Dorchester just announced it is cutting its mass market paperback line and focusing on ebooks.
A few months ago, Medallion announced the same thing.
I've heard, through sources who asked not to be named, that sell-through for paperbacks is as bad as 20%. In other words, out of ten printed, only two sell.
Now what's going to happen if more publishers follow this business model?
Here's a possible scenario.
1. Fewer paperbacks are published. Publishers either eliminate their paperback lines, or begin publishing more selectively, in smaller numbers, to cut costs and losses.
2. Bookstores have fewer books on their shelves, and sell fewer books as a result. Which means less money to the publishers.
3. Publishers downsize, since the ebook market, though growing, doesn't bring in the same money as print does. In order to maintain positive cash flow, they bill their accounts to pay up.
4. Their accounts--bookstores and distributors--can't pay up. They don't have the money to pay for the books they've sold--which they bought on credit. So they begin returning other books on the shelves to get credit for those.
5. Now there are far fewer books on the shelves, which means far fewer sales.
So when publishers stop printing as many books as they are now, the delicate balance will shift.
What does this mean to you, the author?
The main reason we need publishers is for distribution. We can't get into Wal-Mart or Borders on own own. They can. So we accept 8% royalties in order to sell a lot of books. But if publishers are no longer printing books, there is ZERO reason to sign with them, because they no longer have that advantage. Especially when we can earn 70% royalties on our own.
If you do sign with a publisher, make sure it contains a clause that states they MUST release it in print, or revert the rights back to you. Make sure there is specific wording for "out of print" that doesn't include ebook sales.
But, if you do sign with a publisher, do you think you'll ever get your rights back?
Let's say I'm running a publishing company. I see ebooks are the future, and I've got three new authors coming out in print. I gave these authors healthy advances, and there's no way they'll earn out these advances with print sales.
Their contracts state the only way they'll get rights back is if the books go out of print. But if I'm making all of my money on ebooks, and I'm still not close to earning back the advance money I gave the author, I simply can't allow the books to go out of print.
What should I do, as a publisher? If a book is selling very few print copies, but a lot of ebook copies, what are my options?
Now, we all know that publishers are honest, and their accounting is always truthful. But what if, when facing bankruptcy, some unscrupulous publisher (as opposed to all the honest ones) decide to artificially keep a book in print in order to keep earning ebook royalties?
Here's an imaginary example.
Joe Blow gets a $50k book deal with Publisher X. Publisher X cuts the print run because they're having some money trouble, and ships out 30k copies. The book does so-so, and has a 30% sell-though. Of those 9000 copies sold at $6.99 each, Joe Blow earns $5040.
So the publisher is in the red for $45k (probably more, but we'll stick to the advance..)
However, the book is doing well as an ebook, and has sold 5,000 copies. And unlike the print books, which dwindle down to a few hundred per year, the ebook stays strong.
5,000 ebooks sold, at $6.99 each, equals $6,100 in royalties.
Let's look at the royalty numbers for the first few years.
Year 1
Print: $5040
Ebook: $6100
Year 2
Print : $1020
Ebook: $7,200
Year 3
Print: $302
Ebook: $9,000
Year 4
Print: $51
Ebook: $12,500
Now the publisher has a problem. Joe Blow has earned out $41,213 of his $50,000 advance. By year 5, he'll certainly earn it out. But his book is pretty much out of print, which means the publisher has to revert the rights back to the author, on a book that is earning money.
The publisher may be reluctant to do that, for obvious reasons. So what should Publisher X do?
Maybe, incredibly, they sold more print books in Year 4 than they originally thought. Maybe they tell Joe Blow they owe him $1500 for print sales--which is enough to say the book is still in print, and then they still have the rights.
Will Joe Blow ever get his rights back?
Now let's look at what would happen if Joe Blow never sold the book at all. He self-pubs at $2.99, earning $2.04 royalty per book.
Using the same sales figures as above, let's see what he makes.
Year 1: $10,200
Year 2: $12,039
Year 3: $15,049
Year 4: $20,901
Looks like Joe earned $41,213 through his publisher, and $58,189 on his own. Plus he still owes the publisher $8787 on his advance.
Chances are, Joe will earn out his advance in Year 5, and then make a steady $10k per year off of this title, through his publisher.
If he'd kept the rights, he'd be making $20k in Year 5, and every year after that. But my numbers assume he'd sell the same number of books at his publisher's $6.99 price as he would at his own $2.99 price--which is doubtful. The $2.99 price will sell a lot more, based on my experience.
