The Line Between Writing as a Business and Writing as an Art

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Publishing has had a rough year, and it’s only May! The Department of Justice lawsuit, Barnes and Noble is splitting digital and paper into different companies, and it seems like mainstream media has put a death clock on bookstores. Plus ebooks have hosed the “traditional” model of bookselling: what used to be a yearlong process of hardcover to paperback to mass market is now hardcover/eBook to paperback. The entire business model is in flux, and it’s impacting authors and publishers.

Unfortunately, in an idea that must have been conceived in a boardroom and not during the creative process, authors are being urged to push out more content each year. According to the New York Times, authors are attempting to write short stories or multiple novels to maintain their popularity and sales throughout the year:

The British thriller writer Lee Child, who created the indelible character Jack Reacher, is now supplementing his hardcover books with short stories that are published in digital-only format, an increasingly popular strategy to drum up attention for the coming publication of a novel.

Mr. Child’s first story, a 40-page exploration of Reacher as a teenager, was released last August, several weeks before his latest novel came out in print. On the advice of his publisher, he is planning to write another digital-only short story this summer.

“Everybody’s doing a little more,” said Mr. Child, who is published by Delacorte Press, part of Random House. “It seems like we’re all running faster to stay in the same place.”

Even John Grisham is working overtime. Mr. Grisham, who used to write one book each year, now does an additional series aimed at middle-grade readers, the popular “Theodore Boone” novels that are published annually.

Publishers say that a carefully released short story, timed six to eight weeks before a big hardcover comes out, can entice new readers who might be willing to pay 99 cents for a story but reluctant to spend $14 for a new e-book or $26 for a hardcover.

That can translate into higher preorder sales for the novel and even a lift in sales of older books by the author, which are easily accessible as e-book impulse purchases for consumers with Nooks or Kindles.

Jennifer Enderlin, the associate publisher of St. Martin’s Paperbacks, said the strategy had worked for many of her authors, who saw a big uptick in hardcover sales, book over book, once they started releasing more work.

Yes, because the best way to get quality writing is by forcing it. Seriously, the intent makes sense in theory, but I think I speak for many readers when I say I would rather wait longer for a book that’s well written than read a rushed one that came out on time. Books are subject to all sorts of market issues as it is; I know I have read series that were left hanging, went on too long, or had a rushed conclusion because the publisher cancelled the series. A Kindle Single or a short story is a great idea in theory, but in reality, if it takes focus from the novel it is intended to promote, did it help anything?

I know it gets difficult to promote books as it is, and with eBooks, there is such a high signal to noise ratio that readers can be overwhelmed. But forcing authors to write sub-par work more often just drives readers away. There are other forms of writing and communication that are more organic and less forced. More authors, agents, and publishers could promote author’s blogs. Amazon does great interviews where either two authors from similar genres interview each other or do joint interviews. The point is, there are options beyond churning out a requisite number of words each cycle.

I read a lot of books, and I am happy to wait longer if it means a book has more time to percolate. If I read a good book I will seek out more titles by that author, but if I read a crappy one (or the latest in a series goes downhill in quality), there’s always another book to find. But that’s just my take. Would you rather have more volume or better quality? Let us know in the comments!

 

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About the Author

Zek
Zek has been a gadget fiend for a long time, going back to their first PDA (a Palm M100). They quickly went from researching what PDA to buy to following tech news closely and keeping up with the latest and greatest stuff. They love writing about ebooks because they combine their two favorite activities; reading anything and everything, and talking about fun new tech toys. What could be better?

4 Comments on "The Line Between Writing as a Business and Writing as an Art"

  1. I’m not sure I agree.  I agree with the notion that content shouldn’t be forced – absoloutely, but I’m not sure I agree with the idea that it is being pushed any more now than before.  I think that the notion of rushing content or asking for extra content has been going on for many years now.  And I have yet to find a series that I felt maintained it’s quality past the first book or two.  The notion of short stories before the release of a main release simply smacks of the old serialization schemes to me, except that publication was in magazines instead of digital.  And when a series is popular the publishers always seem to push and the result is always disappointing.

    No, I’m not sure there’s anything new here – perhaps packaged and presented a bit differenly, but it seems to be mostly the same as always, perhaps called by different names, but mostly the same.  The publishers seem to make the same requests they have all along.

    • It seems, though, that this is very driven by the “instant” nature of ebooks…and if a story emerges organically that flows nicely as a way to promote more novels, great. But pumping out creative works because they fit a promotional schedule just seems like a terrible idea.

      • I agree with that – but I still think it has been with us many years and doesn’t always result in poor content. I think that the “e” industry makes it seem more instantaneous, but I think that cranking stuff out for promotion’s sake has been around many years. In the past, the medium used to be all those serials and story magazines. I remember them even when I was a kid (you might be a little young to remember most of those), but I also remember reading about how some of the most famous authors talk about how they had to crank out stories on the side to promote their materials in these magazines, often on very short notice. SciFi especially in the 30s, 40s, and 50s was cranked out at breakneck speeds but today we consider much of that material, from “masters” like Heinlein and Asimov to be classics. Both of them had to produce huge amounts of work quickly (much of which is collected into books and story collections these days), but they managed and that material didn’t seem to suffer in quality (but how can we really know?).
        I do know there was kind of a lull when those kinds of publications started to die off but now we are definitely seeing a resurgence of serials – especially in the romance market – novella sized pubs are gaining huge popularity, but again, this isn’t new, just the format is. So again, I’m not sure that all that much has really changed!

  2. Better quality.
    I’m pining for the same choice in the movie and game industries as well. I feel
    authors and publishers should increase the use of related materials (original
    manuscripts, review notes, etc.) for enticing marketing materials as additions
    instead of additional materials (similar to bonus features on a home video), so
    the focus remains on the experience not churning out more content. Media
    applications like Booktrack enhance the experience as well plus I see many
    books/series becoming their own applications that also expand to related blogs
    and websites. Authors have to serve the story and the wallet in any writing
    genre, but always need quality writing as the base for more far reaching,
    creative media marketing.

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