2011 - the year publishing changed
What a year 2011 has been for publishing. A time of accelerating change and radically differing opinions, it started well for me with
Remix
mentioned on 1st January 2011 in an article in The Times. Things I blogged about over the past year:Some indie writers, like Amanda Hocking, making it mega big with millions of fans and sales and offers from traditional publishersRealization dawning (a bit late in some quarters) that ebooks, not paperbacks, are going to be the most popular form of book very, very, soon.The mysterious non-launch of PottermorePublishers like Penguin and Harper Collins trying to monetize the slush pile - all those keen and naive authors, surely some profit there somewhere...Prognostications of doom about the future of publishingThe totally unsurprising rise of ebook piracy, encouraged by the determination of publishers to keep ebook prices as high as possibleSpats between unpublished writers and self-published writers, fuelled by the near-impossibility of getting a contract, and the irritating success of some indiesSome agents attempting to become publishers, with mixed successSo what does 2012 hold? Amazon recently launched the Kindle Touch, the Kindle Fire and the affordable Kindle 4, and reported selling over a million a week in December. Post-Christmas, their charts exploded as all those new owners stocked up their Kindles. So that's a tricky question which I may save for a later post. Meanwhile,
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Published on December 31, 2011 07:59
No comments have been added yet.