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by vegedor 4232 days ago
To a halt? Surely people will keep writing regardless and somebody will want to read it.
1 comments

Its not the writing that's an issue. It's the publishing. Taking someone's writing and turning that into a book requires work and funding.

When price controls and discount bans are enforced on book publishers and book stores, publishers are much less willing to take risks on unknown authors.

Sure, a new JK Rowling or Danielle Steele book will always find someone willing to publish them, but would a young aspiring author be able too?

The good news is that publishing costs and risks have dropped thanks to e-books and crowd sourcing for books. But most books still need a publisher willing to take a financial risk in order to see the light of day.

In a perfect world, publishers would do what they did in the past, i.e. contribute to giving feedback on the contents and the title, proof-reading and copy-editing, making the cover, taking some financial risk by printing the book, distributing it to a pre-existing network of bookstores, sending it to book reviewers prior to releasing it, and promoting it.

In today's world, they kind of still do that, but spend so little time, energy and money on it that it's impossible for them to even remotely justify the huge cut they take with a straight face. Innate talent left aside, whether an author wannabe's book sells well or not entirely depends on his willingness to promote it by showing up at events and bookstores.

As such, you're just as well off -- and more often than not, better off -- relying on friends for feedback and copy-editing, self-publishing an ebook, and reaching out to your audience directly through mostly online channels.

(I worked in a brick and mortar bookstore, and have been watching the situation degrade over the years ever since. Methinks that, much like the press at large, publishers only have themselves to blame.)

> In a perfect world, publishers would do what they did in the past

I can't help but be skeptical that book publishing was perfect a few years ago!

(And hey, book publishing itself was a very disruptive industry - one could even argue that it precipitated the industrial revolution.)

Join the winning team, amazon and the likes. Or read free e-books.
And even JK Rowling had to go through 12 publishers before she got a deal.