So how much money is Joe Blow losing in the long run by signing with a print publisher? Will Joe ever get his rights back when "creative accounting" comes into play?
Now, I know this scenario takes a lot of liberty with reality. None of us can imagine a future where publishers would knowingly fudge numbers. And we all know that print will remain the dominant force in publishing for years to come, even if publishers are printing fewer books and even dropping their print lines completely.
Right?
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247 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 247 of 247Interesting posts, as always. I thought long and hard before pricing my novella for Kindle, and ultimately opted to go with $1.99, a more than reasonable price for the introductory book to what is planned as a three-book series. For the next, I will most likely include some previously pubbed short stories and price at $2.99. All in all, I believe readers are the ones that set the "sweet spot" as far as pricing. I do value my work so I'm not at all lowballing it out of fear or anything of the sort. I've received plenty of critical accolades for my traditionally pubbed work, but this indie venture has been wonderful, and ultimately is more about the reader than anything I've ever done before. Write a good story and the rest will follow.
Joe,
AFRAID is listed at $6.99. How is that working for you, compared to TRAPPED and ENDURANCE at $2.99?
Maybe $6.99 ebooks, published by New York, with the 50-50 royalty split, are just as profitable as doing the indie thing at $2.99.
Not every author is a Midlist God like you.
- Jack
Jack,
You mean the New York publishers than peddle the DRM snake oil, so many people refuse to buy.
And the same ones that georestrict books so huge numbers of people can't buy.
In 2010, with his situation, there is not a chance in hell one of those books with their ludicrous barriers to sales will sell more at $6.99.
I've compared my publisher's ebook to mine before. I'm losing 100k a year on that, a combo of crummy royalties and fewer sales because of highet prices.
" ... they never offer a clear and concise formula for marketing success -- actually selling the books -- the way Joe does. He's been razor focused on this angle all his career (visiting 600 libraries? the guy is a maniac about marketing)."
But surely the point is, he's a failed maniac. His print career was unspectacular, despite the 600 libraries and the 1200 bookstores. He got it wrong. Is he right now?
I'm not saying this to be mean. But, unassisted, we're all poor marketers, and how will we cope among an undifferentiated mass of five or ten million titles?
Ebooks are fun at the moment, but let's talk again in 5 or 10 years.
unassisted, we're all poor marketers
Really, you know everyone on the planet? Not a single good writer-marketer among us?
how will we cope among an undifferentiated mass of five or ten million titles?
Impossible. I mean, the web only has a dozen sites, and we all know that there have only been a few hundred books ever written. My brain would melt if I had to make choices.
Joe,
I understand why the numbers work for you. But at $2.99, only 1000 authors can make a living on Kindle.
Ebooks at $6.99 - $9.99 means we can increase that. Maybe 3000 - 5000 authors can make a living writing fiction.
However fast the ebook market grows, I think we can all agree that getting more authors making more money is the best way to improve the human condition.
- Jack
Jack -
I've looked back at my buying history, and the last couple of dozen ebooks I've purchased have been at $4.99 or less. I can't remember the last ebook I bought in the "$6.99 - $9.99" range. I realize I am only one buyer telling her story, but I visit lots of reader blogs and many, many folks are sticking to cheaper books. I think you are underestimating how many writers will succeed at lower price points.
Since I recently got my kindle (love it), I've bought several e-books, and have done a lot of browsing. I just can't make myself buy e-books that cost the same as, or more than, print books. I hope publishers figure out that lower e-book prices sell more books.
Lynda
http://www.lyndahilburnauthor.com
I just found out the guy who did my kindle conversions is too busy to do any more. I think Joe's guy is pretty busy, too. Anyone else out there who does kindle conversions, and who might help with covers, etc.?
Lynda
boulderboomer@aol.com
http://www.lyndahilburnauthor.com
JimandZetta.com does conversion, as well as editing and other services. They're EPIC members and quite reuptable.
the point is, he's a failed maniac
LOL. I've got hundreds of thousands of books in print and have made a living at this for eight years, and I attribute that to my efforts. Failed? I wish. If I'd failed, I would have my rights back, which is what I want.
Ebooks at $6.99 - $9.99 means we can increase that. Maybe 3000 - 5000 authors can make a living writing fiction.
