Canelo / Arts Council England |
44
Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction
Film and Television:
Again, this is an area of increasing demand. As
with translations it cannot be said this is something that is benefitting
all or even many writers. But, again, the direction of travel is positive.
As mentioned earlier, Hollywood – and film generally – is increasingly
averse to greenlighting completely original projects. Books of course
make the perfect test cases. While this was always true, it appears to
be becoming more marked. In just a few months for example, we had
Room, The Revenant, Carol, The Lady in the Van
and
The Danish Girl
all
at the cinemas at the same time. All are based on (a loose conception
of) literary fiction. Television offers many further examples. So even
if the numbers made are small in comparison to the total number
of writers, for those that do it offers support not only in terms of
potentially large amounts of money, but also an enormous sales boost.
While it is still part of the general two-tier dynamic of writing, it is an
example of where the upper tier may be growing rather than shrinking,
although in 2018 there appear to be poorer pickings: while adaptations
of genre from Ernest Cline’s
Ready Player One
to more E.L. James
are fine, literary adaptations are, at the time of writing, thinner on the
ground (they include an adaptation of Ann Patchett’s
Bel Canto
). It
should though be weighed against the decline in other rights sales –
serial rights sales to newspapers and magazines have, according to
those we talked to, been in decline for some years.
At this point we start to venture beyond earning income from solely
writing. This is where writers can find related support – but crucially it
is not earned directly from writing.
Audiobooks:
There is considerable evidence and anecdotal support
for a boom in audiobook sales. Publishers are hiring in the area and
increasing the number of titles they publish.
28
This is built on the
back of rising sales, many of them digital. The Publishers Association
reports growth in audio sales of 28% in 2016 with a value of £16m.
But a separate Nielsen BookScan investigation found sales in that
year to be a much higher £91m.
29
Encouragingly a third of users were
new to the format and these were younger than typical readers,
concentrated in the 18–34 age bracket. Meanwhile new entrants to the
market like Audiobooks.com and Kobo aim to rival the market leader,
Audible, an Amazon company. However amidst the good news, there
is a sting in the tail for writers of literary fiction. The same Nielsen
BookScan report finds that sales are focused on Genre Fiction: Crime
and Thriller, Light Reads and Science Fiction/fantasy are the major
categories. So again, there is a large possible upside for literary fiction
that may not be realised in actuality.
28
https://www.thebookseller.com/news/publishers-look-exploit-revived-audiobook-sector-543026
29
http://www.nielsenbookdata.co.uk/uploads/press/1UnderstandingUKAudiobookConsumer_2016_FV.pdf
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