 |
| Billingham |
Mark Billingham, author of the Tom Thorne detective series, criticized the
growing self-publishing industry that allows writers to sell their work
electronically for pence.Billigham made his comments at the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate, after fellow author, Stephen Leather spoke about self publishing during a panel talk. Stephen Leather
said e-books provided a better deal for readers and writers, who can
undercut those using traditional publishers and agents.
However Billingham received applause from the audience when he responded by
saying books were devalued if they were sold for “less than half the price
of a cup of tea”.
 |
| Leather |
What makes this so interesting is that both men are well respected novelists, but Leather who both self publishes as well as having many of his books with trad publishers, has long championed self publishing and had success with both backlist and new titles. While Billingham does have a point about books being devalued he is far wide of the mark if he thinks this is down to self publishing - for years now, long before the self publishing boom, UK supermarkets like Asda and Tesco have been selling books at a loss, and that includes Billingham's titles. I bought one of Billingham's Thorne series for £1 at Asda and that may just be enough to cover a cup of tea, but it certainly won't stretch to a couple of dunking biccies.
The devaluation of the book is something that's been happening for years and years, and before Amazon even invented the Kindle, Waterstones were doing this in order to lure readers away from the small bookstores who couldn't afford to discount titles so heavily. And what are stores like The Works doing if not training consumers to pay less for books?
Yes the book is being devalued.
Yes it is wrong.
But it is not only down to self publishing, and is a trend that's gone on ever since the UK NET agreement was done away with.The thing that self publishing has done is empower writers like never before and it is changing the industry. The old publishing model had been around for a long time now and maybe change is inevitable.