That's interesting, but I'm not sure what it has to do with me. I don't have the power to start a trend for higher priced ebooks, nor do I believe they should be higher priced.
I think it would be great for every writer to make a living at their craft, but not at what I perceive to be the expense of the reader. Seven to ten bucks IMO is too much.
Writers can certainly try it, but if they can earn enough to live on at ten bucks, I'd bet they'd earn even more at three bucks. That's been my experience.
Thanks, Selena!
Lynda
http://www.lyndahilburnauthor.com
7.99 for an ebook is too much.
That depends how long the book is! I have a couple that are over 600 pages long and took me a heck of a lot more time than do 100-200 page books. My shorter books are priced accordingly.
I do think most are priced way too high. Why buy an ebook for $9.99 or more when you can wait for the paperback and get that for $12.00 and not have to worry about whether the format will work with your reader? (My 600 pagers are retailed at $25 but I hand sell for less.) $2.99 may be quite fair for many ebooks since many are short, but the author's time does have to be a factor.
As far as Dorchester or the others, there are other considerations:
1- They have a name. Indies have to work very hard to establish their own name to try to compete with known publishers.
2- Formatting your own work into all of the different file types to work with all of the different readers is not a simple or quick process. Before you go indie, consider that.
3- Are publishers other than the top 5 still paying advances that are so hard to make up?
I've been indie publishing since 2003 and have no intention of changing that, but writers better know it's not as easy as it sounds.
This whole publishing business seems almost like the mafia to me. And, while I am not a big fan of e-books and e-readers I do see that they are the future of the literate public. I just hope that the publishers and the writers that are doing a good job today don't end up as trash collectors once this tsunami of unstable business practices settle down.
Joe,
You preach $2.99. And your voice is mighty. If every ebook in the world became $2.99, do you believe 100% of authors would benefit?
I believe less than 1% would benefit. I believe you’re in the elite 1%. You’re running a charity. It’s endearing. You’re a goddamn hero. Joe Konrath vs The World.
You’re also a Super Guru. Selling JK black leather panties. One size fits all. It makes great headlines.
But the economics here is complex. Price is not the bottleneck. Time is the bottleneck. Interest is the bottleneck. Awareness is the bottleneck. Craftsmanship is the bottleneck.
No matter what the price is, I’m only going to read 25 novels per year. I’m only going to read my favorite authors, favorite genres.
I have never refused to buy a book because of price. I have never purchased a book simply because it was cheap. And I’m loyal.
25 ebooks x $8 = $200.
Amazon makes $60.
New York makes $70.
Author makes $70.
25 ebooks x $3 = $75.
Amazon makes $22
New York makes $26.
Author makes $26.
I read twice as many novels as the average American. If you were the God of Literature... How much money would you want me to contribute to the ecosystem?
- Jack
I have to agree with Lynda's comment about finding it hard to buy an ebook that costs the same or more than a print book. I read--on average--at least one book a week. I have a Kindle, and generally alternate between that and print. If I find an ebook that sounds interesting but is priced higher, I generally search around for similar themes (ex. "customers who viewed this, also viewed...."). If something similar is priced lower/the same as in print form, I'm going to go with that.
As for Joe's books--he got me hooked with the cheaper "impulse buys" like ORIGIN and THE LIST. By the time I got to AFRAID, I would have bought any new "Kilborn" title for any price. However, I wouldn't be willing to pay more for an author unless I was fairly certain I would enjoy their book. That being said, I think that most authors would get noticd more with lower priced ebooks--people are more willing to give them a chance when it's not a major purchase.
Kim
Price is not the bottleneck. Time is the bottleneck.
Your numbers are wrong, Jack. On an $8 ebook published traditionally, the author makes $1.40. On a $2.99 ebook self-published, the author makes $2.04.
I also don't believe time is the bottleneck.
First, many people buy more than they actually read.
Second, with ereaders, people read more than they do with print.
Third, the market is growing so quickly, saturating it is next to impossible.
Can every author make as much as I am? No.
But will authors make more self-pubbing than they would traditional publishing?
All signs point to yes.
This is a paradigm shift. Part of that shift is lower prices.
Things might change in the future. But the way I look at things, the $2.99 ebook is going to be the standard until free ebooks become the norm.
I don't want to be a hero, guru, profit, outlier, leader, or pioneer. I just want to frickin' write for a living.
