Canelo / Arts Council England |
42
Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction
of Kit de Waal, ‘The idea of a career in writing is really, really difficult.’
It’s too simplistic to say this is all the result of avaricious publishers;
publishers naturally have something to do with it, but they are facing
pressures of their own and, as more and more writers emerge, the
market does its own work in depressing advances.
Yet the dream outlined at the beginning of this section is now severely
challenged. If you want to be on the inside of those networks and
live in London, a £13,000 advance, spread over several years of work,
won’t cut the mustard. Writers must, for better or worse, take on more
financial risk in order to write.
2. Other Commercial Models
The picture of advances suggest that the ideal of a career as a full-
time writer is harder than ever. We have returned to the New Grub
Street of George Gissing, where writers have little choice but to live
in genteel(ish) poverty. However, even if advances have fallen writers
have other options – some within writing itself, some that involve other
sources of income.
Royalties:
While dependent on advances, royalties are still separate. We
can roughly tell what is happening by triangulating what we have already
established. Sales in print are falling, which means such royalties are
as well. Ebooks have been rising (until circa 2015), which means ebook
royalties, typically 25% of net receipts at most publishers, will have
risen as well. If advances are falling, it means that royalties are more
likely to be paid as advances earn out quicker – assuming that is the
books are selling enough. Given the polarisation in the market though,
this will still not apply to many books as the top books are taking their
disproportionately large share of sales. Moreover, high discount clauses
are routine – these mean publishers pay lower royalties when books are
sold at high discount to the retailer. Such discounts are now standard
and so in practice many writers see significant portions of their sales go
through with such clauses applied. None of which makes for a happy
picture for literary writing. They won’t have the full upside of ebook
revenues, but they will have the downside of falling print. Royalty rates
have not risen with publisher profitability. Royalties are an important
source of income for writers, especially for those with big backlists and
breakout successes. However,they are no panacea and are likely to be
an aggregate worse position for literary writers (as opposed to genre
writers) than a decade ago. While new publishers offer higher royalties,
there is an increasing clamour for change in the author and agent
community.
Foreign rights:
This is a real positive. Two areas in particular stand
out. The UK has an excellent track record in selling translation rights
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