Tuesday, August 23, 2005

"I want to be a writer"

The words appeared on a forum to writers and small publishers: "I really want to become a writer."

If you want to be a writer, you write. You may be an unsuccessful writer or a successful one but it is impossible to stop a writer from being a writer.

As one of those people, I started writing as soon as I was capable of stringing words together with stories pinned up on school noticeboards and in school magazines.

I used my first wages to buy a typewriter and wrote a book which was never published. Eventually I found the one thing which could stop me writing -- the publishing business I started to publish my books after my initial publisher went broke. I went on to publish books by others and I had no time left to write.

So the publishing business had to go** and I'm back to writing. Maybe the business I used to own will publish my next book...

**An explanation may be in order: I'm writing this blog for The Worsley Press, and I'm still keenly interested in the future of that publishing business, but I no longer own it. Worsley Press is now owned by Geoffrey Heard who was a Worsley Press author as well as having done some layout work and having effectively "packaged" the latest WP book, Type & Layout, handling its acquisition, negotiating with the author, writing additional material and handling the layout. So an author and publisher have changed places.

Libraries: a story of hope

A couple of times in recent months I've read stories of libraries in the USA just not buying books any more. One recent discussion list post asked "Imagine if you could walk into your public library and it looked like Barnes and Noble, or Borders, or your independent book store." Well, despite there being tales of constant budget cuts and pressure for funds to be transferred to the electronic services of libraries, it gave me hope that local libraries at least near me in Australia do look bright, with comfortable seating, helpful staff, and no shortage of custom.

When the latest Harry Potter book was released here, it wasn't the local bookstores putting on a major show, it was the local public library. The release time here in Australia was 10am and, at 11am they had the books arrive, a dress-up contest, a reading of the first chapter, displays of other recommended children's books and names could be added to the waiting list of those who wanted the HP copies. Of course the other recommended books by other authors, including several local authors, were available for instant loan.

And I should add that authors and publishers get paid an annual fee for books in public libraries -- a little over a dollar a book for authors, a small fraction of that for publishers. It's done on a random sample basis so payments aren't absolutely accurate but that does keep admin costs of the scheme down. I have a book published more than 10 years ago which still shows up in the survey so I've received around $10 per copy in libraries as the author of that... It will almost certainly go below the 50 copy national threshold this year but that book would have almost been worth writing for library sales alone.

I just hope that the USA realizes the importance of public libraries and adopts the way of the UK, many European countries, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, etc. See http://www.plrinternational.com/

I've seen comments from small publishers that library sales could be hurting their other sales. I just cannot see that. It is not uncommon for the letters or emails we get at Worsley Press from people who order direct to say things like "I borrowed the book from the library but I want a copy for myself" and I'm sure that is only the tip of the iceberg.