Publishing:
What the &%!@ is going on?
April 2005
by Michael Bryson
Last month, I was talking to a senior
editor at a Canadian small press, and I asked him the $60 million
question: "Why do Canadian publishers release more poetry titles
than short fiction collections?"
To be clear, as a writer of short
fiction, I have a lot at stake in the answer to this question. I've
received more than one rejection note from a publisher turning down my
current manuscript because "as you know, short fiction is a hard
sell right now."
I don't dispute that short fiction is
difficult to sell. All small press titles are, generally speaking,
difficult to sell (a book like Eunoia
being the pleasant exception). About ten years ago, The New Quarterly
held a night at the Rivoli on Queen Street in Toronto to celebrate
Pocupine's Quill editor and writer John
Metcalf. Metcalf noted that the average small press title in Canada
sells between 500 and 1,000 copies. At that rate, publishers don't make
back their investment. In order for Canadian small press publishers to
remain in business, government funding is required to keep these
operations afloat.
(Of course, on that night, Metcalf also
reaffirmed his long-standing belief that governments should not fund
writers. Government grants for writers only ensures that bad writing
gets published, etc. See Metcalf's An
Aesthetic Underground and earlier Kicking Against the Pricks
for a full report of the man's views . . . . )
In any case, apparently the reason why
Canadian small press publishers release more poetry titles than short
fiction collections is because the Canada Council funds
"books." Thus, a publisher can finance a 90-page poetry title
much easier than it can finance a 200-page short story collection (less
paper, fewer expenses, lower break even point).
Do Canadian small press publishers
really publish fewer short story collections than poetry titles?
- Consider that the
list of titles submitted for 2004 Governor General's Award includes
183 fiction titles and 138 poetry titles. More fiction titles than
poetry titles, for sure. However, without even reviewing all 183 of
the fiction titles, I'm confident that more than 47 of them are
novels -- and, therefore, fewer than 138 of them are short story
collections. See the list yourself on the Canada
Council website.
- Further, you should check out the
Relit Awards. In 2004,
the Relit awards long list included 45
novels, 56 poetry titles, and
29 short story collections. In
2005, the Relit long list included 32 novels, 51 poetry titles, and
30 short story collections.
- Also see TDR's
informal survey of this issue.
Now you might say: But that Metcalf
event was a decade ago! Yes, it was, which leads to the obvious
suggestion that maybe things are better now. Except that the past decade
has been replete with tremendous shocks to the publishing, book
distributing, and book selling businesses. Exhibit 'A': Chapters/Indigo.
Exhibit 'B': The collapse of Stoddart. Exhibit 'C': Increased
consolidation of media companies worldwide. See TDR's
2002 interview with the Literary Press Group's Director
of Sales and Marketing, Robert Kasher, particularly this
question.
A quick summary: Chapters/Indigo, it
has been widely reported, make up roughly two-thirds of the bookselling
business in Canada. That means they have tremendous purchasing power --
which they use to leverage deals from publishers which are financially
beneficial to the bookseller. These deals cut the margin of profit that
publishers can count on and, thus, publishers have been negotiating
tougher contracts with writers. Chapters/Indigo has also caused much
financial trouble to small publishers by returning unsold books by the
hundreds. Booksellers have a right to return unsold books, within a
limited timeline; what makes Chapters/Indigo unique is the volume of
books they order/return. The middle-man between the publishers and the
book sellers is the book distributors. Stoddart acted as a publisher and
distributor. Chapters/Indigo set up its own book distribution company.
This fact, along with other financial pressures, led pushed Stoddart
into bankruptcy -- and left many publishers with books in warehouses,
book shelves, other unknown places. In other words, the small press
industry nearly slipped into chaos. Some of it did slip into chaos. Some
publishers closed shop. Some were sold. At one point, ECW Press didn't
pay its staff for three months.
Last month, when I spoke the senior
editor I mentioned earlier, he told me that the small press industry had
stabilized "as long as we take into account the current realities
of the marketplace." When I asked what that meant, he said,
"Basically, we need to acknowledge that we're going to be selling
fewer books, and we're going to be selling different books -- fewer
literary titles, more mass-market titles -- because that's what we need
to do to survive."
