Saturday, August 19, 2006

The last few days have seen a renewed flurry about the impossibility of new writers getting published and/or the inequity of the process of selection and/or the inanity of publishers in general and big publishers in particular. I am pasting in a piece by Brian Martin which appeared in this weekend's Financial Times.

Better late than never

By Brian Martin

Published: August 19 2006 03:00 | Last updated: August 19 2006 03:00

There are writers whose work is not published until late in their lives. Fanny Trollope published Domestic Manners of the Americans, her first of more than 40 books, at the age of 52. That was from financial necessity. Her husband had died and she had a family to support. Perhaps her son Anthony gained his discipline of writing, in his case novels, from her. He wrote his first book, The Macdermots of Ballycloran, aged 32, while working for the Post Office.

Earlier this year my first novel, North, was published. There is nothing particularly remarkable about this except that I am 68. Admittedly I had written a couple of academic books, but fiction was new to me. Now I have joined a coterie of novelists who started late: Mary Wesley, who first saw her fiction in print at 70; Charles Chadwick, whose book It's All Right Now appeared when he was 72 - it took him three decades to write; and Marina Lewycka, whose prize-winning novel A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian was published when she was 58.

My career has been spent teaching. I taught English at the same school in Oxford for 40 years and could have continued for another two, but release was too tempting. (Only one of my predecessors, a Victorian named Brownrigg, exceeded my tenure at the 500-year-old school.) At the same time, over a period of 14 years, I taught English literature at the university. But by 2001 I was free and spent a year contemplating and considering what I should do next.

As it happened Mary Wesley proved an inspiration. I remembered that she had once said: "I have no patience with people who grow old at 60 just because they are entitled to a bus pass. Sixty should be the time to start something new, not put your feet up." For more than 30 years I had been reviewing fiction, first for the New Statesman, then for The Times, Spectator and FT. It occurred to me that I should try my hand at a novel. So, intellectually refreshed by a year of freedom, I turned my attention to writing fiction. Here, Graham Greene was my mentor. I wrote every morning until lunchtime, and only if the mood took me would I return to the typescript. Otherwise, like Dr Johnson (but only in this respect), I was available for tea or coffee. After about 10 months, North was born.

It is certainly not easy to find a publisher in your late sixties. I spent a couple of years approaching agents, finding people who liked what I had written but who doubted its marketing potential. Then I found an innovative fiction-publishing scheme, Macmillan New Writing, which took to North without hesitation, and a deal was struck.

At the same time as trying to find a publisher, I continued to write. At the present time, I have three more novels completed. The publisher David Fickling said to me with characteristic enthusiasm, "Test yourself. If you want to go on writing most of the time, if it's a habit, almost an obsession, then you are a writer in the proper sense."

I reckon I pass the test.

I wrote North because I am interested in the ways people think and behave towards one another. It is a psychological novel, a drama of suspense. Three of the main characters are young. Others are older, professionals, more sceptical and circumspect. All are caught up in the turmoil of emotion and events. The novelists whom I have admired are Greene, Henry James, Joseph Conrad and Iris Murdoch. There is no telling what their influence has been, but the agent Giles Gordon, to whom I showed the North manuscript just before his death, said it reminded him, "at different times of C.P. Snow and Iris Murdoch". I make no such claims, but pay tribute to their craft and power.

Readers should take heart. Even in your sixties, it is not too late to start a new career. A few weeks ago Joanna Trollope, a mature novelist, and Charlotte Mendelson, a young, distinguished newcomer to the art, discussed on the Today programme the contention that novelists should not start writing till they are at least 35 because they lack experience and authority. Naturally, I inclined to Trollope's point of view.

Some journalists have accused Macmillan New Writing of cheapening the publishing process for novels, likening it to Ryanair inasmuch as there are standardised conditions and no advances. The novels it publishes stand or fall on their own merits. When it came to the stage of editing the final page proofs, my editor was on sabbatical in Languedoc. I was flown down to Carcassonne to pass the pages. As my publisher put it, "North goes south on Ryanair."

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 Friday, August 18, 2006

There are two Barry Turners in Wikipedia. The first one is a Canadian politicians in favour of freedom for ducks and the vital conservation of wetlands in North America. The second is a friend of mine, a former Macmillan employee and a prolific author and editor.

