When Amazon and Publishers fight it's the authors and readers who are bloodied.


If you don't follow publishing news, you may not be aware about the Hachette and Amazon dispute...but you may have noticed that books you want to buy on Amazon are higher priced, and taking longer to deliver. Well, now we know why.

I first noticed a problem on February 7th when my books that were usually discounted 25% - 30% on Amazon lost all their discounts. I wasn't alone.  Every Orbit paperback and ebook I looked at was at full price (except a few in pre-order and those released VERY recently).  I brought it to my publisher's attention, but they said that Amazon discounts however they wish, and they could do nothing about it.  About a month later I noticed my books weren't being restocked as they normally are.  From time to time you can see a book go from "in stock" to "xx left more on the way" usually before that number gets too low a new shipment comes in and it goes back to an "in stock" situation.  In early march my books started showing "Usually ships in 2 - 3 weeks).  I wasn't the only Orbit author whose books were this way...nor was I the only Hachette author.  For weeks Robin was emailing to Orbit, not much in the way of explanation was forthcoming. But our suspicion was that Hachette and Orbit were in some form of contract dispute and are books, and most Hachette author's books were pawns in the chess game.

We were right.

Yesterday The New York Times broke the news that Hachette was accusing Amazon of holding back orders.Other venues like The Wall Street Journal, The LA Times,  Publisher's Weekly, Digital Book World,  The GuardianCNN Money, Gigaom, and many more picked up the story.

Today, Forbes ran an article on the situation, and rightly pointed out that the consumers are the one's hurt,  and I agree. But they went on to indicate that authors really aren't:

The Times reveals more about its biases and its audience when it makes the whole story about how writers are the real victims. “Writers Feel An Amazon-Hachette Spat,” shouts the headline. Do they? Consumers do, if their books take longer to ship. But do writers actually feel it?

To answer Forbes's question - Yes...we do actually feel it.  I make my living from writing and when the price of my books goes up, and the stocking of the titles goes down...yes I feel the pinch.  In fact since this whole thing began my sales are off 30%.  How would the reporter for Forbes like it if his paycheck was cut by 30%?  It's especially frustrating since we have  no idea how long this will go on.  It's already been 3 months and I'm tightening my belt.  But how many notches do I have to go in?

I do agree with Forbes that the readers are also being hurt. I don't want my readers to have to pay full price. I can't do anything about the ebooks (except Hollow World), as I'm not allowed to sell those, but I can help for the print copies.  All my books are in stock and discounted  15% - 20% from my store. So, if you want an alternative source for buying my titles while Amazon and Hachette battle this out, please consider purchasing direct from me.
16 likes ·   •  13 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 10, 2014 09:27
Comments Showing 1-13 of 13 (13 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Joyce (last edited May 10, 2014 06:16PM) (new)

Joyce What can readers and book buyers do to help the authors in this pawn game?


message 2: by Evan (new)

Evan Do you provide mobi format by any chance? I have seen a few authors have mobi format through their own sites.


message 3: by Igor (new)

Igor Ljubuncic This is similar to what Google did with their advertisement algorithms in the Internet/tech space. I think the important thing is to stay true to yourself and keep writing. There's little else you can do against such giants.

Keep writing, the truth shall prevail.
Think V for Vendetta, think Fahrenheit 451.

Sort of.

Igor


message 4: by Karen (new)

Karen Thanks for writing about this so that more people are aware of it. I pay a lot of attention to book prices, and I buy more when I get a discount.


message 5: by Michael (new)

Michael Joyce wrote: "What can readers and book buyers do to help the authors in this pawn game?"

Hey Joyce, thanks for asking...the best thing you can do is always look to see if your favorite author sells books direct. (I do). When you buy directly from the authors, it gives them the highest % of income, and eliminates the rather large % that goes to the sales channels. The publisher is still compensated (because the author has to buy their books from them) so this is the best thing you can do.


message 6: by Michael (new)

Michael Evan wrote: "Do you provide mobi format by any chance? I have seen a few authors have mobi format through their own sites."

Yes I do provide .mobi and .epub, and .pdf. I'll even provide the less familiar formats such as .lrf if needed. Basically, if there is a format, I'm sure I have a version


message 7: by Michael (new)

Michael Igor wrote: "I think the important thing is to stay true to yourself and keep writing. There's little else you can do against such giants. Keep writing, the truth shall prevail."

I agree, and no worries on that front. Writing is my favorite thing to do.


message 8: by Michael (new)

Michael Karen wrote: "Thanks for writing about this so that more people are aware of it. I pay a lot of attention to book prices, and I buy more when I get a discount."

You are very welcome.


message 9: by shaymond (new)

shaymond After reading your article, I am sure to look on authors website first to purchase books from now on. I have been self employed and know the strains of an up and down income. That being said, can I buy your books in hardback from your website? I didn't see the option anywhere. I am sort of a hardback book only collector.


message 10: by Annarose (new)

Annarose Thanks for the information. Just bought Hollow World, so I know that's going to be awesome! In my enthusiasm, I didn't see how I'd actually get a copy of the ebook once I'd paid for it. Should I be looking for an email or do I need to download it from somewhere?


message 11: by Michael (new)

Michael Hey Shaymond,
Thanks for looking for direct buying. As to hardcovers...Orbit never did hard cover editions of my books, but there were versions made by sfbc.com (Science Fiction and Fantasy Book Club). Theft of Swords is sold out, but I do have copies of Rise of Empire and Heir of Novron...I don't post them on the site as I have just a few copies. If you want them, they run $25 plus shipping and if you email me (michael(dot)sullivan(dot)dc(at)gmail(dot)com we can make arrangements on those.


message 12: by Michael (new)

Michael Hey Annarose,
Thanks for buying Hollow World. I do hope you enjoy it. If you bought from my site, you'll get an email with the book sent to you to the address of your Paypal account. If you want it sent somewhere else, just let me know. My wife handles the shipping.


message 13: by Tammy (new)

Tammy I did buy the book Hollow World from your site which I am currently reading. I had no idea this was going on with Amazon. As long as your site sells ebooks I'll be more than happy to buy from your site. My husband is in the military so with us moving a lot Ebooks don't require packing so I always like to get Ebooks.

So far your Hollow World is very good!


back to top