I began this blog as a way to share what I've learned. I'll continue to share. And in the case of ebooks, what I've learned has the potential to help more writers than anything else I've done in my career. Whether it will help writers is up to luck, talent, and hard work.
As for prices, I can't justify more than a few bucks for a download. Maybe someday I will. But it isn't up to me to lead this charge. I'm only leading because people are following, not because I want to make any sort of difference.
I don't want to be a hero, guru, profit, outlier, leader, or pioneer.
A Freudian slip, no doubt. ;)
@Jack -
"But the economics here is complex. Price is not the bottleneck. Time is the bottleneck. Interest is the bottleneck. Awareness is the bottleneck. Craftsmanship is the bottleneck."
Wow, your bottle has a heckuva lot of necks!
Clearly there is no one cause holding all hesitant readers back from ebooks. Every reader has his or her own reasons for not purchasing them, and they usually have an order of priority. For me, price absolutely is my "bottleneck", and I know it is for many others as well. You may declare that it is not all you want, but spend much time on reader blogs and forums and it is very apparent that price is the biggest complaint readers have.
The only other factor from your list that matters to me personally is craftmanship. No wants wants to spend money on a stinker. The more "cheap" writers I read, though, the more I discover that low price doesn't mean poor craftsmanship, and high price certainly doesn't guarantee the reverse.
"I began this blog as a way to share what I've learned. I'll continue to share."
Glad you added that 2nd sentence.
and looking at the prophets this fiscal year, we see all of them have been murdered by unbelievers...
Bottom line - the traditional publishers will have to entice authors to go through them or they WILL face bankruptcy. Nowadays, I (as unpublished author) have to come up with my own marketing plan, platform (even for fiction), business plan and so on.
I JUST WANT TO WRITE! Why the heck would I do YOUR job for you and then collect 8% royalties when I might as well COLLECT 85% through Smashwords?
What benefit does traditional publishing hold for me anymore? I'm really asking.
I can get in bookstores - well, they're stopping that.
I can get reviewed - I can do that myself and reach more people via Blogs and Bloggers who just plain love to read - word of mouth through my peers, my market.
I can get an advance - hmmm...not nowadays and as your Post suggests, this opens up a bad can of worms.
High quality - now this one bugs the heck out of me. I know people who've revered books for decades are throwing them away so no one else can read it.
The ONE thing trad pub had going for it (in my opinion) was automatic seal of approval that the book was high quality.
In this economy combined with the ebook market, trad pub was tightening the reins and not taking on new authors - so someone tell me why there are tons of god-awful debut books out there? More so than in the past.
It just seems like trad pub is giving readers and authors no choice BUT to go to e-books.
Joe,
You have a Kindle. 6" or 10"?
How many ebooks do you buy per year?
How many cost $2.99 or less?
- Jack
It'll be a shame if this happens. I love to see my books in hardback. Just to see a row of them sitting on my bookshelf is good for the ego when you feel down.
JA wrote: "Now, we all know that publishers are honest, and their accounting is always truthful."
JA, can you do a post on this subject? How do we know publisher's are honest and truthful? Do they provide writers with accounting and inventory documents? Or do they just send you a check with a notation that says "1000 books sold this period. $1500 royalties."
I have a Kindle 2. In the past three months, I've bought 75 ebooks. Seventy of them were under $3. The other five were under $7.
75 books in 3 months is superfreaky.
How much of that is friendship?
How many have you read to the end?
I wonder what kind of ebook sales would attract a print publisher? For example I'm on target to sell 1000 ebooks within the first 4 months of publication. Is that a good number, or ordinary?
"I understand why the numbers work for you. But at $2.99, only 1000 authors can make a living on Kindle."
Exactly where do you come by this very specific statistic that only 1000 people can make a living from eBooks on the Kindle?
Evilphilip,
It’s not a stat. It’s my own dirty math.
I’m an author with a dream.
My question is, how many Kindle authors can earn over $50,000 per year (the average household income in the US) purely from Kindle sales.
Think like Joe. Price $2.99. Earn $2 per book sold. That means an author needs to sell 25,000 ebooks per year.
Look at Kindle sales rank. Estimate the books sold at different levels.
The top 300 authors can maybe make a living with one book.
The midlist authors can make a living with multiple books. Like Joe. He has 7-ish? books in the top 3000. Others might need more books to earn 50K+.
