Journey to Rainbow Island is currently #1 on the BN.com list
Congratulations to author Christie Hsiao, who I had the pleasure of meeting for dinner last week.
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Congratulations to author Christie Hsiao, who I had the pleasure of meeting for dinner last week.
I’m delighted to announce that we just signed a deal with Karrine Steffans, three-time NYT bestselling author, to the BenBella roster. I had the pleasure of meeting Karrine for a face-to-face contract signing. Here she is right after signing the contract with the pen (gifted to her by Bill Maher) that she uses for special occasions:
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Last year, BenBella had the honor of publishing Claudia Christian’s memoir, Babylon Confidential, detailing her battle with alcoholism and her discovery of the treatment that saved her life: The Sinclair Method, created by Dr. David Sinclair.
Now, with her new documentary, One Little Pill, …
I’ve always thought it unfair that the big name books, celebrity books in particular, get paid advances that are so high that even the publisher doesn’t expect them to earn out. In effect, books that surprise the publisher by selling well subsidize the books that everyone assumes will sell well.
But Mike Shatzkin points out that it’s even worse than that:
Because books that publishers and agents know will be big in advance tend to have advances calculated to be too high to earn out, …
“The Market for Lemons” is a classic economics paper by George Akerlof (I rarely get to use my graduate training in economics, so please forgive me). It deals with information asymmetry, the fact that sellers of used cars know more about the car’s defects than buyers. It concludes that owners of used good used cars will tend to avoid the used car market, …
Let’s face it. Publishing is not a high margin business. In earlier posts, I mentioned that on profit-sharing deals, authors can make 50-100% more than traditional royalties. How is that possible?
These royalties don’t come at the cost of our margins (very nice, thank you) or our staff (we generally peg our salaries against New York standards, …
The Atlantic on why the doomsayers are wrong. I’ve been saying this to everyone who will listen!
Increasingly, it’s clear that self-publishing is going to be highly disruptive to almost every sector of publishing, in a healthy way. A large but unknown portion of traditional publishing will shift to self-publishing (some say all – I doubt this for reasons I’ll get to in future posts). In the process publishers will be forced to reexamine their value proposition, …
In my previous post I made the argument that profit-sharing is a better way to pay authors than traditional arrangements. Is so, why is it so rare?
In fact, two famous experiments in profit-sharing were notable failures. Harper Studio, launched by the legendary Bob Miller, lasted two years before shuttering its doors. More recently, …
In all the debates over appropriate ebook rates, there is an answer that rarely comes up: profit-sharing. I’m talking about profit-sharing, not just for ebooks, but across the board.
While the majority of our deals are still traditional, we’ve been increasingly doing profit-sharing deals. I’ve become increasingly convinced that profit-sharing can be a much better way for authors and publishers to do business, …