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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!ames!agate!rsoft!mindlink!a710
- From: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca (Crawford Kilian)
- Subject: Fiction Advice 17: Contracts
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1992 04:37:14 GMT
- Message-ID: <17187@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Sender: news@deep.rsoft.bc.ca (Usenet)
- Lines: 216
-
- Reading a Contract
-
- When you do finally receive a publisher's contract, you may feel your heart
- sink. It runs to several pages of single-spaced text, highly flavored with
- legalese and organized in a daunting sequence of numbered paragraphs and
- subparagraphs. Who knows what thorns lurk in such a thicket?
-
- Actually, not too many. Most of your contract is standard "boilerplate" text
- that protects you as much as the publisher. It is often possible, even for a
- novice, to negotiate specific aspects of the contract.
-
- Still, it helps to know what you're getting yourself into, so let us take a
- look at some of the key passages you're likely to find in your contract.
-
- Delivery Of Satisfactory Copy
-
- If you're selling your novel on the strength of sample chapters and an
- outline, the publisher wants assurance that you'll submit the full manuscript
- (often with a second copy), at an agreed-upon length, by an agreed-upon date.
- If your full ms. doesn't measure up, or arrives too late, the publisher has
- the right to demand return of any money you've received.
-
- In practice the publisher is usually much more flexible. He may bounce your
- ms. back to you with a reminder that you don't get the rest of your advance
- until the ms. is "satisfactory." He (or more likely the editor) will tell you
- in exquisite detail what you still need to do to achieve "satisfactory"
- status. A late ms. also means you won't collect the balance of your advance
- until it arrives, and it may also cause delays in final publication--as I
- learned to my sorrow with Greenmagic.
-
- Permission for Copyrighted Material
-
- If you want to include the lyrics of a pop song in your novel, or quote
- something as an epigraph, it's up to you to obtain the rights to such
- material, and to pay for them if necessary. If you leave it to the publisher,
- he'll charge you; if he can't get permission, and the novel doesn't work
- without such material, the deal is off and you have to repay any advance
- you've received. Obviously, this is an extreme case; normally you just drop
- the lines from the song or poem, and carry on.
-
- Grant Of Rights
-
- You are giving the publisher the right to make copies of what you've written.
- These copies may be in hardcover, softcover, audio cassette, filmstrip, comic
- book, or whatever. You are also specifying in which parts of the world the
- publisher may sell such copies. For example, a sale to a British publisher
- may specifically exclude North America, leaving you free to sell North
- American rights separately.
-
- You may also be giving the publisher rights to sell foreign translations, to
- print excerpts in other books or periodicals as a form of advertising, or to
- sell copies to book clubs. Normally such sales require your informed, written
- consent.
-
- Proofreading and Author's Corrections
-
- You agree that you will proofread the galleys or page proofs of your novel
- and return the corrected pages promptly. If your corrections amount to actual
- revision of the original manuscript, and will require re-typesetting more
- than 10 per cent of the book, the publisher will charge you for such costs.
- This can very easily destroy any income you might have earned from the book.
-
- Advances and Royalties
-
- This spells out how much the publisher will pay you, and when. The most
- common agreement is payment of one-third of the advance on signing the
- contract; one-third on delivery of a satisfactory complete ms.; and one-third
- on publication date. You may be able to negotiate half on signing and half on
- delivery; otherwise, you are in effect lending the publisher some of your
- advance until a publication date that may be over a year away.
-
- Royalties are generally a percentage of the list price of the book. For
- hardcover books, the usual royalties is ten per cent of list price. So a
- novel retailing for $24.95 will earn its author $2.50 per copy. For
- mass-market paperbacks, royalty rates can range from four per cent to eight
- per cent, usually with a proviso that the rate will go up after sale of some
- huge number of copies--150,000 seems to be a popular target. A paperback
- selling at $5.95, with an eight per cent royalty, will therefore earn you
- about 47 cents. A "trade" paperback, intended for sale in regular bookstores
- rather than supermarkets and other mass outlets, will probably earn a
- comparable rate; the list price, however, will likely be higher and the
- number of copies sold will be lower.
-
- Whatever the royalty rates, you're likely to get only half as much for sales
- to book clubs or overseas markets. (This is especially painful for Canadian
- authors with American publishers: sales in your own country, as "foreign"
- sales, earn only half the U.S. royalty rate.)
-
- You will also agree to split the take from certain kinds of licensing sales.
- For example, if your novel is a hardback and some other house wants to bring
- out a paperback edition, you can normally expect a 50 per cent share of what
- the paperback house pays. Sometimes a paperback house will license a hardback
- edition (in hopes of getting more critical attention for your book and hence
- selling more copies in paperback eventually); in such a case you should
- expect 75 per cent of the deal.
-
- If you can possibly avoid it, do *not* agree to give your publisher a share
- of any sale to movies or TV. A film or TV show based on your novel will boost
- the publisher's sales quite nicely; he doesn't need a slice off the top of a
- deal that will surely pay you more than the publisher did. But if the book
- seems highly unlikely to interest Hollywood, you might offer a slice of film
- rights in exchange for a richer advance, with a proviso that an actual film
- or TV sale will also produce an additional chunk of money from the publisher.
