In December of last year, Simon & Schuster, one of the large traditional publishing houses known in the industry as the “Big Five” ( formerly Six, announced the upcoming publication of “Dangerous, an autobiography by “alt-right leader” “professional agitator” whatever, you know who he is Milo Yiannopoulos. The publishing world immediately proceeded to lose its damn mind. From preachy virtue signaling from literary review magazines to preachy virtue signaling from bestselling authors to preachy virtue signaling from Simon & Schuster’s own U.K. division, the last two months in the Publishing World have been nonstop outrage, boycotts, Twitter rants, and general hysteria.
Undoubtedly, the bigwigs at Simon & Schuster were very relieved when they were given an easy out for severing ties with Milo after The Pederasty Incident. But now that his book deal has been canceled, the question is: Where will Milo go? And what does his choice mean for the publishing industry?
It’s entirely possible that he will decide to just shelve Dangerous. But if he decides he wants to continue to pursue publication, he has two choices—try to court another traditional publisher, or self-publish his book. And which route he takes could have long-term effects on the industry as a whole.
To better understand the implications of what direction Dangerous takes to publication, it’s important to understand the nature of the modern-day publishing industry. Until about ten years ago, publication via a traditional publishing house was considered the only legitimate means of publishing a book. Though the stigma of self-publishing has lessened slightly with the explosion of ebooks and hugely successful self-published authors like Andy Weir and Hugh Howey, for the most part, traditional publishing is still considered by the elites to be the only “true” form of publication. The Big Five have a stranglehold on brick-and-mortar bookstores, on libraries, on literary awards*, and even on bestseller lists (which by no means reflect a straightforward measure of sales). Everything about the industry is designed to give legacy publishers an advantage over digital imprints and independent authors who try to skirt the gatekeepers.
Not unlike the Fourth Estate, publishing is suffering from the changes in consumer expectations brought on by the digital age. However, market analysis shows that despite predictions to the contrary, the digital age hasn’t killed traditional publishing just yet. But ebooks aren’t its only threat. An arguably bigger problem that may ultimately hasten the traditional houses’ demise is the disproportionate influence on the industry held by the progressive factions of what is colloquially known as “Book Twitter.”
“Book Twitter” is an extremely vocal faction of readers, authors, editors, agents, small publishing houses,
and others involved in the publishing industry that skew overwhelmingly left. They exist in an echo chamber, where each reverberating talking point bounces back and gets louder and louder. One refrain that became deafening over the last year is that all writing is inherently political, and as True Artists we have a Sacred Duty to preach Rightthink in any and every aspect of our lives. Thus, previously non-political, bestselling authors have been chiming in almost incessantly, contributing to the industry’s pronounced and rapid shift leftward.
So what does this mean for Dangerous? It means that, regardless of the fact that the book hit #1 on Amazon’s bestseller list twice while still in preorder—despite the fact that there may (and undoubtedly will) be a huge consumer demand for his book— Dangerous is likely going to be a very tough sell for other traditional publishers, particularly any of the remaining four major houses. They saw what happened to Simon & Schuster over the last two months, and my prediction is that their desire to avoid controversy and save face with the insiders of their industry will outweigh any concerns for freedom of speech, and likely even the prospect of the monetary gain that could come from publishing his book.**
Which leaves self-publishing.
If Milo chooses to self-publish Dangerous, it could be the first sign of a changing tide. The backlash that Simon & Schuster experienced over signing a deal with Milo is likely to continue with future book deals with other authors. Despite their exclamations to the contrary, considering their track record, it is almost certain that the rage machine will continue to work its way down the list of authors who are conservative, libertarian, or anywhere to the political right of Karl Marx (or at least Bernie Sanders), targeting them as proponents of hate speech who must be silenced for the good of society. And as long as the echo chamber continues to consist of prominent members of the traditional publishing industry, the Big Five will continue to be puppets to their whims.
This means that as the traditional publishing industry grows increasingly leftist in nature, it seems likely that conservative and libertarian voices may start to shift towards an independent/self-publishing model. The implications this could have for the industry are multifold. First, it would likely mean that the slight increase in legitimacy that self-publishing has gained over the last few years will abruptly decrease, at least for the purposes of the gatekeepers (the aforementioned professional reviewers, brick-and-mortar bookstores/libraries and, of course, lists and awards). But additionally, as in the case of the declining legacy media, it would likely lead to a simultaneous increase in the market share of self-published books—particularly in nonfiction, a genre previously dominated by the Big Five. And as their sales dwindle, no amount of Rightthink will be able to keep them afloat. It will be Trump’s election all over again.