He is the editor of the invaluable and enormous Statesman's Yearbook which improves with every annual edition and this year comes with a free single-user online licence.

He is also celebrating the twentieth birthday of another of his brainchildren The Writer's Handbook which has become the leading resource for professional and would-be professional writers. He has written a piece in the London Times on the difficulties and issues around new writers getting published. Judging by the amount of correspondence I get on this whenever it's mentioned I thought I'd encourage readers to visit the associated debate which is getting a fair response.

I reckon that saving the Canadian wetlands is really important for the world but I reckon that Barry does his bit too.

And a propos ducks I came across a wonderful quote from Colin Haycraft, ex owner of the idiosyncratic publishing house Duckworth, cited (his name wrongly spelt) in the Bookseller magazine by Anthony Cheetham: ' A publisher who writes books is about as much use as a pregnant midwife.' In researching him I also came across his wonderful: 'A publisher is a specialized form of bank or building society, catering for customers who cannot cope with life and are therefore forced to write about it.' Have a good weekend.

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 Thursday, August 17, 2006

Just back in London from the Cairo day trip (where I failed even to glimpse the pyramids) and a few miscellaneous items.

1. Someone will be able to make a lot of money by working out how to have Egyptian hotels, restaurants and cafes serve decent espresso. I'm told that it's something to do with the water but really...

2. An Egyptian author asked how best to get her book sold in the UK given that wholesalers and retailers weren't in the least bit interested in Egyptian Homes and so it is only available through the online bookseller which I'm not allowed to mention. Do have a look at the website - it's very special.

3. And from Egypt back to an excellent interview about our burgeoning medical publishing arm, Nature Clinical Practice.

4. Tracy Hofman has written an interesting piece (apart from the fact that she describes me as silver-haired - accurate but do I need to be reminded?) on blogging. She can't see why I bother to do this blog and sometimes I wonder too. However, the original reason which still stands is that our IT department were getting fed up with my internal email newsletter clogging up the Macmillan servers. The blog solved that issue at least. And if you want to know more about corporate blogging I see that Piatkus publishers are offering a free download chapter from Debbie Weil's new book The corporate Blogging Book (it presumably does what it says on the tin).

5 and finally,phew. I can't resist pasting in the attached press release from Wisden which suggests that A&C Black have done a great sales job, MDL an excellent distribution effort, Matthew Engel a brilliant editorial tour de force and the England team - thank you for the Ashes and the extra sales.

This year’s edition of Wisden Cricketer’s Almanack has seen record sales, and the standard hardback version is to be reprinted for the first time since 1982.  The Almanack, which has been published every year since 1864, is an annual bestseller and is described as “the most famous sports book in the world”.

 

Wisden 2006 records the 2005 Ashes, which it describes as the greatest-ever Test series. The Ashes factor has clearly boosted sales, just as it did 24 years ago when Wisden 1982 featured the series known as “Botham’s Ashes”. Since then Wisden has revamped its format to include more top-class writing, pictures and the quirky facts cricket followers love. Gavyn Davies, in The Guardian, called Wisden 2006 “the best edition ever”, while in The Spectator, Frank Keating described it as “the most compelling must-have for many years”.

 

This year, for the first time, Wisden published a large-format edition as an alternative to the standard hardback and soft-cover versions.  Combined sales of all three has reached 50,000, nearly 20% up on recent years and far ahead of recorded sales for previous editions.

 

Christopher Lane, Wisden’s managing director, commented “One of the articles in this year’s Wisden asks whether the Ashes boom is real. Sales of Wisden suggest that it certainly is. Our challenge now is to convert those new readers into Wisden collectors. And to achieve that we are striving to make next year’s edition even better.”

 

October sees the publication of the Wisden Anthology 1978–2006, covering the best of the Almanack from the past three decades. This is a long-awaited sequel to the highly successful Wisden anthologies published in four volumes in the early 1980s.

