Ferocious Cheese, Ale, and Authors - Susan Price
Susan Price |
Now that was a cheese you could call a cheese. It reminded me of
Pratchett’s Horace, the ferocious, kilt-wearing Lancre Blue which fights
alongside the Feegles.
A cheese like that has a small, specialist market. A market that became even smaller when we opened
the boot, and released the full, pent-up bouquet. stripping paint from a nearby wall.
Still, the cheese had its fans. Business was brisk. There was no supermarket executive, saying,
“We’ll cease production because it’s too – individual.
It’s not economically viable for us.”
Lovers of the ferocious cheese were kept supplied, because
the dairy was small enough to respond to its customers – who it met face to
face across the market-trestles – and small enough to think every customer important.
'Head and Tales' by Susan Price |
The Campaign for Real Ale formed in 1971, to oppose the
‘mass production of beer and the homogenisation of the British brewing
industry.’ The campaign has had enormous
success, not only in keeping small breweries open, but in encouraging the
opening of new ones, and forcing large brewers to rethink their attitude to
their customers. It’s usual now, as in
my local, to find several ‘independent’ beers on sale, even in a pub owned by a
large franchise.
Well, recently, the publishing industry, just like the big
supermarkets and breweries, has become more focussed on what produces big, fast
profits for them, and less interested in what’s wanted by their core market –
people who genuinely love reading.
As with the breweries, huge conglomerations bought up
smaller, more responsive firms. Already
piffling authors’ advances were cut (thus killing the goose that lays the
golden eggs), and mid-list authors with very good sales were dropped because
they didn’t make spectacular sales.
We’ve seen – often to the dismay of editors - the rise and
rise of Accounts and Marketing, which isn’t interested in nurturing talent for
the future, or quality, or originality, or in anything except the spreadsheet
and the marketing angle.
So bookshops are full of books-of-the-tv-show, and
biographies of 22 year-old reality TV stars – while Linda Gillard, erstwhile of
these pages, was dropped by her publishers because she insisted on writing
intelligent, original, lively, funny romances with heroines in their 40s. She had – and has – legions of readers but her
publishers said her books weren’t ‘marketable’ because they had no clear genre. Most of us on this blog
have had similar experiences regardless of what kind of books we write.
'Christopher Uptake' by Susan Price. |
This is our Writers’ Craft Fair. This is our stall and here, spread out, are
our wares.
If you like Farmers’ Markets because the profit goes
directly to the small-holder, little bakery or dairy and supports their
enterprise – if you buy handmade or vintage clothing because it’s different from what’s in all the conventional, high-street shops – if you buy
from Farmers' Markets because you appreciate the greater flavour of
cheese or bread made with higher quality ingredients and greater care – then
welcome! Please take a look around our stalls.
Please browse the pages – click on the links. Jump to the writers’ websites. Visit their blogs – leave a comment and have
a chat. Drop by our Facebook page.
If you love reading, if you want to directly support the
writers who invent, shape and hone the books you love to read – then be
assured, a much larger percentage of the selling price of our books goes directly to the writers than with any conventional publishing deal. Even though our e-books are generally much cheaper, we still earn more per book than we would with a publisher.
And we’re so pleased to see you here – we hope you enjoy our books - please do come again!
Find out more about all of Susan Price's e-books here.
Check out readers' reviews of my books at Good Reads, here.
Find out more about all of Susan Price's e-books here.
Check out readers' reviews of my books at Good Reads, here.
Comments
But I'm being sidetracked by cheese issues here.
It is one of the great pluses for ebooks - there is a much greater range of titles available than in a bookshop which a) only has a certain amount of stock and b) tends only to stock the big selling titles rather than the smaller niche volumes. And, of course, it's as instant as buying in a real shop, but without the hassle of having to go into town.
So you could also say that like certain cheeses, it's green too!
But all these books were written for readers - some very consciously so. Ask any dumped mid-list author who already had a loyal following waiting for the next book. (Me again.)
You're right that what leads to blandness is the pursuit of profit, but that's nothing to do with readers. Readers are far more adventurous than editors give them credit for! It's Tesco & co. who put the conservative brakes on. Readers want a rattling good yarn at a good price and for them anything goes.
Lee, I think we do need to keep the reader in mind, but this isn't a deadening influence. I judge my books by what I want as a reader. Is it interesting enough for me? Is the prose beguiling enough? Is the story rich enough? I learned by reading books I love - and so I keep my 'reader self' in mind when I write.
If Blogger eats this comment - my second go - I will have to break open a beer.