Canelo / Arts Council England |
40
Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction
continued to spiral upwards, most were coming down. We have already
seen a huge spread between the very bestselling authors’ sales and the
bulk of writers. While the evidence is less clear, it’s not unreasonable to
expect a similar spread for advances, meaning that for the majority of
writers they are coming down.
Despite the general malaise there is still talk of the ‘super-advance’. In
the wake of a flurry of deals before the Frankfurt Book Fair,
Publishers
Weekly
talked about seven figure (USD) advances as ‘the new normal’
23
.
Big advances do seem to work for literary books. Garth Risk Hallberg’s
City
on Fire
, which had a seven-figure advance for US rights and reportedly in
the hundreds of thousands for UK rights, was an 800-page, experimental
literary book. Similarly Jonathan Littell’s
The Kindly Ones
was a 1,000 page
ambitious novel about an SS officer that also had a seven figure advance.
Hari Kunzru’s
The Impressionist
had a reported £1.25m advance. These
may not compare to celebrity advances (reported figures of Amy Schumer
$15m, Bruce Springsteen $10m, for example) but they show the dream is
not entirely dead. Many more advances, particularly in the context of the
reluctance among British publishers, agents and authors to discuss them,
will go unreported.
Advances at this level often work in a ‘beauty parade’, offer, best-bid
auction system. Hot books may be pre-empted for a substantial amount in
order that they’re taken off the table. Off the record, we were told that the
pace of pre-empts and auctions is happening more quickly. The preferred
method for the most desirable books is the huge pre-empt to take it off the
table within 24 hours of their having been seen. This will typically involve
sums above £250,000. Many of the advances at this level are for debut
authors. Without a sales track record, debut writers exist as pure potential,
untarnished by disappointments that put retailers off future books and
sap morale (and warn off investment) in publishing houses. Paradoxically,
those with no background in the industry seem more likely to receive such
an advance. The inverse experience is that of bruised midcareer authors.
There is also the pressure of fewer bigger publishers at work here. Where
multiple big publishers all see the potential in a bid, the costs can escalate
fast. At times it is hard to escape the feeling that the ‘bandwagon effect’
may be at work here: because some people are going in, everyone feels it
must be a good idea which creates a self-propelling momentum.
Meanwhile, most authors are seeing their advances go down. In addition
to the anecdotal evidence there is some limited data to support this. In the
author survey ‘Do You Love Your Publisher’ the median reported advance
was £6,000; this went up to £13,000 when just looking at advances from
large trade publishers
24
.
23
http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/book-deals/article/64848-the-rise-of-the-seven-
figure-advance.html
24
http://www.thebookseller.com/news/average-author-advance-under-6600
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