I’m just back
from the Harrogate Crime Writing
Festival – three days of talks and events involving some of the country’s top
crime-writing talent. Why was I
there? Truth be told, I’m writing
a short story called Inspector Zhang Goes To Harrogate where my Singaporean
detective solves a locked room mystery in the Old Swan Hotel where the festival
is based.
I went with my 13-year-old daughter and she had a blast. The high point for me was the Come Die With Me murder mystery dinner where we had to solve a murder. Our table won! There several writers on the table - including the talented Chris Ewan who signed a copy of his book Safe House for my daughter - but it was two lady readers who solved the case for us. We all won a set of books by Ann Cleeves who hosted the dinner. Everyone had a great time and I'm still on a high for winning!
I got to meet some old friends and to hang out with writers like Matt Hilton, Peter Robinson, John Connolly, Simon Kernick and Zoe Sharp, and to meet readers and Facebook friends. I also met my old mate Barry Forshaw - see below! Twins, or what?
While I was
there I appeared on a panel called 'Wanted for Murder: the e-book', where a
group of us discussed ePublishing, a subject I do know a fair bit about.
It turned out
to be quite a surreal experience.
Fun, but surreal. Running
the festival this year was Mark “Scaredy Cat” Billingham, one of the best
writers in the business as well as a top stand-up comic. Mark came over to me in the green room
before the panel and had a quiet word with me. Basically there is danger of the
panels turning into a luvvie love-fest and he wanted me to take a view and be a
tad confrontational if at all possible. He wanted the panel to be the talking
point of the festival. I’m never
one to duck a good argument so I said I’d go for it.
In the chair
was Channel 4 presenter Mark Lawson, and on the panel with me were a publisher,
another writer who hasn’t sold many eBooks, an agent and a bookseller. It was pretty much going to be four
against one from the start.
What
surprised me was how the audience seemed so set against cheap eBooks. Rather than taking my view that books
are best sold at a price that readers find attractive, the general feeling of
the audience seemed to be that books were already – as one man said – ‘cheap as
chips’ and that Norwegians had to pay £40 for one of Jo Nesbo’s books. When I
explained that I had sold half a million eBooks last year, most of them for
less than a quid, I was surprised to hear a few boos and hisses rather than the
applause that I had expected.
On the panel was a horror writer by the name of Steve Mosby. I don't remember much about him other than we discussed tattoos, which he is something of a fan of. Mosby was clearly unhappy at appearing on the panel with me and went on to spend the next year or so insulting me on Twitter and on his blog and making the most bizarre accusations about me.
I later discovered what a truly unpleasant man Steve Mosby is. While claiming to be a feminist he is quite happy to use the C-word as an insult in public.
Mosby is a pal of Harry Potter writer JK Rowling, though I doubt she is aware of this tendency to describe people as c***s.
Also on the panel was a short, plump agent called Phillip Patterson who also went on to post insulting comments on me on Twitter. All very strange.
On the panel was a horror writer by the name of Steve Mosby. I don't remember much about him other than we discussed tattoos, which he is something of a fan of. Mosby was clearly unhappy at appearing on the panel with me and went on to spend the next year or so insulting me on Twitter and on his blog and making the most bizarre accusations about me.
I later discovered what a truly unpleasant man Steve Mosby is. While claiming to be a feminist he is quite happy to use the C-word as an insult in public.
Mosby is a pal of Harry Potter writer JK Rowling, though I doubt she is aware of this tendency to describe people as c***s.
Also on the panel was a short, plump agent called Phillip Patterson who also went on to post insulting comments on me on Twitter. All very strange.
The
most surreal moment for me came when the President of the Publisher’s
Association, Ursula Mackenzie, was trying to defend their policy of maintaining
eBooks at a high price. Basically
she was saying that books needed to maintain their value and that 20p and free
eBooks needed to be stamped on.
I
understand her view, but I’m a big fan of selling eBooks at lower prices
providing you can get high volumes of sales. And I’m happy enough to give books
away if it helps to bring in new readers.
So
I explain to Ursula – and the audience – that I can write a short story in five
days and am happy to sell that at the Amazon minimum of 72p which generates me
an income of 25p.
CORRECTION
At this point in my blog I mentioned a comment that I remembered had come from Ursula about earning 5p a book. Having heard the recording of the panel I realise that I had misremembered this and the comment was made by Mark Lawson. I owe Ursula an unreserved and total apology for this and I will be writing to her personally to apologise. Truly my memory let me down and I am so so sorry. I can only think that the stress of the panel caused caused my memory to play tricks on me.
The point I wanted to make - which applies to Mark's comment and not to anything that Ursula said - was that of course I don’t work for 5p a day. My Inspector Zhang stories sell about five or six hundred copies a month. Each. So one story sells 6,000 copies a year. So over the next ten years it could sell 60,000 copies which means I’d get £15,000, which is £3,000 a day.