The rage brigade of “Book Twitter” think they are saving traditional publishing by silencing voices they don’t agree with. But more than likely, they are hastening its decline.
———
* I won’t go into the Rabid/Sad Puppies vs. Hugos drama, as that would be enough for another article entirely, and it’s already been covered in other places.
** The exception to this would be if there is an independent/small press that caters to a specifically conservative or right-wing audience that doesn’t mind the blowback from Pedophilia-gate. Which there may well be. I’ll be interested to see what comes out of the woodwork over the next few months.
* I won’t go into the Rabid/Sad Puppies vs. Hugos drama
Sounds like you’d prefer not to go down that…
dons sunglasses
…Rabid hole.
YEAAAAAAAAAAAH!!!
Seriously though, thanks for the article. Yet another fine piece here at the Glib.
:narrows gays:
*narrows gaze*
What’s your take on the Gayroller 2000 being something that literally *narrows gays*?
I can’t wait to read the lengthy diatribes in whatever is left of the legacy MSM about the death of free speech Milo wrought.
I’d argue that the left’s goal is to make everything political.
There are only two things that are infinite: the universe, and the number of things the political left can apply identity politics to. And I’m not sure about the universe.
There needs to be a way to send all the leftists into a blackhole. But it would totally be a crime against the beings inhabiting the universe that they come out in.
“Dude, we don’t dump our undesirables in *your* universe!”
ALTERNATE JOKE: “Hey, jerks, do you see any kangaroos? No? That’s because our universe isn’t Australia, so find another penal colony!”
I think many leftists themselves would even readily admit that, at least the ones who actually bother to read the seminal works of their ideologies. “The personal is the political” has been embedded into their action plan and led them (and unfortunately, everyone else) down countless political crusades over the past decades. One would hope they’d be running out of things to politicize sooner or later, but their ingenuity never ceases to amaze.
Or, put another way, “All within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state.”
Yeah, they were pretty explicit about it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_personal_is_political
I sincerely hope that the general publishing industry isn’t as successful in coopting and censoring free inquiry as the academic publishing wing has been.
For example, it’s pretty much impossible to find anything published by a university press in any subject field (sciences/economics included) that isn’t skewed hard left.
Castalia House will probably publish it.
http://www.castaliahouse.com
I think Vox Day (actual alt-right leader) has already offered, so it’s up to Milo.
Sad thing is, he publishes some good stuff but because I bought some books from Castalia (“Appendix N” and “Green Knight’s Squire Trilogy”, which are all non-political), for a while my amazon recommendations were Coulter, Beck and such. Then I linked one book by a PM Zoolander’s trade minister, and now it’s all “Income Inequality” and “Socialism but we don’t call it that.”
Look at some Naomi Klein books and watch your Amazon recommended melt into derp.
I have not yet finished Appendix N…what did you think of the book?
It was good, and certainly an interesting concept. I thought the main weakness was lack of consistency between articles. Some were straight-forward reviews of the book, some were “here’s how you can use the concepts in your game”, and in some, book was just a starting point for a meditation on a related theme. Then, of course, there are chapters that mix the approaches.
I guess part of it is that it’s a series of blog articles edited into a single work. Still, it does show that
a) Fantasy as a genre was much broader and weirder than it is after 80s (and he doesn’t say it, but D&D can take part of the blame for that, especially after success of Dragonlance series)
b) Roots of D&D are broader and weirder than is assumed today, and it’s probably to the game’s detriment. Goodman Games DCC RPG actually does a great job of incorporating Appendix N concepts, as do smaller OSR games.
It’s definitely a recommended read, for the reasons outlined in J.C. Wright’s intro to it. There is a legacy to SF/Fantasy that is being forgotten today, and we need to be more informed about it. It hit home for me because I was just finishing my first time read of Poul Anderson’s Polesotechic Universe series and was angry at myself for not knowing about it. It’s a series where free traders are fucking heroes and government and crony companies are what literally leads to a Dark Age and near-collapse of civilization, written over some 40 year period and quite well regarded in its day.
