting something that, while imperfect, came out about how you wanted? The
satisfaction of putting together a story others will enjoy reading, no matter
how many – or how few – actually read it?
There is no right answer; there
are wrong ones. By “wrong,” I mean, if you’re getting into it to make money and
you don’t, whose fault is that? Is the system rigged against you? Sure it is,
if only because there are more people who want to make money as writers than
the industry can support. The lottery’s rigged against you, too, and you don’t
bitch about that. (You have one chance in 292,201,338 to win the Power Ball jackpot.)
Telling stories for money is a
privilege, not a right. It’s on you to come to accommodation with the industry.
If you can’t, don’t bitch; quit. Not being a writer is the default state of
humanity; there’s no shame in it. Those who make even a serious attempt are
outliers.
“But I can no more not write
than I can not breathe!”
Then save your breath and stop whining.
No one is owed a living in their preferred profession. No one knows that better
than I do. How I came to know it is a topic for another day.
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