How many authors, each with 5-10 books, can you squeeze into the top 3000, and keep them there all year, so they can earn a living. I estimate 1000. And only if they can get $2 royalties or better. Can our $.35 friends break the $50K barrier? I doubt it.
These might be the current limits of Amazon’s recommendation system.
I love Amazon. Amazon is the world’s greatest pimp. But every pimp has a limit.
How many Kindle authors can earn $200K per year? Maybe 100.
How many Kindle authors can earn $5K per year? Maybe 10,000.
Can low-selling authors price higher to increase total profit? How high can we get?
Can we all have different sweet spots?
Having New York at $6.99 - $9.99 is helping indie authors sell more books at $2.99.
Would Joe sell the same if every book in the world cost $3?
If all the prices went down 1/3, would every reader start reading 3x as many books?
Today I read every post Joe wrote in the last two years. And I still don’t have the answers.
My dream is one thing. To, every day, increase my understanding of the nature of the world.
And I’m a guy who likes dirty math.
- Jack
Great post. Having recently self-published my own ebook, I can say it is much more satisfying than submitting queries to agents and publishers.
I think the beginning of the end for publishing begihns with the great feeling an author can get from submitting an ebook to the Kindle store (for example) and getting immediate sales and feedback from readers.
J.R. Chase
Author of Chicago Squeeze
Jack,
I think you're forgetting something with your numbers. Even if your numbers were completely factual (and I realize you're not claiming they are), those Amazon rankings will mean less (money-wise) as more and more ebooks hit the market.
Today a book that has to be in the top 1,000 to make a certain amount of money in the future might only have to be in the top 10,000. Why? More ebooks.
Will this happen? Don't know. But I'll take my chances. I'm a nobody, and I sell at least 500 ebooks a month through Kindle alone. I'm not paying all my bills with that money yet, but I'm paying some. And my numbers keep improving each month. And I have plans for more ebooks in the next several months.
Honestly, I don't see where selling 25,000 ebooks a year is out of the question, even for a beginning writer who polishes his or her craft, seeks out good editors and uses a quality cover artist. One of the keys is going to be to have more than one ebook for sale.
@Jack How about you put your nose to the grindstone and start going to work.
Write a novel. Get it out in the market place. Then promote it. Rinse and repeat.
It's called paying your dues. You want to skip first base and go right to third.
Most authors don't make a living. the one's who do make it, don't quit their day job until the 5th or 6th book.
Joe, I changed the prices on several of my books from $0.99 to $2.99. But Amazon has discounted most of them to $0.99. So, one of my novels, Hideaway Hospital Murders, has made it to #25 in Romantic Suspense in the Kindle Store (and #39 in Romantic Suspense for books).
And sales of my other books are beginning to take off. At the current rate, I will sell 1,000 books over the next month.
Very exciting. I just need to get my current novel finished.
Thanks for all your encouragement, Joe!
Robert, I don't know this for sure, but I'm guessing Amazon is discounting your books to 99 cents because you probably have the books for sale elsewhere online for 99 cents. Smashwords, perhaps?
Ty,
I hope Kindle-zilla breaks free and eats Tokyo.
And I’m not a Kindle virgin.
I have written seven novels. Five are on Kindle, and paperback. I had books on Kindle back in 2007.
My publisher is a small press, owned by a writer I went to university with. I’ve been writing plays, screenplays, and novels, 5-hours-per-day, 365-days-per-year, since 1997.
My sixth novel will release this fall. The seventh is in the pipe. I’m almost done with my ninth. I have a 50-year, 100-book ambition.
But I don’t write genre fiction. I write hardcore literature for a niche audience. NC-17 sex, violence, profanity. I will never be in the top 10,000. I made peace with that ten years ago.
My business is craftsmanship. Maximizing profit is just a hobby.
Like I said, I’m only here to learn.
- Jack
@Ty - Yes, my books are also distributed via Smashwords. I raised the prices of my books there too, but it takes forever before they update on B&N, Apple, Kobo, Sony, and Diesel---especially B&N. According to Smashwords, B&N takes up to eight weeks to make updates AFTER Smashwords has sent them.
So, right now Amazon is taking a loss on my books since I (wisely) opted for the 35% of list price royalty. I'm earning $1.04 on books Amazon is selling for $0.99.
It's not that I want Amazon to lose money. That's just the way their system works. If I had opted for the 70% royalty, I would only be making $0.64 on books that have a list price of $2.99.