Whatever else can be said for Robert Jordan and the Wheel of Time series, I always admired the fact that when he marched out the trope of an idealized Golden Age in his world, he specifically made it an an-cap system. I know a couple lefties who were really into that series and were not happy about that at all
There are a few other examples of explicitly pro capitalism authors I can think of in the genre. Something about it seems to attract that type of mind. Even Tolkien was an anarchist
i know I’m crazy late to this thread, but Terry Goodkind led me to objectivism which led me to TSTSNBN.
Also: want to extend a hearty thanks/congratulations to the people running this site. The quality level of the articles and commentary here (to say nothing of the interface itself!) is lightyears better than the old place.
Seconded! Have to undo years of training to read the articles first here, instead of skipping to the comments.
Serious question: is there anything that leftists don’t fuck up and make poisonous? What awful people.
There’s gotta be *something*.
It’s interesting to me that a similar virtual book-burning hasn’t occurred with Allen Ginsberg. I mean, gay Jew, overrated shitty writer, praised sex with underage boys, what could be the difference?
Fine effort here, Myth, hope there’s many more from you.
Interesting, but not in any way surprising.
Communist sympathizer. He’s a prodigal son, not an Other.
20 years ago, when Merriam-Webster and Hasbro expurgated the “official” Scrabble dictionary to make it suitable for school use (tournaments are now run by a different organization and keep the “offensive” words), COMSYMP was one of the removed words.
“Abortuary” was also removed.
Children are supposed to be able to use the thing itself, but not the word which describes the thing.
You know a lot of children having abortions Eddie?
(I’m pretty sure you mean teenager but I’ve always found calling them children odd).
Odd that they didn’t remove abortion though.
In Black’s Law Dictionary (8th edition) the first definition of “child” is “a person under the age of majority.”
Perhaps I just have an old soul, but I don’t think elevating the concept of ‘children’ past puberty is consistent or logical, particularly with it being a very recent notion in Western cultures. For thousands of years they were decided not children, until they were. For some reason.
You can join the military at sixteen. Are we employing child soldiers?
@John Titor:
You can only join at 16 if you’re an emancipated minor, or your parents sign for you.
I figured he was referring to the children being aborted.
I mean that efforts to ban abortions for minors run into opposition from the prochoice crowd.
Therefore, they want children, at least in certain cases, to have abortions.
It’s interesting to me that a similar virtual book-burning hasn’t occurred with Allen Ginsberg. I mean, gay Jew, overrated shitty writer, praised sex with underage boys, what could be the difference?
Paul McCartney dug him. Beatle royalty still had some currency at that time; made even a Burnt Beatnik paedero seem sagely and wizened.
I once encountered Allen Ginsberg at a poetry conference. Remind me to tell you that story when you’re in SF.
I’m not coming to SF (escaped there almost 10 years ago), so you’ll need to type it out for my enjoyment.
Ever see his interview by Wm F Buckley?
I’d rather read Agile Cyborg.
I never understood the Ginsberg fascination. When I came across him as a teenager he struck me as a pathetic perv; but man did pop culture elitists love him.
I was listening to a George Carlin bit earlier today and he was nattering on about how Earings (on men) were out and one should stop wearing them–because they only reason to START wearing them to was to “annoy the squares” and now that “squares” were wearing them…
If you look at a lot of what happened in pop culture between the beginnings of the Beats and the mainstreaming of Punk as “let’s do this to annoy the squares” it makes more sense.
Thanks for the article!
How does a company like Amazon fit into this? Do they censor/refuse to make available wrong-think? I haven’t been to a brick & mortar bookstore in years since I started reading everything on Kindle. They have to have a big impact on publishing in this day and age.
I bet that five years from now, even if it’s published, Dangerous won’t be on Amazon. I’m willing to bet there are SJWs inside the company working on it right now, and that staff turnover in the future will just increase their percent.
I truly hope they don’t. I do a lot of shopping on Amazon and customer service is second to none at the moment. If they jump on that bandwagon it would gut me.
I haven’t gotten the full SJW bandwagon vibe from Amazon that I have from the social media sites. I don’t doubt they lean left, but I only recall maybe one or two times they pulled something because of political controversy.
I assume you’re aware that WaPo is owned by Bezos. Probably wise of him to not use Amazon for a mouthpiece, but since he already owns a paper for that anyway…
So far, Amazon has provided me with everything I’ve wanted in the way of books. If they’re censoring, it sure hasn’t shown up in my reading lists.