 

 

For further information please contact Christopher Lane on 01420 83415 or e-mail:  chris.lane@wisdengroup.com

 

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 Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Arrived in Egypt for the first time at 1.00am this morning after coping with Heathrow security etc etc. First impressions:

They drive on the right in spite of still using pounds as their currency;

They identify the quality of fruit by naming the best quality after film stars and worst quality after George Bush;

They claim that more Mercedes are sold in Egypt than in Germany;

On arrival at the airport we were whisked into a luxury lounge, had our passports and luggage tickets taken away and suddenly everything (customs, passport control, luggage carousel) was fixed - nowhere else in the world that I've experienced...

We're here because the Egyptian Government has decided to encourage competition among publishers to produce the best quality textbooks for schools and colleges. Macmillan has worked in Egypt for more than thirty years and intends to be part of the massive opportunities of a country with 15 million schoolchildren, 4 million university students and a commitment to education as a driver of economic and social progress. There are many many problems but as usual we follow our new mission statement - We're doing our best.

 

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 Tuesday, August 15, 2006

I was at a celebration yesterday afternoon to welcome Graham Swift back to Picador. His last book was published by Penguin. He told a nice story of how he was in a very swanky Madrid hotel recently. Apparently this was the hotel where bullfighting stars stayed when preparing for an event. So perhaps unsurprising but uncomfortable to share the lift with two fully-uniformed picadors. As he pointed out, this is still more likely than sharing a lift with two penguins.

There was a certain tension in the air because we (and Graham's agent) were awaiting the announcement of the Man Booker prize long list. We were delighted that books by two authors published by Picador, Claire Messud and Edward St Aubyn were selected. The trouble with the longlist is that it must really hurt not to be on it if you think you have a chance but that being on it is still a huge distance from winning the prize itself. Fingers crossed that these two make it to the next round to be announced on 14 September and then they can both suffer the agony of awaiting the final announcement on 10 October. Authors published by Picador have won the prize the last two years (Alan Hollinghurst and John Banville). I'm not sure any publisher has ever achieved a hat-trick but records are there to be set.

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 Monday, August 14, 2006

I wrote about Gerard Jones and his directory of trade publishers. This has generated a few comments which say what a good thing he is - and I am sure he is - but I asked a question: Why does he bother? He hasn't responded in the comments section but he has emailed me this reply and in the interests of freedom of speech and assuming he has no objection here it is:

'Richard Charkin has a blog, upon which he had this to say about one of my innocent little e-mails and this to say about me:

I don't think anyone hates Gerard and certainly no-one that I know of minds his publishing names etc. Actually nobody gives a damn about him.The question is why does he bother?!

Why he bothers is that books have become "product," merely another means to make nothing but money...not art, not truth, not beauty, nothing worth anything but money. Books themselves don't matter a whit, how much money they generate is all. With the right packaging, enough endorsements, a fair amount of expensive hype and a modicum of proof-reading, any piece of unreadable drivel can make some short-term money. That's the publishing industry's stock in trade. It's the same as the salami industry. There are truly great salamis out there that nobody's ever going to get to eat 'cause you don't see 'em advertised on the telly. The Audio Book of Ginny Good
is a greater literary experience than everything Macmillan has published in the last twenty years combined but nobody's ever gonna listen to it 'cause nobody can make any money off it. It's free. That's anathema. G.'

Well, I think Gerard is wrong. The publishing industry is full of people who care about books. He wants to believe the opposite simply because his proposals haven't been accepted as widely as he'd have liked. There are always two explanations of failure. One is that you need to try harder or get better. The other is that the world is conspiring against you. The latter is better for the ego. The former is probably the more likely.

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 Sunday, August 13, 2006

There's a guy called Gerard Jones who sends emails around the publishing industry about his website. I think he's probably a talented writer. I think he's also extremely assiduous judging by the amount of time and effort he has dedicated to creating a huge database of people in the publishing and related industries. Here's an example of his email style:

EWA, Fifth Edition, September 2006

The Fifth Edition of "EVERYONE WHO'S ANYONE IN ADULT TRADE PUBLISHING, NEWSPAPERS, MAGAZINES, BROADCASTING AND TINSELTOWN, TOO: A Writer's Guide to The All-Pervasive Nazi Propaganda Network" is finally finished. Phew.