-
- The publisher will normally not charge for the production of versions of your
- novel in Braille or other formats for the handicapped. So you will get no
- money from this source.
-
- The publisher should agree to supply you with two royalty statements a year.
- Each will cover a six-month reporting period, and each should arrive about 90
- days after the close of that period. So a statement for January-June should
- reach you at the end of September. This will probably be a computer printout,
- and may be confusing. But it will indicate the number of copies shipped, the
- number returned unsold by booksellers, and the number presumably sold. The
- publisher will hold back on some of the royalty "against further returns."
- Whatever remains is the actual number on which the publisher owes you money.
-
- Chances are that your advance will have consumed any potential royalties for
- the first reporting period, and perhaps for the second as well. Once you have
- "earned out" your advance, however, you should expect a check with each
- royalty statement.
-
- Do *not* sign a contract that does not explicitly promise you at least two
- royalty statements a year. Some publishers promise a statement only after the
- novel has earned out its advance. This means you may go for years--or
- forever--without knowing what your sales have been.
-
- Author's Warranties and Indemnities
-
- Here you are promising that this is indeed your work, that it isn't obscene,
- a breach of privacy, libelous, or otherwise illegal. If you do get into
- trouble, you agree to cooperate with the publisher's legal defense, and you
- agree to pay your share of the costs instead of asking the publisher,
- booksellers, or others to do so. If the publisher's lawyer thinks the
- manuscript poses legal problems, you agree to make the changes required to
- solve those problems--or to allow the publisher to do so.
-
- You may find an insurance rider as part of your contract; this is intended to
- protect both you and the publisher from suffering total financial disaster if
- you get caught in a losing lawsuit.
-
- Copies to Author
-
- You will get a certain number of free copies, and will pay a reduced rate for
- more copies. That means you will still pay for those copies, and you should.
-
- Option Clause
-
- Pay attention to this one! This says you are giving the publisher right of
- first refusal on your next book (or at least your next book of this
- particular genre). The option clause means the publisher will give the next
- book a close, prompt reading. You should expect a response within 90 days,
- but some contracts specify 90 days after publication of your current book.
- That means you might have to wait for months, maybe over a year, until the
- publisher sees the initial reaction to your first book.
-
- In practice, though, you probably will get a quicker response than that. If
- the publisher does make you an offer, you have the right to refuse it; you
- can then take your second book to any other publisher you like. However, you
- can't sell it to anyone else unless you get better terms for it than your
- original publisher offered.
-
- You may well find yourself trapped as a result. If you need money in a hurry,
- you may feel you've got to accept a bad offer rather than spend months or
- years shopping your ms. around the market until you find a more generous
- publisher. And then, of course, your second contract will include an option
- clause for the *third* novelI
-
- Your best hope in this case is that sales of the first book will warrant a
- heftier advance on the second or third book. And if the publisher still won't
- cooperate, you can then go to another publisher with at least some
- respectable sales figures that show you deserve a better deal.
-
- Going Out of Print
-
- If the publisher lets your novel go out of print, you can make a formal
- request for it to be reprinted; if he doesn't want to, you can then demand
- that all rights revert to you. You are then free to sell the book to another
- publisher. (I have done this a couple of times. You don't make as much money
- on the resale, but at least the book stays out on the market longer.) You may
- be able to acquire the plates or film from which copies of your novel were
- made, making it possible for a new publisher to bring your book out quite
- cheaply.
-
- You will probably not make any money from "remaindered" copies that the
- publisher may sell to a book jobber at a deep discount. In some contracts,
- however, the author may indeed receive some percentage of such sales. It's
- also possible to buy copies of your book at a similar low price.
-
- A Word of Advice
-
- If at all possible, go over the contract with the editor or publisher, asking
- whatever questions arise. Then take your contract to an agent, lawyer, or
- professional writer. Chances are that it's perfectly okay. But even if you
- don't find something sneaky in the fine print, you'll have a clearer
- understanding of what you and your publisher have committed yourselves to. If
- something arises later on, like a problem over the option clause or the
- frequency of royalty statements, it won't come as a total shock.
-
- Finally, bear in mind that if you have read this far, you are seriously
- interested in mastering an art and craft that rewards very few
- practitioners--novices or experts. Fiction in print is still relatively
- popular, but only relatively. For every reader you might attract, TV or films
- or recordings attract hundreds of consumers. You will work for months or
- years to create a product that is theoretically eternal, but in practice has
- a shelf-life of a few weeks. Most of your readers will, two months after
- reading your work, be unable to recall anything about the story (including
- your name)--maybe not even whether they liked it or not. And you will reach
- more readers with a punchy, witty letter to the editor of a metropolitan
- daily than you're likely to reach with your novel.
-
- Is it worth it? Only you can answer that question. My answer has been yes,
- and I don't regret it. Writing ten novels has been not only fun but an
- education; I can hardly wait to find out what the eleventh novel will teach
- me.
-
-