I don’t see Amazon trying to censor. They’ve come down hard on vendors trying to censor customer comments on their products.
They will make a decision and markets will sort it out.
So far you can pretty much publish whatever you want on Amazon. I have not heard of any cases of censorship, here’s hoping it stays that way.
And yet, here’s someone trying hard to get Amazon to censor. As one of (((them))), I’m horrified.
http://www.jpost.com/Diaspora/Amazon-is-asked-to-stop-selling-books-on-Holocaust-denial-482349
Maybe someone should make a donation to Amazon to pay for a free anti-denial book to be shipped with any pro-denial book.
All they have to do is find a group of donors with lots of money…
Great article.
Excellent article. A fine and self-evident example of the good things that can happen when, as you say, libertarian voices start to shift toward an independent/self-publishing model. Keep up the great work.
Also…PALADIN PRESS FOREVER
*Ashida Kim silently appears behind Steve, slits his throat with a tanto, and then disappears without a trace*
First he has to get past my bodyguard, Dr Haha Lung
Woo! Real Saturday content. Nice, MLW.
huh, MLW doesn’t sound like Milo at all…
I still have no idea why or how you keep a Twitter feed in the publishing world without going insane.
Great content, troll free threads.
What’s not to love here?
It is sort of tranquil, yes?
They said I could be anything I wanted. Turns out that not everyone can be a rising star in the Internet trolldom. 🙁
Gotta pay the troll toll
No vodka, no passage.
Have you tried calling everyone a Trumptard? That seems to be the go to move.
That said, I still want to see the list of top ten commenter fascists.
I had that list somewhere, lemme see if I can find it again.
I only remember that John was fascist number 1. Did he ever even release his full list?
I pressed the troll for his list of “top 25” but he only produced like seven or something, one of which was not recognized as a commenter name by anyone.
1. John
2. Crusty Juggler
3. Tonio
4. JOHN MUTHAFUCKIN’ TITOR, SCOURGE OF GOD.
5. Someone else, might have been the nonsense name.
6. Citizen X.
Swiss was somewhere on there too.
#5 was jupistar, which has surfaced periodically before and after The Great Migration in the Before Times.
Was kidding, TBH. I triggered tens of thousands of proggies just this morning on Twitter. Bumper crop. I’ve triggered a lot of right-wingers too, though. Don’t even feel bad about it because the parody isn’t always obvious to some people.
I say, trigger ’em all and let Kek sort ’em out.
We had a troll. He’s gone. SP is without mercy.
Thanks for removing the asshat known as shreek. I told you he couldn’t control himself for more than a single day. Did he even make it 24 hours? I was hoping that cat picture was the end of him.
When was this? I missed it. I must have been, you know working.
I think it was cuffy.
Yes, cuffy, AKA dajjal, AKA AddictionMyth, AKA Palin’s Buttplug, AKA shreek.
The left just want to shut down speech that they don’t approve of. They’re going to go after easy targets first, sure, just to start setting a precedent. They’re eventually going after all of us. The other reason Milo stood out as a target is that he’s a gay man who doesn’t tow the lefty lion. The one thing the left hates more than someone saying something they don’t agree with, is someone who is ‘rightfully’ in their eye, one of them, who says something they don’t agree with.
If that’s not a fucking clue I don’t know what is.
I read most of my books on my phone. The only ones I read in dead tree edition are the ones I don’t have an electronic copy of.
I love books and I have more of a collection than I can display right now. I used to go to library sales and just load up with boxes and boxes of hardbacks. Haven’t bought a paper book in nearly a decade. I read on my Kindle.
It’s easier, you still have the same collection…it’s just harder to be pretentious about it. 😉
There is a nice feeling connected with having a lot of books on the wall.
Yeah, but I still have A Brief History of Time on my coffee table, cause you know, it makes you look like super smart.
Yeah, I put out books about Olympians so I look more athletic.
That is why I drink Michelob Ultra, cuz the tv says it is for finely tuned athletes.
Same reason I eat McDonald’s breakfast every morning
@Steve Sone of Steve,
Are you also suicidal?
I find it more difficult to read on electronic devices. I’d much rather read from paper.
