Yes, I know I owe you a chapter, but you have no idea how crazy things have been out here.  We’re now dealing with the aftermath of the hail storm, which requires appointments and estimates and such.  Yep, it turns out we had damage, but insurance SHOULD cover it all.  Hopefully.  Almost for sure.  Of course, this on top of staging the house for sale, finishing three overdue books, and still keeping normal life flowing, and getting ready for Liberty con next weekend, is being a real challenge.  Those of you going to Liberty con might find I don’t have any hair left, or that it’s all turned white.  Oh, wait.  It turned white 23 years ago.  So….  that’s okay, at least, and besides, there’s dye on top of that. 😛

So this week, I did my blather for book plug Friday: send your promo to book.plug.friday@gmail.com and Charlie Martin and I will put it up.  In my own experience it gooses up my sales for a week, and I understand it has created some amazing successes for people out there.

Normally I do the “blather” late at night on Thursday, but this week I forgot it was Thursday.  (Yes, it’s a theme.  I’m really getting pulled in fifteen directions at once, so stuff happens.)  So, I woke up early morning on Thursday, and the only thing I could think of was how stunned I was at Hilary’s book bombing publicly.  It’s not that I think or thought that there was a huge market for it, but because I thought the traditional machine could still FAKE it.

So that’s what I wrote about.  Sorry, PJM is a political site, and yes, there are a couple of passing political references.  BUT mostly it’s about publishing.  (And for the record, I don’t think there’s a great market for ANY politicians’ memoirs.  I think it’s all push and smell.)

Anyway, I wrote “the blather” which is what my coauthor and I call the text that goes before the book plugs.  And to our everlasting shock — okay, at least mine — the post became a huge hit before instapundit linked it.  To me, at least, what I said about the way the industry operated/operates, etc. was absolutely obvious.  Apparently not.  Apparently it’s also not well known.  Who knew?  People are emailing me to tell me how I explained things for them.  And this is without my mentioning the warm bucket of fail known as “ordering tot he net” that made it impossible for midlisters to “ascend through the ranks” so it was push up front, or nothing.

Apparently this post is sort of like revealing an arcane code.  Fine.  But it’s not like both Dave Freer and I haven’t talked about it before.  And if I have to prove it, below is Dave’s post, The Elephant of Surprise, published in August of 2011

The Elephant of Surprise, by Dave Freer, August 2011

“Why don’t you,” said the accountant looking at the books (account books) of the normal series of chaos and disaster, and very occasional black swans which is publishing, and the good money ascribed to that little subset ‘bestsellers’,  “just buy bestsellers?”

The editor sneered at him behind his hand while mumbling that it wasn’t quite as easy as that, and that that was what they tried to do.  And at least most of his sales predictions had been remarkably accurate. He knows what people want to read, and so he’s a key employee, in case any accountant is thinking of making anyone redundant.

If the accountant had known anything about books that were not a spreadsheet he would of course have known that a)the editor is cooking the books b)the editor has to cook the books because he neither the tools nor the specialized ability to use those tools to predict what books people want to buy reliably. Sometimes he can guess what he can sell better than other times, and sometimes he has more of a clue.  And a lot  of the time he cooks the books to hedge his bets, because the accountant hates him getting it wrong and he has not faintest idea.

But he can’t just buy best-sellers.

Because it would be easier and cheaper and more likely to buy antimatter, the way it is done now.

You see buying bestsellers at present relies on the possible pachyderm postulate. Now, this is more or less a tale for those authors trying to pick a direction and style for success. It’d be valuable for accountants to publishing houses and editors, and agents, and possibly even for agents ‘assisting in self publishing’.

So here is a little parable about the professional licensed hunter who had been out in the big bad jungle and been bitten by bugs and scratched by thorns, and got the runs from not boiling the water first, and had his campfire flattened by wildebeest, and his food nicked by monkeys.  As a result of these experiences he’s retreated to his safe home in New York, and decided he’s going hunt from safety. Of course no one else has a license so if they want game, they’ll have to buy it from him. His beaters will bring it to him!

There are a couple of downsides to this: there is not a lot of game in his patch of apartments, and he needs to sell his kill to pay the rent and to eat, and peering out of the keyhole he can’t really see what he’s shooting through the door at.  He hires beaters, but as he has squat to pay with, these tend to be local winos who will hold a cat to the  keyhole.  So he’s limping toward eviction, and has sold a few cats and pekinese carefully skinned, as finest venison.  But looking through the keyhole he sees gray.

Now the hunter once made good money shooting elephant. One bullet, lots of meat, ivory, elephant’s foot umbrella stands. And it was gray.

So from his keyhole, the hunter sees… gray.  He dances a jig, calls up Boggis and Fenci, Suppliers of Elephant guns to Royalty, and gets them to fly him a Holland and Holland – with gold inlays, and have a courier do a helicopter delivery through the roof, regardless of expense.

And he gives the grayness a 50 mm slug through the door and rushes out to start butchering his new fortune.  Because it was gray, it was probably a pachyderm, right?