Mark
turned to the conversation around to the cost of books and how much went to the
publisher, and asked Ursula to justify why the publisher’s took the lion’s
share. She put forward the old
arguments about editing and marketing and I tried to explain that with eBooks,
an author with a large fan base can use fans to edit and proof-read. Everyone seemed to think that meant I
thought writers could do away with editors, and of course that’s not the case.
But not every writer needs a hard edit, some writers need little more than
proof-reading and fact-checking and that can be done through fans.
The
audience were quite strange when I talked about piracy, and I thought I was
about to be lynched when I said that I regarded pirates as helping to market my
books. Someone shouted ‘Tosser!’
which was a bit harsh. What was a bit surprising was that it seemed to come
from Mark Billingham’s direction.
I
didn’t really get a chance to explain what I meant, which was a pity. Of course
mass piracy would destroy publishing and destroy my income. But controlled
piracy, where pirated books represent a small fraction of the total books
available, can be a help to get a writer better known. My opinion is that readers who buy
pirated copies wouldn’t buy the real book anyway. But once they have become a
fan, they might. The reader who starts off buying a pirated copy of one of my
books might move on to buying hardbacks. It happens.
But
I didn’t get the chance to say that. I did meet a lot of self-published writers
at the festival – writers like Kerry Wilkinson, Allan Guthrie, Mark Edwards and
Louise Voss. All have stormed up
the Kindle charts selling low-priced books. I’m not going to put words into anyone’s mouth but I can
tell you that most of the self-published writers I know have no fear of piracy
and most embrace it. Publishers
don’t get it. They don’t get the
whole DRM thing either, where eBooks are ‘protected’ except of course they’re
not. Ursula, representing the
publishers, was vehement that DRM was a good thing. Even
traditionally-published author Steve Mosby tried to explain that DRM doesn’t
work and isn’t fair in that it stops a reader transferring a book that he has
already bought between different devices.
But Ursula wouldn’t have it.
I should say at this point that I was talking to one of the really big
names at the festival and he has a Kindle and he has a neat like program that
removes the DRM protection. I would love to tell you who it is but my lips are
sealed!
Ursula
was easy to argue with, as was the token agent, Philip Patterson. He was a
lovely guy and I do feel guilty about blind-siding him with the question that
most writers have – what exactly does an agent do to earn his 15 per cent when
a writer sells most of his books through Amazon with whom there is almost no
room for negotiation. He didn’t
come up with an answer and I did apologise to him afterwards. The simple fact is that if a writer is
self-publishing eBooks then he doesn’t need an agent. Of course if that self-published author is then approached
by a publishing house, that’s when you do need an agent in your corner.
What
was strange is how a couple of agents started tweeting quite nastily about
me. One wondered how I would sell
my foreign rights without an agent.
That’s a good question. I’d sell them myself, it’s not difficult. And in
my experience, foreign rights barely cover the 15 per cent of the main UK deal.
Frankly
I think publishers and agents are going to have a difficult few years as the
whole eBook business works itself out.
And so are the book sellers. But of all the people on the panel, other
than myself of course, I thought that the token bookseller was the guy who was
most ready to take advantage of it. He was Patrick Neale of Jaffé and Neale
Bookshop in Chipping Norton. He’s
a very smart guy who really understands his trade. I think that the large book chains, the ones that are left,
are going to be in big trouble soon but guys like Patrick can survive and
prosper. He’s seen a boom in
hardback sales, but is also selling coffee in his shop and looking to profit
from eBook sales. It was clear from listening to him that he is adapting his
business to take advantage of the way books are changing, as opposed to the
publishers who are fighting to maintain the status quo.
I
guess the reason the audience were so unsympathetic to my views on piracy and
low prices is because they are quite a different audience to my core
readership. I guess the big
question is how my views would be received by a younger audience. Hopefully they wouldn’t shout ‘tosser!’
Anyway,
Mark Billingham came afterwards, shook my hand and agreed that we’d achieved
our objective – the tweets were already flying around the world and the
festival was buzzing. Oh, and I pretty much finished Inspector Zhang Goes To
Harrogate. Much as I’d like the
victim to be an overweight agent with badly-dyed hair, it’s an
author who meets an untimely end.
And yes, I’ll be selling it at 72p.
3 comments:
An interesting and refreshingly honest article. I am surprised there has not been a campaign to exclude VAT from e-books and balance out the pricing.
I would also love to see a free e-book version when a hardback is bought so we can swap beteeen our electronic library and our paper one!
well, all I can say is, thank goodness for writers like you who sell at what to me are reasonable prices on Kindle, otherwise I couldn't be reading at all... I have read a couple of books of yours (just finished Once Bitten and loved every word) and have bought a couple more, looking forward to read more, thanks for giving people like us, on low income, the opportunity to read your books..
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