I also have this problem, even as one of those Dratted Millennials that’s grown up surrounded by electronic devices. I don’t want to see paper books go away any time soon. Fortunately, there are some good print-on-demand options out there (CreateSpace, IngramSpark—which also does hardcovers—and Lulu, though I’ve heard they’re not as good as the other two), so hopefully print won’t die off any time soon.
I think seeing what happened with vinyl records ameliorates fears of the disappearance of paper books.
*looks at collection*
should be ok.
I tend to read big books , and my kindle is easier to carry around than printed books that could be classified as blunt instruments. Unfortunately, editors have a hard time telling successful authors what to cut.
I also don’t like to advertise when I’m reading Porno. It’s OK, but not as good as Trainspotting.
For me it’s better, especially with the backlight and being able to change fonts.
I still prefer owning paper books. With Kindles and whatnot you don’t own the book, you are best renting it. With my paper copy, I can mark it up, give it away, sell it. If I decide to get a new book shelf I don’t need to buy another copy. Or if I put it away for a decade or more and then decide to/need to read it again the paper is still compatible with my current hands and still usable.
For me there is also pleasure in physically handling old books as well. To hold and read an antique book is to see the text as it was and to consider the history of the ideas and people who have encountered this same thing. I found a first edition “Seven Pillars of Wisdom” by TE Lawrence back in the 1970s and found it a fascinating read. During the Iraq war the book was again widely read and when I went I picked up a new paperback copy to bring with me I noticed multiple small changes.
I would consider a device for library type usage for books.
Anyway that is my $0.02.
What ever happen to the “cent” key on a keyboard? Now get off my lawn!
Inflation.
If you buy the books on Amazon, yes. But there are other ways to get them.
Same here. Old party fart fart I am.
FRICKEN AUTO SPELLING RUINED MY COMMENT.
Repost:
Same here. Old FARTY fart fart I am.
Whatever you say, Ol’ Party Fart Fart.
Thank you for the comments, everyone! And thanks so much to the Glibertarians overlords for letting me share this piece.
For fun, another example of actual publishing houses going above and beyond to alienate non-leftist readers: https://twitter.com/melvillehouse/status/835219745477648384
That one popped up on my feed just hours after I submitted this article, and is a prime example of what I’m talking about. They really do not care if they drive away every customer that doesn’t conform to their mold.
I’m formulating a theory where that’s actually a reasonable strategy.
Most people can keep political separate from their lives.
Progs can’t.
So if you have to upset someone, upset non-Progs.
Upset no one? That upsets Progs, so see above.
eh, my wife won’t buy from Penzey’s Spices anymore since they went full progtard TDS. Non-lefties will change their buying choices, they just don’t tend to be as vocal about it (Christmas Warriors notwithstanding).
We still do because they’re great. I refuse to allow politics to shape my purchase decisions.
Certain companies have certain niches. The Trump fans were screaming they were going to boycott Starbucks after the “10,000 refugees” tweet*. Sure, maybe they did. But I think 80% of Starbucks’ revenue comes from Hillary voters. Along the same line, the liberals claiming they would NEVER AGAIN eat at Chick Fil A didn’t exactly bring them to the ground.
*Although in response to that tweet, a company called Black Rifle Coffee Company tweeted they would hire 10,000 veterans. Their online store sold out of literally everything they carried in less than a day.
Politics and branding are connected. I just like good stuff, no matter where it comes from, but a lot of people really do signal their values via their purchasing.
Generally, companies are better off just keeping their mouth shut when it comes to politics. Penzey’s basically called all Trump voters racist douchebags, so I don’t really blame anyone for not wanting to give them money.
To clarify, some companies make decisions that have little to do with partisan politics and get hammered for it in social media (Target tries to walk a fine line). In those cases, I think the reaction is overdone.
Target really fucked up with the trans bathroom nonsense. Nice white lefty women who cried for a week when Hillary! lost still don’t want men using the restroom with them or their daughters when they’re shopping at Target, which is totally not WalMart because WalMart is icky and gross and Target is totally not putting small businesses out of business at all.
It’s a shame companies are going political and I’d be lying if I didn’t take it personally. Companies like Starbucks should shut the fuck up and serve my coffee. THAT’S their business. Not fucking lecturing me. Same goes for other stupid left-wing companies and social media. DO YOUR JOBS and spare us your faux-righteous gibberish. Same with musicians, if I’m going to plop down cash to go see one I don’t expect an attack or screed on political opponents or free speech or whatever. SHUT UP AND PERFORM. The least you can do is show class and respect the parts of your audience who don’t agree with you: I’m looking at you Springsteen and Mellencamp. Honestly, I’ve just stopped going I don’t feel like being made for a sucker and getting insulted or annoyed. And I don’t miss it. At all.