And once in every 1 000 000 times it might even be. The rest of the time he’s obliged to hastily butcher the mailman in a once gray shirt with a final demand letter, and sell him as finest wild boar.  Or he’s shot a mouse on stilts peering in the keyhole. Or merely shot a gray day.

So: now you say ‘interpret for us this parable, oh master’. And I in my charming and irascible way say ‘fool-boy go fetch another bottle of wine.’

Soothed by wine I may explain… why not?  Once publishers roamed the world and some got rich, shooting elephant (or at least bestsellers which were the equivalent of elephant), and much other game because you can’t find elephants every day. They lived in tents (or offices ) which were cheap, and they sold meat and hides to anyone who’d pay, mostly quite cheaply too.  They had many customers, ordinary people. But it wasn’t very safe, and wasn’t very comfortable, and when you had good ivory or hides you could get a better price in the big city. So they they retreated on New York, and went out shooting more rarely, with lots of beaters and bearers and a cook, and what they got, they wanted top dollar for, so they lost their old markets as customers gave up eating game or hunted for the pot themselves.  Seeing this  publishers got even more hurt, and instead of going out and hunting again (or trawling slush) they locked themselves in their houses with the bearers and cooks and relied on freelance beaters, AKA agents,  who also lived in New York.  Now some of these agents were intrepid souls and went to great effort and expense to get whatever game possible back to NY, to the publisher’s locked door.  But as the publishers weren’t doing too well, getting a buck or even a horse or cow or a goat to the door was less rewarding than it used to be, and elephants were… rare.  Some of the beaters went hunting on their own… I believe they called it assisted suicide because they weren’t licensed as hunters… and the publisher went on peering through the keyhole shooting at possible pachyderms.  The keyhole is a severe limit on vision, which might equate to the way books are viewed prior to buying. You see they’re viewed through keyhole called ‘statistics’ which every publisher knows are absolutely defining. (Every statistician of course knows that the layman and a set of figures is slightly less clued up than the spinster aunt who works in a condom factory all her life, believing she’s making waterproof sleeping bags for white mice. ) The publisher looks at bookscan figures and sees… gray (a large number). Probably a  Pachyderm! Order the delux Holland and Holland.  The trouble is the gray can be all sorts of things. Artifacts. Artificial constructs. Mailmen. Even mice on stilts more plausibly than elephants.  Without coming out of the house, almost impossible to tell if they are elephants, and really in NY the gray is actually very unlikely to be that.  You see the hunter hasn’t bothered to figure there are a lot of other parameters besides ‘gray’ to make something probably a pachyderm. And until you establish things like its size (or how much was spent on it – if it was little that’s possibly a real pachyderm) if it has tusks (what sort of distribution it got – if it was poor and still did well it is almost certainly a pachyderm) whether it has a trunk (what sort of publicity it got – if it got none and still did well it was a vast tusker indeed)…

Otherwise… the hunter may find there is less meat on mailmen than his creditors demand, and the beaters… well, they may find cats wishing to be assisted in suicide less common.  And people might just get used to eating eggs (or e-books sold by authors) which do best when you look after the egg-layers.

Yes. I have finished and turned in CUTTLEFISH. How did you guess?

12 responses to “The Arcane Truth About Publishing”

  1. But beware, now we’ve got this puppy to contend with.

    1. Hat-tip to Peter Grant for mentioning this.

  2. I have to admit, I’ve been learning a lot about the publishing industry lately. The more I learn, the more indie appeals. Having said that watching the pundits try to say that the Book of Wisdom that HC has written/ghosted/phoned in is the greatest thing since sliced bread shows a total lack of understanding of the industry. Saw one talking head on Fox of all places that said the book was a best seller and a success. No understanding that yes it will make the best seller list based on the shipped books, then tank as sales go no where. Saw another article on Bloomberg talking about how it was a great success at little more than half predicted sales and showed essentially that HC was a shoo in for the White House in 2016.

    1. Pretty happy for indie myself, based on what I’ve been reading lately. Now all I need is a bit more discipline.

        1. Yes, very much so. And as for the thing I linked above…don’t let any of it deter you all. Don’t let any of it water down the stories you want to tell, because this is our moment. We can finally read and write the stories we want, free of the gatekeepers. Continue writing, and don’t stop until your very fingers bleed.

          1. And then continue on Dragon Naturally 😉

            1. Of course. 🙂

  3. The only political memoirs I’ve read that were actually enjoyable were those written by Sir Winston Churchill. Of course, he was a first-rate historian and journalist as well as a politician.

    1. Also in the habit of thinking of really great lines ahead of time because he always blanked.

      So he’s one of the most quotable politicians ever. 😀

    2. Try Ulyses S Grant’s autobiography post presidency. Amazing book and written by the man himself, not a bunch of lackeys.

  4. The PJM post got a pretty wide ranging set of linkage, I even found it linked on Roberta X’s blog … kinda weird how it got such extra distribution this time, but that happens.

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