Remember publishers' lunches? by Jan Needle
Deadlines
– as Ann Evans was saying just a blink ago – doncha just love ‘em? Following the principle that there’s more to life than working, or even writing, I found
myself this week towing a twenty foot sloop from the north to the south to
launch and berth her with my brother-in-law near Portsmouth. The sun was
shining, all was delight. Two days later, soaked, frozen, and exhausted, I
noticed the date. It’s Friday evening now. I've just got home. You’ll be reading this, sensation
seekers, within brief hours of me finishing it. Okay?
I
also came to realize that I’d put a day-specific post on my own blog –
janneedle.com – last week, and the event I was talking about, and appearing in,
had come and gone. One never knows if anyone reads these things, but if they
do, I need to apologise. Or at least get rid of it, quickly. As quickly as the
June weather put paid to my hopes of nautical bliss (suntan included).
A
third thing, now remembered, gnaws at me. I’ve been giving away a free digest
of my thriller Kicking Off as a booster before putting it up on Kindle. My
guess is that I should have given the whole thing the final go ahead by now.
Not done. Good God, I’ve got to pull myself together!
I’ve
never been technically minded. I can do old engines, solve mechanical problems
reasonably well, get by when the car breaks down, but the world of the computer
is a mystery, through and through. Which is why I decided to take the plunge
when my ex-agent sent me a letter from a company that wanted to publish my
historical naval fictions as ebooks. Cut out the middle man. Me.
I
got in touch with them, heard what they said, and checked out with the Society
of Authors if it was echt or some sort of snare for a dumbarse author. Me.
A
week later I went to lunch with them in London. Lunched by a publisher! Just
like the good old days! I’d probably have said yes to anything!
Not
true, but I was impressed. They wanted an original, and I told them the William
Bentley books were not available. Matti Gardner (son) is in the process of
readying them for the ebook world. The first one, A Fine Boy for Killing, is
almost ready to be rolled out.
“How
about writing us a novella then, same era, same characters if you want?” they
said. “That way the books can feed off each other. People will read the
novella, then want to read the novels, or vice versa. And yes, of course you
can trail your own epublications in ours. You’ll do the same for us. Makes
sense, no?”
Sounds like sense to me, I said. What’s the deal?
“Give
us a file, or a copy of the book if we’re talking backlist, and we do the rest.
All the scanning, proofing, everything. And we do a cover.”
Still
sounded good. But I assumed it would cost me. No, they said. It costs you
nothing. We do everything, and consult with you as well. Our USP is good
professional books. If we turn out rubbish, the business dies.
The
nitty gritty, naturally, was the financial nuts and bolts, the “deal.” Which
turns out to be thirty per cent of the cover price, gross, paid twice a year.
They take thirty, Amazon takes thirty, the author takes thirty, the taxman, the
legal niceties, see off the rest.
I
later ran the whole thing in front of the Society of Authors. They said fifty
per cent would be better, but that was up to me. And it was thirty per cent of the gross, which was unusual, and not in a
bad way.
One good reason to forget work |
A
backlist book sounded the most useful victim for experiment from my point of
view. I told them of one I wrote some years ago about the Rudolf Hess flight. A
dark and mysterious thriller about a dark and mysterious man. Or even men…
Bingo,
they said!
It
is now in the process of preparation. Their turnaround time is measured in
weeks, not months. And in the meantime, I’m writing a novella about Daniel
Swift, the terrible man who is uncle to William Bentley, the fine boy for
killing.
I’m
not giving up my own ebook venture, that’s the best thing. Kicking Off will be
up soon in a revised edition, followed shortly afterwards by The Bonus Boys,
which will also feature Rosanna Nixon and Andrew Forbes.
And
the Hess book, if I so wish, will contain information about these books, even
sample chapters. Cross fertilization, it appears, might turn out to be the name
of the game.
The
weirdest thing about this unexpected lunch in London was that all three of us,
writer and two publishers, had soft drinks.
Comments
Now that's the business side cleared away let's get down tomore important stuff. What were you towing WITH? And what's the mysterious Dutch square-rigger in your photo. Need to know. And also, don't belittle your own practicality. Loads of people can do computers (I can't) but not nearly as many can do the much more important diesel engines (I can't - as you well know)
Jus a minute. You say you towed a boat from north to south on the SEA? And it took TWO DAYS? Stone me.
Cally, you've already given me several lunches, even cooked 'em for me. Also oodles of advice and inspiration, which my tired old bonce is still processing. This offer, that came out of the blue, involved me doing NOTHING, except catching a train and two buses. So therefore had to take priority! And after struggling with force six winds and lashing rain rigging my boat in Portsmouth for two days, I'm damn near dead, so you can publish me soon, probably.
Julia - naut fic site? Aha, thank you. I'll check it out. As for the towing, as an ocean tug fanatic, I'd love to say I borrowed the Turmoil or the Zwarte Zee for a couple of days, but in fact the job was done by Viv's old Vauxhall Zafira, by road. And the 'twenty footer' was technically a romantic fabrication. She's a Winkle Brig (called Badsox) and only twenty feet if you include the bowsprit. Sixteen feet on deck, fifteen on the waterline. As to the mysterious Dutchman, isn't she beautiful? But I nicked her off fb, from the wall of my mate Geraint Lloyd Taylor, whose mum and dad I'm just about to drive down to Wales to spend the night with. He goes to work by water taxi every day, so I guess he snapped her in the Thames. Diesel engines is good. What more need I say?
Dennis, same answer. No, it was not upon the sea! I dreamed as a lad of being Captain Jan (wonderful book about tugs by Jan de Hartog) but I can't add up, let alone do navigation type trigonometry, etc, so that was out! As to your terrific book, it was in my mind when I met these two fellers, but they very firmly don't do children's. However, I'm not sure yours has to be a children's book, entirely, are you? Maybe you should think about keeping the ebook rights? The deal most publishers want to do on ebooks makes me think that should possibly be a general rule. Keep the buggers, and look to the future! In the meantime, I'll keep you posted.
Knowing my track record, I might be about to get fleeced!
As to book world lunches - successive agents have always treated me to good lunches (I think they feel sorry for me), but publishers? A pub sandwich, if you're lucky.
I had to sell my own boat a few years back - having to do a 1 hour 40 minute drive to and from her mooring in Findhorn Bay didn't really make sense - so I envy you the rigging work, even in conditions like that.
My sole publisher's lunch was with my then editor, a lovely, perceptive, generous person. It was a real, posh one in London - great food, interesting conversation - but the only specific thing I remember about it was when we were leaving. The editor is about 5' 10" and my wife, who's 5' 1" complimented her on the dress she was wearing and asked where she got it. The answer? 'Long Tall Sally'.
and i've also had lunch in that vauxhall pub with pam royd's daughter Caz, of walker books. she pointed out jeffrey archer eating some slop, and i had the extreme pleasure of accidentally treading on his foot as we left. literary criticism on the hoof!