I dare say everyone will be talking about the J. K. Rowling reveal today—I certainly will in Wednesday's edition of the British Genre Fiction Focus—but I wanted to take this time to talk about a topic that didn't quite make it into the column.
In a recent blog post for The Bookseller, you see, Keith Smith had a bit of a righteous rant about how certain authors—including Joanne Harris, Julia Donaldson, Alison Weir, Ian Rankin, Kate Morton and Patrick Ness—seemed to back Amazon and various other chain retailers despite having vouchsafed their support for smaller stores. For instance his:
In a recent blog post for The Bookseller, you see, Keith Smith had a bit of a righteous rant about how certain authors—including Joanne Harris, Julia Donaldson, Alison Weir, Ian Rankin, Kate Morton and Patrick Ness—seemed to back Amazon and various other chain retailers despite having vouchsafed their support for smaller stores. For instance his:
“As someone who owns two independent bookshops I feel angry that these authors, unthinkingly or by design, have chosen to support Amazon, W H Smith or Waterstones without giving a fig for independent bookshops. Many of these are authors who, when asked, will say they couldn’t imagine life without their local bookshop. But words need to be matched by deeds if they are to make a difference.”
In principle, I agree with this
part of Smith’s argument entirely—and so, it seems, do many of the authors he
specifically took to task.
But Smith draws a hard line later
in the originating article that I can’t quite get behind, by insisting that
“the Booksellers Association should contact all authors immediately and ask
them to stop supporting Amazon directly.”
Which strikes me, at least, as
rather tyrannical. And a number of authors responded
to Smith’s comments in kind. Alison Weir, for one:
“Linking to Amazon does not mean that I do not support independents. [...] The fact remains that publishers can shift large quantities of books through Amazon, W H Smith, Waterstones and the supermarkets, which are their main clients. Amazon also pays authors on their associates programme fees based on the number of books sold. Authors do have a living to make and Amazon can provide a great source of income which, sadly, independent book shops could not possibly meet. I understand the concerns of independent booksellers, and I think that there is a case to be made for Amazon to pay corporation tax, so that there would be fairer parity between its prices and those which independents with overheads have to charge. But accusing authors like me [...] of not 'giving a fig' for independents is not only ignorant but untrue; I think my deeds over the years give substance to my words."
Here’s Diana Kimpton, co-creator
of the Pony-mad Princess picture
books, speaking by way of The
Bookseller again:
“I sympathise with small independent bookshops struggling through a recession, but authors are struggling too. Only a few get the high advances mentioned in the press. The rest earn much less, and many don't even get the equivalent of the minimum wage. As a result, the fact that the Amazon Associate scheme pays commission on sales resulting from links is very important. Because I have to split the royalty on my picture books with the illustrator, I actually earn more from the Amazon commission on a sale than I do from the publisher.”
Ultimately, I think Smith’s anger
is a mite misplaced. Though it’s certainly the case that authors should be
squarely behind independent booksellers, let’s face it: these days, most books
are bought from the bigger names in the business, and to simply sever a supplementary
source of income because Amazon and its ilk are, you know, completely evil,
seems... well, selfish.
Let me be clear here.
I sympathise with the plight of independent booksellers, but to ask for authors
to support said stores solely goes against the real issue here: our right to
choose where and from whom we buy our books. Why deny readers that? That
they’re buying literature to begin with is, I think, the most important thing.
In one respect, then, Keith Smith
is spot-on: authors should be seen to support choice.
But so should he, surely.