Fuck them.
I saw the Dead Kennedys in London in 2003. They’d kicked out Jello Biafra by that point, and that was great. Instead of rambling, 30 minute political diatribes, they just played all of their songs.
on 1) – i went and read some of those people’s twitter history. The impression i get is of a very tiny group of people social-signaling to one another so hard, to the effect of creating an entirely distorted picture of reality. they seem to think they’re engaged in some kind of ACTUAL “#Resistance of the status quo!!” when in fact hardly anyone anywhere has the first clue that they even exist.
on 2) this i think is the real “vicious cycle” in the legacy media. The news media are going more tabloid-ish to get clicks, but sacrificing their news-credibility in the process; its a short term gain (in theory) but it just hastens their long-term decline.
As for books…. i can’t speak for ‘new publishing’, but i still read all my books on paper *(most of them are older books). I don’t know what the #s are for people who are all-in on kindles vs. people who still prefer paper copies, but i suspect everyone’s going to want a hard copy, and there will always be a role for people in the print-publishing business.
jesus, sorry – don’t know how that ended up as a reply. it was supposed to be a separate post.
They seem to genuinely believe that the only people that read books are Hillary! voters.
+1 great posting name.
I’m impressed that a five-year-old can manage to run a publishing house.
One refrain that became deafening over the last year is that all writing is inherently political, and as True Artists we have a Sacred Duty to preach Rightthink in any and every aspect of our lives.
I think everything in life is political in one way or another. It is the pushing “rightthink” where the train comes off the tracks. Some of the stuff in the linked articles is kind of disturbing. Thanks for the article.
There was this Federalist piece about the NYT bestseller list and the Gosnell book.
WOW. I hadn’t heard this. I’m not surprised, but damn. Thank you for sharing that.
This article is an interesting look into how the NYT Bestseller list is created. And I just saw it had an update four days ago:
Regnery (the publisher) confronted the Times about it, who issued this statement:
“The Times’s best-seller lists are based on a detailed analysis of book sales from a wide range of retailers who provide us with specific and confidential context of their sales each week. These standards are applied consistently, across the board in order to provide Times readers our best assessment of what books are the most broadly popular at that time.”
Confidential, and Our best assessment .
Yeah those are totally not weasel words at all.
Top. Book. Stores.
Speaking of Regnery, Last month, Marji Ross, the president of conservative publisher Regnery, told The New York Times her audience would have been too polarized by Dangerous. (“Some of our market would have loved it, and some of our market would have been very uncomfortable with it,” Ross said.)”
Love the language there. Strictly business.
It cannot be said enough that Gosnell, (regardless of ones view on abortion) was one sick motherfucker. I don’t know if I could read that book. I have heard the authors interviewed a few times.
^This. But don’t tell Eddie I said that.
The authors of the Gosnell book, Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer, also crowd funded a movie of the book, raising 2.3 million. Their first attempt to crowd fund was through GoFundMe, who then shut down their campaign, so they had to go to Indiegogo.
The movie is completed (including all post-production) but now they can’t get a distributor.
I guess the studios don’t want to be accused of being anti-abortion if they don’t suppress the story of Gosnell’s house of horrors.
What’s this? No “to be sure” or “but” explaining that Milo is morally repugnant and horrible? What is this madness!?
She didn’t need to say it because everybody already knows it. 😉
To be sure.
Muh qualifiers!
Good article. I would add that Encounter Books is a decent-sized publisher that leans right and gets distributed to at least some brick & mortar stores.
Another aspect of the publishing industry that has changed is that publishers now do little or nothing to promote books. That is left to the authors. It is not uncommon for authors to spend $7,000 on a promoter for a title. Obviously, Milo has a big advantage there.
So?
For fun, another example of actual publishing houses going above and beyond to alienate non-leftist readers: https://twitter.com/melvillehouse/status/835219745477648384
What the…?
And, of course, the Goodthink Mob assembles to declare their fealty. I couldn’t help wondering when R Soave would appear.
Sycophants. “OMGZ I ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ YOU RIGHT NOW”
Well, why not, I mean that strategy is working great for Democrats.
