'Only connect' by Cally Phillips
(or, Serendipity Part One)
Selling yourself is the advice writers are often blithely given. I’m afraid it always smacks to me of ‘the oldest profession’ when I hear the phrase. I have no intention of selling myself. If I sell anything I’m selling my WORK. Anything else, I give away. (Some might say all too liberally – I mean why give my opinion, everyone has one and they don’t need me to give them mine.) Yet I in my opinion (since you ask) I think an important issue is: what value does one place on ones writing? I made a living out of selling my writing (and writing skills) for 20 years (in some very ingenious and non conventional ways I’ll admit) and so I entered the ebook revolution hoping to find a way I could perpetuate this ‘career’ move. But it just isn’t like that. Not for me. Not for many non genre ‘indies’ I expect. One has to take stock, take a deep breath and learn how to ‘deal’ with that uncomfortable truth. For me, and the likes of me (yes, even hardened, hard bitten, hard boiled or whatever kind of hard you like – former professionals who’ve earned their crust through writing) in the short term this is not a way to make money. I know some of you are doing it – some with better ‘track records’ or better built ‘fan bases’ and I applaud you, if this is ‘your time’ then please, make the most of it – there is no chagrin or jealousy implied here – if you can do it DO IT because you are the vanguard leaders and hopefully me, and the likes of me, will eventually join you in that happy land when THE MARKET changes or settles or does whatever it will need to do to enable individual writers (be they self or indie publishing) to see the light of day and connect with readers.
As E.M.Forster put it, the issue is ‘only
connect.’ I still hope (even if I don’t always
believe) that when we find a way or build a way or a way is found or built to
connect directly reader to writer we will start to make progress in the digital
revolution.
One truth (ugly for seller, happy for consumer) I perceive is
that when it comes to digital media, FREE is the new black. And maybe we’ll have to get used to that. You
can give it away or you can sell it. The choice is yours. It depends what you
want out of it. But you can’t make people buy it. And if you want to get sales
you have to do the sales shuffle! For
me, I prefer ‘always be writing’ to ‘always be closing’ but above it all
‘always be learning’ is my main mantra from Mamet.
To misquote once again: 'It’s the revolution, stupid.' Economics is god folks.
Remember that. (That
only need be a problem if you believe in God of course).
I’ve spent the last 18 months wandering the virtual streets
of the emergent ebook marketplace and found that these virtual streets are no
different from the ‘real’ ones when it comes to writing and publishing. The
same rules apply. If you are in fashion, if you have marketing power or hype
ability then you get noticed. If not, not. And then it’s a case of not getting
depressed, not spitting the dummy and not thinking that ‘good’ has anything to
do with ‘sales.’ It’s a case of doing
what you believe in to the best of your ability. And then there’s LUCK. Sure the harder you work the luckier you can
be, but equally the more money you have to throw at something in our consumer
capitalist world the luckier you can be too. So I’m thinking there may be some
relationship between luck and money and that some of us are just destined NEVER
to ride the lucky money train. So we
need other things to get us out of bed in the morning. Fortunately, I don’t
believe in either luck or money (yes, I said it folks, I don’t believe in
money) either as things in their own right or indeed as having any relevance to
my life. They are social constructs. I spit on them! I have higher aims. For me, the most important commodity in my
life is TIME.
Time has to be managed like everything else and priorities
have to be made. And my current ‘time out’ from writing is in order to ‘direct’
the online ebook festival for this, its second year. It’s a bit of a busman’s holiday but it’s a
time commitment and a commitment to my ‘principles’ which I’m happy to
undertake. I don’t believe in luck, money
or god but I still have an unshakable belief that likeminded people working together
for a common goal (even if they be writers) can achieve something. In this
instance the goal is to introduce writers to readers and to show the average
Joe who hasn’t a Scooby what all this ebook stuff is about (which includes many
writers as well as readers) that there’s a lot of writing out there ‘beyond the
margins’ of the mainstream marketplace and traditional patterns, which offers
all kinds of new, enjoyable and challenging experiences. I know the virtual streets aren’t paved with
gold, I know that the market will always dominate and the big boys will always
stand at the front and crowd out the rest of us – but even though I’ve read
Orwell and I know that we are doomed from the moment the clock struck thirteen
on the opening page,
I will NOT love Big Brother and I will continue to put my
efforts into finding another way, a niche, a resistance – call it what you will
– to voice the unvoiced and to have a good time doing it.
Finding readers can seem a bit like looking for life on
other planets if you’re not ‘in the mix’ but at least if we put it out there
there’s a chance. GlenGarry GlenRoss
gives me the shivers.
Nineteen Eighty
Four is my acknowledged truth but when I need a bit of cheering up, you can’t
do better than Field of Dreams
(if you build it they will come) and when that
doesn’t work there’s always Bronco
Billy.
Always be dreaming is so much nicer than always be closing (in my opinion!)
Next month I’ll give you the pre-festival ‘low down’ but you
can get in before the event and bookmark the site. We’ll have ‘teasers’ and
information on site from the beginning of August – we’re ‘building it’ right
now in the hope that you’ll come to the ball game. And it’s FREE for all with
an infinite number of best seats in the house.
Hope to see you there.
Comments
We all believe in god - sometimes we just call it something different: science, progress, love, self-fulfilment, success, whatever. Even the god of writing.
,-)
As for the divinity of money, the way we all behave about it makes it look like the peak of evolutionary progress (so far). It certainly seems to be more important than people in the present context. Its existence (in one's pocket or bank or whatever) is becoming more important than its function. To me, an ignoramus in the realm of economics, it seems like an abstraction more potent than most material things.
Finally, the first job I had when I graduated was as trainee manager in a factory. I was paid what was for me a huge salary but I only stuck it for 10 months because I realised that I was in that factory for 10-12 hours a day so, however much they gave me, I'd never have time to spend it. That was when I first realised that, as you say, the real currency is time.
We just have to keep writing - I'm discovering, through the eco-writing movement, that there's a whole lot of people out there who have a very different view. There are people who want books about ideas, lyrical expositions of what it means to be human, and books that try to change things, challenging the status quo.