And more poetry titles than short
fiction collections, I couldn't help remarking.
Which was when he explained why.
And then I noticed on BookNinja
that Porcupine's Quill, where John Metcalf has been editor for many
years, has announced that it will be cutting its number of titles and
staff by half in 2006 -- and that the publisher has said he's not sure
the press can survive past 2007. BookNinja quoted the following from The
Globe and Mail report:
[Tim Inkster, the publisher] says
that last year Indigo cut its orders dramatically, ordering only 2,797
units of his press's 11-book list, which included critical favourites So
Beautiful by Ramona Dearing and Emma's Hands by Mary Swan.
Meanwhile, Indigo's returns of unsold books were 1,415, more than 50
per cent of its order. By comparison, Inkster says that, in 1998,
Indigo and Chapters (absorbed by Indigo in 2001) ordered 13,293 copies
of the press's books and returned 4,052, or less than 30 per cent.
Other links from BookNinja were also
discouraging. In an article ostensibly about the University of British
Columbia's creative writing program, Toronto literary agent Denise
Bukowski was quoted as saying "Publishers
are running scared right now because fiction isn't selling." A
posting on the blog Moby
Lives said something similar,
and the Globe's Martin Levin wrote in one of his weekend columns
that literary agents were encouraging novelists to write memoirs (why?
fiction isn't selling). Meanwhile, TVOntario cancelled its long-running
book show "Imprint," which led Gordon Lockheed to note on the
Dooney's Cafe website "a
fundamental shift from literature as a crucial cultural conversation to
a low-prestige consumer commodity".
Incidentally, the March/April 2005
issue of This Magazine includes an
article by Tim Falconer about how 80-90 per cent of the fiction
bought in Canada is bought by women; the reading habits of men lean
towards non-fiction:
It’s no coincidence that most
people who work in publishing—including the editors—are women.
Desperate for sales, they pursue the biggest market: suburban book
clubs. “That tells men that fiction has nothing to do with them and
is just for their mom’s book club,” says [Russell] Smith, who
notes that publishers reinforce the problem by putting out so many
books about “family, memory and loss” and giving them titles and
covers that could only appeal to women.
. . . “A lot of guys think, and I
do blame the publishing industry for this,” says Smith, “that if
they read fiction it’s going to be like having that long
conversation with your girlfriend that she always wants to have about
the relationship and where it’s going.”
Hmm. I'm not sure what I think about
that.
In conclusion, then: What the &%!@
is going on in publishing? I really haven't a clue.
If you find out, could you do me a
favour? Let me know.
*
April 14, 2005 - Update
An article in today's Globe and Mail
reported that Anna Porter is stepping down as the publisher of Key
Porter Books. The article includes some quotes that provide details to
what I was writing about above, such as:
"I sold the company last year
after the most trying three years of my more than 30 years in
publishing," [Porter] said. "I was tired, really, really
tired and I thought I might feel a little less tired as time went
on." That wasn't the case. She is still suffering from the
financial, emotional and psychic aftershocks of the bankruptcy of
General Distribution Services Ltd., Jack Stoddart's publishing and
distribution conglomerate.
"I did not expect that Jack's
company would go down," she said. "Our books were in his
warehouse and our receivables were in his computer and we ended up
losing a very, very, substantial amount of money," she added,
explaining that she had had to buy her own books back from the defunct
distributor.
The article also highlighted another
significant factor in the Canadian publishing industry at present: how
power will be transferred from one generation to the next. The article
noted: "The generation of literary nationalists that came of age in
the culturally euphoric years after Expo 67 are all now heading for
their old-age pensions" and quoted Porter saying, "Succession
is the most serious problem facing the industry today."
Who did Porter sell the controlling
interest in her company to? H. B. Fenn, the largest Canadian-owned book
distributor in the country. The Globe reported: "Harold Fenn,
founder and president of the company, confirmed that his son Jordan will
become publisher of Key Porter Books."
Succession issues are "the most
serious problem facing the industry today"?
Hardly.
Michael Bryson is the
editor of The Danforth Review.
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