“Book Twitter” is an extremely vocal faction of readers, authors, editors, agents, small publishing houses,
and others involved in the publishing industry that skew overwhelmingly
left. They exist in an echo chamber, where each reverberating talking point bounces back and gets louder and louder. One refrain that became deafening over the last year is that all writing is inherently political, and as True Artists we have a Sacred Duty to preach Rightthink in any and every aspect of our lives.
Inconceivable!
Like Viking1865 said above, it’s like many people in the book biz think only Hillary voters buy books.
Or maybe they don’t want to take the filthy tainted money of Those People.
Or perhaps they simply don’t care about the effect of what they’re saying.
I’ve seen many Twitter feeds from literary agents where maybe 1/3 at least of the tweets were about how awful Donald Trump is. And these are their professional Twitter feeds, not some personal account.
Great article, good illo, and nicely formatted.
🙂 I agree.
I imagine there should be a panel of (obviously half-Soviet-Bloc) judges who have 3 scores for every submission =
Technical Difficulty = 1-10
Style = 1-10
Formatting = 1-10
this gets a 9.5 for format; my only gripe being that the font for the “S&S” graphic and the body text is a little out of whack. But obviously this is a person who takes the printed word seriously.
Doesn’t S&S lose the advance they gave Milo… AND, basically give free promotion to whomever then picks up the rights to publish Milo? I don’t know if ‘advances’ are somehow able to be clawed back or not, but it would seem to me at the very least the sort of thing someone like Milo would demand from a publisher
(i.e. either back me fully, or you lose the advance = otherwise the contract would basically be a way for a publisher to keep an author in limbo indefinitely, paying them an advance, never publishing the work, and then rescinding the advance at some future excuse)
It seems the dumbest move ever, given that the controversy will do nothing more than sell more books for someone else. I don’t see how they come out a ‘winner’ either, since they’re apparently still guilty of having decided he was a horse worth betting on in the first place.
Either they want to swallow the loss so their officers can preen themselves on their superior virtue (do they have stockholders? how would stockholders react if such were the motive?)
OR
They eat the loss from dropping Milo in order to keep their other, anti-Milo authors and protect themselves from a boycott.
I don’t know for certain whether they “eat their loss” at all. I haven’t read much about the situation so i don’t know if he keeps the advance or not.
but i think your second point has merit – they probably were risking a greater shitshow with other authors making a stink. Still….. i imagine it would have been an interesting analysis to look at all the various author’s book-sales after about a year of constantly press-whining, and see if the whole stink hadn’t actually simply improved EVERYONEs book sales overall. Basically, that the “Milo Effect” ended up being a Win-Win for writers and publisher. But that’s just a theory.
Advances are usually paid in 3 parts (on signing the contract, on delivery/acceptance of the finished book, and then on publication). I have seen some people speculating about what will happen with that, but no one seems to know. I’m guessing he’s only been paid one portion, and that he’ll be keeping that and not getting the rest.
Ah. I suppose the name “advance” is a bit misleading then.
it sounds a little bit more like the way consulting firms get paid
(the 1) up front billing “we don’t start until a check clears”, 2) the “on delivery”, then 3) the residuals/performance-based or client-based usage fees)
Well, it’s an advance on expected earnings. So you don’t actually get paid royalties until your book sells enough that it earns back that advance. Most authors don’t actually earn out, so your advance is your entire income for that book.
“The rage brigade of “Book Twitter” think they are saving traditional publishing by silencing voices they don’t agree with. But more than likely, they are hastening its decline.”
A line I could not agree with more – and not just in publishing but across the cultural and societal landscape. You try and squash free speech and expression it’s you that will pay ultimately.
That’s the comeuppance we can but hope for.
Whenever I am overseas I try to find “Atlas Shrugged” in the local language. I have been successful in: Germany, Argentina, France, Sweden, Israel and South Korea. No luck at at all in any Arabic speaking country and I still search for it in Thailand. Just thinking about John Galt’s speech in Thai makes me smile.
This started as a way to try and learn more “educated” German when I lived there and quickly metamorphosed into a search for its own sake. My rule is simple: be in the country and find the book in the local language. I did find the book in Italy but could not make myself pay 45 Euros for a hard back during a period with a horrible exchange rate.
“I did find the book in Italy”
Atlas Shrugged, and Also Waved His Arms Around Wildly to Emphasize His Points