There was another burst of indignant publicity this month about
how little authors are paid. The figure of £7,000 a year has been put forward
as our median annual earnings, following a survey by ALCS, a brilliant
organisation that collects money on behalf of writers.
I fear that the figure, however, while useful for giving the
story a media-friendly hook, doesn’t really mean much. In the age of
self-publishing, I would posit that a large percentage of the books earn their
authors nothing. Just like the vast majority of paintings and the vast majority
of music.
That is not a reflection on self-publishing, which I genuinely believe
to be a giant leap forward for civilisation, because I would suggest that a similarly
large percentage of traditionally published books have also earned their
authors virtually nothing, despite having taken many hours, months or even
years to write. I have certainly had first-hand experience of writing books that
earn nothing, as well as others that have earned a great deal and allowed me to
continue in the business. I have never been able to predict in advance which
will win and which will lose, and nor can the publishers.
But losers there are always going to be in this race for sales. There
are simply not enough customers to buy all the books that are written and not
enough hours for enough people to read them. There are too many books and there
are too many competing forms of education and entertainment for it to be
possible.
So, what is a person to do if they want to write full-time for a
living?
I would suggest that we look at what happens with other arts and
crafts, whether it is making paintings, music, clothes, jewellery or furniture.
There are millions of people doing all these things for pleasure, never
expecting to make a penny. Those who do want to make a living usually have to
accept that they will have to compromise their standards and surrender their
peace of mind by dealing with people in the world of business, who might be
able to help them but will definitely want to make money from them. The
jewellery maker, for instance, will need the help of outlets that range from
Aspreys, (the equivalent of selling your book to a highly regarded literary
publisher), to the high street chains, (mass market, commercial publishers).
They will need someone to help them afford the valuable stones and to reach the
potential customers. They may even need to become wage slaves in the process,
(the equivalent in the writing world to being journalists, perhaps). All these
people will want to influence the creative process, and all of them will want
to keep as large a share of the resulting earnings as possible.
If the very idea of compromising is anathema to the jewellery
maker, then they will continue to make pieces that please them, with whatever materials
they can afford, and will accept that they may never make any money. Sometimes,
of course, by remaining true to their muse, their creations may find their own
market, and rise of their own volition, propelled by positive word of mouth. In
most cases, of course they won’t because the world is full of jewellery, (as a stroll
through any craft fair or antiques market will demonstrate), and there are only
limited amounts that people can wear.
So it is with books. Anyone who wants a book to read will not
have to look far in order to find one, and in most cases they won’t have to pay
the author because it will be waiting for them on the shelf of a friend, in a
library, or available for pennies in a charity shop. How can it be possible for
every book to sell enough copies to recoup the cost of manufacture and pay the
author a decent hourly rate for their labours?
As a result, writers are all at the mercy of the machinations of
publishers’ marketing departments and the fickle whims of the mass media, which
is why books by celebrities push their way to the top of the charts and why
most professional writers can only dream of bestsellerdom most of the time.
Some people worry that the lack of financial return will mean that writing remains an elite pastime, only available to those with other sources of income. But exactly the same situation applies to musicians, and yet music is often cited as a potential pathway out of poverty. Others worry that the unlikeliness of making any money will put
people off writing books. I’m not so sure. I have a feeling that knowing the
odds are stacked against them will not deter people from writing any more than
it deters us from buying lottery tickets. Dreams are resilient creatures.
Comments
Writers need readers, which as a teacher it is my life's work trying to create. I also think we need to ensure that people are aware of the joys of creativity as you mention for example in the jewellery trade.
You have raised such a big question here that my reply can hardly do it justice. Most authors I know combine writing with other careers and the growth of book fairs and festivals like Hay has been significant in the last 30 odd year - see some of our AE writers' blogs for evidence of this. In Stegner's novel the writer gets a job in publishing in Cambridge, Mass., but his wife is suffering from a serious illness. I like my bibliotherapy flavoured with realism.
Thanks for a great post. Onward and upward with those dreams.
All my novels have earned something, though not thousands, and some sink without trace after the first few months. It's harder to get into the top 100 of your genre now than it was, but I'm glad to say my latest novel has managed to be categorised as a cosy dog mystery (not my doing but Amazon's!)so the genre is probably much smaller in terms of other books than the major ones are.