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Publishing Alternative to Rejection Letters



By : William Dorich    99 or more times read
Submitted 2009-03-18 04:24:20
Over the past two decade I have produced and printed books for The Los Angeles Times, Simon & Schuster and Random House and still enjoy relationships with a number of friends at these publishing houses.

I am therefore well aware of the horror stories on the street about what is being called Black Wednesday a few months ago when three dozen people on the editorial staff were handed their pink slips at Simon & Schuster after decades of loyal service. Like most avalanches the process continues to bury hundreds of employees as the head rolling process of downsizing is taking its toll. This is just the beginning of what might be another major industry in this country headed for bankruptcy, hard times and a Washington bailout.

The week before Black Wednesday, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, a publishing house made up of two previously independent publishers, including the very successful Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, decided in November, 2008 to freeze acquisitions and has told it editors to stop buying books. Since November the staff at Houghton Mifflin was decimated as their publisher resigned, surely in protest? I have been in the printing and publishing industries for over 40 years and I have never heard of such an edict. There were always those temporary cut backs, but never a public policy of NO MORE BOOKS. Such events at major publishers should give the readers of this article great pause, especially if you are thinking your manuscript has a prayer today of being published by a major publisher. Self publishing or independent may be your only alternative.

The days of the bloated and over extended conglomerate are over which can be said of hundreds of American companies in this economic meltdown. It is not merely a fact that books are not selling; bookstores across the country are returning books to the publishers at an alarming rate.

In my earlier blog I wrote about the return policy of bookstores and the lack of obligation to the publisher and their authors of returned copies without penalties, a stupid policy endorsed by the entire publishing industry. Last year 26.3 percent of the billion or more books sold in the U.S. were returned to bookstores. The phrase Let Them Eat Cake attributed to Marie Antoinette, seems fitting here, I hope the publishers choke on them as these returned books come right out of the hide of the authors who have been promised a golden dream that quickly turns into a tarnished nightmare.

A few years back I produced and printed Witness to War: Images of the Persian Gulf War for the Los Angeles Times, a book which won a Pulitzer. I produced a number of books for the Times including ConArtist, the 30 year anniversary book for political cartoonist, Paul Conrad, Dining Out in Orange County by Max Jacobson their food critic, The Los Angeles Riots, The Los Angeles Earthquake, and 30 Years of Recipe Request by Rose Dosti.

In 2001, I suspected all was not well in the newspaper business when the Times cut off nearly half of its staff and enticed another 10 percent of its staff to take early retirement with handsome bonuses, but that has proven inadequate today as its parent company filed for bankruptcy. Dorothy Chandler, who built the Times Mirror Empire and the famous Music Center in Los Angeles is surely rolling over in her grave.

But let us take a close look at how major publishers treat authors. If you are fortunate enough to get your manuscript accepted and even more fortunate to receive an advance on your royalties, the publisher most likely will insist that you use that advance to hire a publicist or public relations firm to promote your title before it hits the bookstores. It takes a major publisher at least 12 to 14 months to get a book to market and if they feel you have not gotten enough interest in your title they may decide at the 12th hour not to publish placing you, the author, in a catch22. If you have spent the advance or if the publisher is so magnanimous as to let you keep what is left, under most contracts the publisher will own the rights to your property preventing you from taking your manuscript to another publisher.

Since the word depression creeps into most conversations these days I am reminded that books did very well during that economic crisis of the 1930s as did the ten cent movie and the sleazy dime novel as these were about the only escapism available at the time.

Last week my wife and I decided to go to see the movie, Doubt. With tickets costing $12 each and popcorn and a Coke another $10, I wonder how many Americans these days will be willing, much less able to afford the luxury of $44 for an evening at the movies?

As the actors contemplate a strike to further destroy the local film industry in Los Angeles, the Motion Picture and Television Fund and Hospital have just announced that they will move 100 of their residents to other local nursing homes, layoff 300 employees, about a third of their staff, and close this famous retirement home of the stars by the end of 2009. As the very rich reel from the Madoff $50 billion rip off our movie stars will no longer have a place to crash in old age. Apparently, we all need to look for alternative ways to survive this meltdown, even in publishing.

So polish up that manuscript...there is still hope for that book you want to write and publish. Looks like reading may come back in style?
Author Resource:- William Dorich is the author of 7 books including his newest, Defeat Foreclosure and The Nursing Home Crisis.A pioneer in self and independent publishing he has published 130 title including Witness to War for the Los Angeles Times which won a Pulitzer. See: http://www.gmbooks.com
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