Will author contract reform succeed this time?

‘Can you hear me now?’  A not-so-funny television commercial a while back gave us that line with maddening repetition as we watched a hapless mobile phone customer wander through his world in search of a decent connection. The line might work today for authors, agents, and others who are becoming increasingly frustrated by the “silence of… Read More

Is Online Life Real Life? #AskELJames – No, Ask Chuck Wendig

One Big Gray (Not Grey) Area Of Rage  Online is IRL. It’s all real. This is all really happening… It’s not a show, no matter how much we want it to be. That’s the author Chuck Wendig, wrapping up what he seems to have thought would be his one post on the PR hair-tearer #AskELJames. But a funny… Read More

'Growing pains': Scribd's romance 'purge'

Mark Coker: Smashwords’ Scribd sales may ‘drop at least 50 percent’ Coming in the context of Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) Select’s controversial new per-page paymentsin its Kindle Unlimited (KU) and Kindle Owners Lending Library (KOLL) services, the news from Scribd may not raise independent authors’ spirits. One key platform c.e.o., Smashwords’ Mark Coker, refers to it as a… Read More

Scribd makes cuts to romance in its catalog

Scribd has announced to publishers and distributors that it is “making some adjustments, particularly to romance” in its $8.99-per-month ebook subscription service. Described by Mark Coker, founder and c.e.o. of Smashwords, as “dramatic cuts to [Scribd’s] catalog of romance and erotica titles,” the changes are removing an unknown portion of the subscription’s titles from the… Read More

Is Amazon KDP Select's per-page payout better?

  I’d like to be paid per-page for everything written about Amazon’s KDP Select since the 15th of the month. And certainly, I’ve tried to hold up my end. I wrote about it here. And then I wrote about it there.  And now I’m writing about it once more, hoping that you’ll join us in this week’s #FutureChat on… Read More

Will We Ever Be Able To Trust Online Reviews?

‘Fake Reviews Are Still Rife’ Three summers ago, in August 2012, one of the hottest stories of the year came from the book-retail sector. The author John Locke had confirmed to The New York Times’ David Streitfeld that he had paid for reviews, lots of them, starting with 50 reviews of his books for $1,000. The… Read More

Gaming the system: Amazon at home and abroad

The special symmetry of ‘the disrupter that demands to be undisrupted’  As Friday’s edition of The Bookseller points out, last week brought Amazon’s place in European markets into tighter focus. A scene-setting article from my colleague Lisa Campbell announced the European Commission’s formal antitrust investigation into the retailer’s relationships with publishers and ebook distribution. Campbell also pointed to… Read More

Can publishing use a little mindfulness?

Not that anybody in publishing is tense When my colleague Miriam Robinson put together her programmefor the upcoming Bookseller Marketing and Publicity Conference at Southbank Centre, we all might have looked a tad haggard to her. She installed a special session on 30th June called “People-Powered Products and PR” with Rohan Gunatillake, the mind behind… Read More

Hoofing self-publishing's 'known unknowns': A #FutureChat recap

  ‘The author services crowd is loving these big numbers!’ That was author Abby Quillen during our #FutureChat of Friday (12th June). And she’s right. The blind man on the team who’s in the author services biz is sure to be happy with the size of whatever chunk he encounters. Everybody agrees that self-publishing is big. Very big.… Read More

Amazon And Its New KDP Select Per-Page Payments: Everybody Has To Swim For It Now

‘What This Means For Authors Is Debatable’ Yesterday’s news (15th June) that Amazon is changing its payout structure for Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) lending scenarios — that’s Kindle Unlimited (KU) and the Kindle Owners Lending Library (KOLL) — has been met with somewhat muted reactions. And this is good to see. Some mature, prudent thinking is… Read More