According to Alexandra Alter’s article in the Wall Street Journal,
for the first time in history publishers and book sellers have their
claws on hard data about what turns pages.
Buying a Kindle, you sign an agreement with Amazon that they will be
allowed to peer over your shoulder at what you bookmark, highlight,
comment upon, and at which page you put the story down. Nook and Kobo
do similar data harvesting off their e-readers.
What does that mean to the publisher? I guess it will be such a lot
easier to decide which titles warrant big money behind them. Simply
scan a manuscript through a few proofreaders and observe their reading
behaviour (speed, highlights, comments…). Where before it was an art
that relied on the author striking it “lucky” with style and finding an
agent or publisher who enjoyed his book, now it’s becoming an exact
financial science…
What does it mean to the author?
I would suspect, two things. Firstly, YAY! We’re finally getting
feedback! (We got feedback before: It came in reviews, readers’
comments and sales figures, but now we’re getting
detailed
feedback: Which ones of our quips hit the funny bone best.) We can
therefore learn which parts of our style are best liked by most readers,
and we can adjust. Or we can decide, doggedly, to write for that
fanatic minority that
likes our long-winded melodrama and our unfunny lines, and not budge from our style.
But secondly, it means that publishers will now
expect of
us, more than ever before, that we attend writing courses so that we all
can write in exactly the same money-spinning way…. (“im Gleichschritt,
Marsch!”). The question is: If everything tastes like peanut butter,
and nothing tastes of oysters (though oysters are admittedly an acquired
taste), how long until peanut butter stops selling altogether? I think
they pioneered this with the TV soapies…
Trends will be identified. Readers want to read about… boy meets
girl, or perhaps, boy meets boy; murder-at-sea stories; and tear-jerkers
about the teenage daughter of a rock star who follows in her dad’s
footsteps even though he abandoned her and Mommy. So if you want to
write about vampicorns, well sorry, mate: The market wants teen rock
starsters. Not weird imaginary monsters.
It makes target marketing easier of course: If a book is marked
“Young Adult” then sure as anything, for young adults it is! It’s not
an “I-Think-So” science as up to now.
Seeing that ebooks in America have outsold paper books this year, this is definitely the way to go.
And then there is the privacy issue: Do I really want Amazon
watching me while I read how the hero seduces the heroine? This is the
kind of (ob)scene where I go and hide with my book in a cupboard to hide
my blush, because frankly, I’m inside the story and privacy is called
for! (If you think I’m embarrassed reading such scenes you should see
me trying to write them!) So if the Great Amazon In The Sky watches my
face burn while I read such a scene (slowly, savouring it), and later
read it again because perhaps it was well-written… arrrgh! Leave me
alone!!
Then again, do I mind if Amazon watches me while I read Harry
Potter? Not at all, in any way! And with “The Wee Free Men” I sort-of
wish the author were in the room to hear me roar with laughter – his
reward for writing such stuff. Nothing blows my hair back better than
hearing a reader giggle and snort over what I’ve written, and shoo me
away because they want to focus on the book.
Here’s the upshot for the small publisher P’kaboo:
Currently all the ebooks we have available are in pdf format.
Every E-reader can handle pdf. (This is the main reason.) Even Android can.
But pdf can’t “read” you back. A pdf is practically an “image” file with the letters frozen into position.
There are programs that allow you to annotate pdf, bookmark etc… but
they are (and stay) on your computer. (And gosh, let me sing you a saga
about how unwieldy pdf is for editing!) P’kaboo cannot (and will not)
pry. We love feedback; but we would like you to volunteer it. Drop us
an email if you thought something was well written; or comment on the
P’kaboo blog. Or better, just tell your friends what you thought,
instead.
Remember to click here and collect your free copy of “Donegal Trouble” en route if you don’t have one yet…
(and remember that there’s more of that story to be had, in “The
Mystery of the Solar Wind” and “The Assassin” and, soon to be launched,
“Freedom Fighter” and “Raider!”. )