EWA (
everyonewhosanyone.com) is a free, searchable, 1.2 GB online e-mail and web address directory of around fifteen thousand (15,000) of the most influential ignoramuses in the media, entertainment and academic industries whose perverse job it is to keep themselves and others brainwashed beyond belief. Here's the page you're listed on:

http://everyonewhosanyone.com/eduk.html

During the four years EWA has been online I found a good agent, sold one of my books (Ginny Good), got it published the way I wanted it published and made it into a fifteen-hour, multimedia audio book all on my own. The Audio Book of Ginny Good is easily and by far the single greatest literary achievement of the 21st Century. Listen to it and see. It's free. Like me.

http://everyonewhosanyone.com/ggsyn.html

Or not. Stay safe in your creepy cave with money-grubbing Nazi thought thugs keeping you from reading, writing, seeing, hearing or saying anything worth reading, writing, seeing, hearing or saying. Land of the free, home of the brave, yes...as long as you don't do anything brave or free. Ignorance is bliss, but calling slavery "freedom" is absurd. There's plenty of other worthwhile stuff on the rest of the site, as well. Click some links. Let 'em take you where they take you. Or not.

Finally, if you don't want me to send you any more e-mails, let me know and I will gladly put a little mark (
666) by your name to remind me not to send you any more e-mails. Thanks. G.

Gerard Jones
http://everyonewhosanyone.com/audio/GGch00introm.mp3

Why does he do it? Making enemies can't be the best way to help his efforts to be published. He can't make money from it (or can he?). Perhaps it's a way of creating a community of like-minded people. He seems to think there is a conspiracy among publishers to avoid new talent, to promote rubbish and in general to do a very bad job. All this might be true but I'd like to reassure Gerard and anyone else who thinks similarly that there is no conspiracy - it is merely incompetence. Perhaps the publishing industry should adopt a mission statement - WE'RE DOING OUR BEST.

Having posted this I went to get my weekly fix of book browsing - in an independent bookshop - all right, not that independent, the Pan Bookshop. I picked up a copy of Bad Faith by Carmen Callil. It is history of the guy in the Vichy Government responsible for 'controlling the Jewish population' in Southern France. I haven't read it yet but it is clearly a work of scholarship about a fascinating period of French history. It must have taken the author years of research, tears and trouble to produce this 600-page treatise. It is beautifully designed and produced by the team at Jonathan Cape, part of Random House UK, part of Random House Worldwide, part of Bertelsmann Media Worldwide. The book's audience is clearly not mass market and yet, in spite of the consolidation, gloabalisation and commercialisation of the industry it has seen the light of day and found a market ( I bought a copy and so, according to the bookshop manager, have another forty people, helped by a signing session).

Alongside this book were hundreds (possibly thousands) of similarly excellent titles - a great range, beautifully produced, idiosyncratic but tailored to the local market - at great prices. Bad Faith was £20 in hardback which elsewhere in the Fulham Road in London buys a bunch of asparagus, 100g of Brie and two glasses of wine. The point of this is to suggest that maybe (just maybe) the industry is doing a great job and is getting better by becoming more professional and more market-aware. If so, then perhaps a little credit should go to the dedicatee of Bad Faith - 'To PBH' - Paul Hamlyn who, extraordinarily does not have a Wikipedia entry and so you'll have to make do with a link to one of his legacies - another reason to be cheerful.

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 Saturday, August 12, 2006

After last week's utterances from the British government about building creative hubs blah blah I was pleased to see that the Macmillan English Dictionary's Word of the Week was garbology. I was hoping that this was the new science of studying verbal garbage as practised by civil servants, management consultants and politicians throughout the world. Unfortunately it is the much more prosaic but possibly more interesting 'study of a person or group of people by examining what they throw away'.

Anyway, this led me to look more closely at how our English Language Teaching websites and electronic resources have been developing. Given the importance of English in the world. Given the importance of language to international understanding. Given the importance of education to economic prosperity I am delighted that Macmillan is leading the industry. You just have to check out a few sites to see what I mean.

One Stop English

Macmillan English

Dictionary Magazine

Macmillan English Campus

Macmillan English for India

We've had quite a bit of interesting correspondence  on the need for scientists to communicate better. I think it applies to everyone and particularly in the UK where reticence and inability to speak other people's languages are considered virtues. Maybe this will change with  better education.

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