home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ames!data.nas.nasa.gov!taligent!apple!mumbo.apple.com!gallant.apple.com!chuq
- From: chuq@gallant.apple.com (Chuq Von Rospach)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Publisher production times
- Message-ID: <1992Sep11.153513.17906@gallant.apple.com>
- Date: 11 Sep 92 15:35:13 GMT
- References: <1992Sep07.081951.5496@sco.COM>
- Organization: Apple Computer Inc.
- Lines: 34
-
- charless@sco.COM (charles stross) writes:
-
- >novel, which I was made an offer for in March this year, will not
- >now be published until March-April 1994. Aside from the obvious
- >(why does it TAKE so LONG?), this leads me to ask; is it my
- >imagination, or is the lead time on the midlist growing longer
- >for everyone? I'm not the only author I know who this has happened
-
- Nope, it happens a lot, and it's been happening for a while. The primary
- problem seems to be (at least in the SF field) a chronic inventory glut.
- Some publishers, like Berkley/Ace, simply have too many books contracted
- for, and because many publishers have been slimming down the line and
- publishing fewer titles, it takes them longer to get what they've contracted
- for out the door. Most contracts have a 24 month reversion clause (two years
- from signing or the author owns it again), which is why you see so many
- books come out coincidentally about 2 years later.
-
- In a 'normal' (as normal as publishing ever gets) world, it takes about a
- year for a manuscript to wander in one door, get processed, get marketed,
- get sold, get shipped and wander back out the other door. A lot of that time
- is spent waiting, because while they're doing that book, there are dozens of
- other books screaming for attention, also. That's the key reason why things
- seem to take forever in publishing: there are 200 other titles that also
- need to be put through the production process in a given year, and the
- editor's primary job is to juggle all of them around so that the proper ones
- hit the back door at the proper time, because the truck doesn't wait if
- you're late, and the truck won't load you up early. It's a massive,
- semi-controlled chaos that somehow works in total, but looks really bizarre
- if you look at any single title or element.
-
-
- --
- Chuq "IMHO" Von Rospach, ESD Support & Training (DAL/AUX) =+= Member, SFWA
- chuq@apple.com | GEnie: MAC.BIGOT | ALink:CHUQ =+= Editor, OtherRealms
-