Once all of the other stores update my prices I will change my Kindle royalty to 70% of sales price and start earning over $2.00 o my $2.99 books (since Amazon has discounted them to $0.99).
I hope Joe is alright.
@Jack
I don't think NC-17 sex, profanity, and violence is such a small niche audience.
It may not be as wide as the crap that sells 10 million copies.
But you could definitely gain an audience. It how well you pulll it off.
Is it written with taste? Is there a point and story arc?? Is the violence within context? Is the profanity within context? Is the profanity overdone? And what kind of profane words are you using?
For example, Al Pacino in Scarface. I think it was a total 224 F-bombs. But it fit the character, so it was acceptable.
I've read books where there was no need for the excessive violence.
I've seen movies where the hack screenwriter didn't know what to do so he just had the two characters say "Fuck you." back and forth repeatedly for no reason.
In other words, what i'm trying to say is that sexy naked women, violence, and profanity in and of itself isn't bad. but there is a limit. And after awhileit loses it's effect.
What's really hurting you now is the book covers. The guy licking the woman's bush might tickle a guys fancy and a woman might like having that done.
But as a marketing tool I think people will just think it's cheap, or low brow.
@RobertBurton
Or, instead of trying to be on every e-reader. You could have focused all your energy towards the kindle with a 2.99 title at 70%royalty rate and made a bunch of dough without the head ache.
You can try to be global and cover all your bases, but for what? to get a couple of sales from a foreign country? People are watching movies and playing games on the Ipad, B&N has too problems to make it worth the effort, and who cares about any other e-reader there will be a big rush of products and a lot of them will fail.
"It’s not a stat. It’s my own dirty math."
You made up your own number based off a ranking system that no one really understands and without any anecdotal or empirical evidence to prove your theory.
"Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government."
No one really understands how Amazon's ranking system works due to it being a combination of both the overall sales of a book and the number of sales for that book in the last hour/day/week.
Plus, most people brag up their Kindle sales based on obscure sub-lists and not the overall top 100.
You can't decide that any specific number of people can make a living off the Kindle based on random guesswork and that goes double in an environment where the potential number of Kindle readers is growing by leaps and bounds.
The Kindle itself is selling like hotcakes and there is a Kindle app for almost every device and phone.
I suspect that a lot more than 1000 people make their living off the Kindle now and that number will explode over the next five years.
I've already expounded on my resentment of the "attitude" of traditional publishing yet I also agree with many posters here that the wait time between agent/publisher acquisition is inexcusable.
Hell, I could write XYZ number of books and self-publish in the months/years that it might take my work to see print the "traditional" way.
Again, I'm not looking for instant gratification as I realize full well that the marketing end of this business is all-important.
However, I also agree that publishing IS a business: I.e., Will it sell well? or Does anyone know your name?
The first question is a subjective one. Just because I don't write vampire themes does not mean my work won't appeal to others. The second question is almost moot to me as I get quite tired of seeing the likes of Patterson slap crap (IMO) on some pages and automatically hit the bestseller list because of name recognition.
Anyway, I - for one - feel that publishing is usually about the flavor du jour...so if you happen to write vanilla on a chocolate day, you're shit out of luck.
@Jack H King
I bought 50 full-priced paperbacks last year. I went to a publishers warehouse and bought 30 more (for £3o total). In addition to that I regularly max my library card (30 book limit at one time) my oldest daughters library card (she's 6, so I get to get my books on her card) and usually another 10 - 15 on my middle daughters card. That's for a months loan.
I can (and often have) read 3 books a day, fitting them around everything else I do. I only read books start to finish; if I'm not going to have time to finish it, I won't start it (I hate stopping in the middle).
At $6.99 I can buy 2 books a week. At $2.99 I can buy 5. How does that equate to dearer books supporting more authors?
@Jack
If the average HOUSEHOLD income is $50,000 surely the author would only need to earn $25,000 since one person is generally considered HALF of a household.
Just my own dirty maths.
Hey ANONYMOUS!
When you were answering @Evilphillip about several subjects, you mentioned having a discussion with the Hard Case editor about their series turning away from noir .... said "This book ..." was not noir, among other things. Which title was it? You may have mentioned it in an earlier post, but I didn't see it.
Frankly, I thought the whole series "jumped the shark" when they published the Sherlock Holmes story (with an albeit fabulous cover). There have been a few fairly good stories since, but the series as a whole went sideways at that point.
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