Saturday, December 22, 2012

Matthew Hughes update

 According to the SF Signal blog , Matthew Hughes's Luff Imbry novel, The Other, is on a short list of three titles for the inaugural A.E. Van Vogt Award. The other two finalists are Lady of Mazes by Karl Schroeder and Alphanauts by Brian J. Clarke. The award is presented by the Winnipeg Science Fiction Association and is named for Canada's only SFWA grandmaster.
http://www.matthewhughes.org/excerpt-from-the-other/

 Paul Di Filippo has reviewed Matt's PS Publishing novella, "The Yellow Cabochon," in the current Asimov's. He says: "Hughes’s facility with ornate, roccoco language has never been more polished, and his plotting is sharp and twisty. His evocation of a faded age of wonders piles high the frissons of a factitious but effective nostalgia that is all the more piquant for being manufactured from mere allusions, rather than actual touchstones of our consensual past."

The whole review is here: (scroll down) http://www.asimovs.com/2013_02/onbooks.shtml

Meanwhile Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine is running the first half of  Matt's space-opera novelette, "And Then Some," as a free sample.  http://www.asimovs.com/2013_02/exc_story1.shtml
Locus Magazine's online short-fiction reviewer, Lois Tilton, calls "And Then Some" recommended reading in her review of the February Asimov's, and notes that the universe in which it's set is "complex and fascinating."

T

Friday, December 14, 2012

Let's Think Small


by Matthew Hughes

(Reprinted from The Lonely Cry newsletter, Issue no. 21 )

In 1951, an editor considering buying J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings worried that it might lose the publisher a thousand pounds. His boss told him, "If you think it's a work of genius, then you may lose a thousand."

Fifty-five years later, no major publisher takes such a risk. Today, numbers rule. The decision to publish a new author is based strictly on the "P&L" -- industry shorthand for "profit-and-loss statement."

The P&L minimizes potential loss while maximizing potential profit. Its formula can be massaged to produce minimal risk by adjusting such factors as type size (thus altering the number of pages and therefore the cost of ink and paper), the number of copies printed, and whether to go hard cover or mass-market paperback. If the editor can make the formula work, the book is published. If not, it isn't.

The P&L is why major publishers now routinely launch SF authors in hardcover, though with print runs of only 5,000 copies and scant promotion. Thirty years ago, SF debuts usually appeared as cheap paperbacks with print runs above 50,000. Today, the hardcover is preferred; it stays on bookstore shelves longer, and unsold copies returned to the publisher can be reshipped to fill new orders. Ultimately, unsold copies are remaindered for a dollar each, recouping part of the manufacturing cost. But mass-markets are neither returned nor resold. After a few weeks on the shelves, booksellers rip off the covers (returning them for credit), while the defaced book goes to the recycler.

Promotion is a favourite for cost-cutters massaging the first-timer's P&L. Most new SF authors receive no more nurturing from the major publishers than baby sea turtles get from their absent mother. The result: every year the big houses launch a new flock of first-timers in hard cover, but most do not make it to the surf -- i.e., they don’t sell enough copies to justify a second book. The days are long gone when major publishers allowed a new author two or three books to develop a readership.

For niche authors (and I'm one), the big houses are no longer a good fit. Fortunately, SF is now seeing a flowering of high-quality small presses, such as Night Shade and and PS Publishing (both of which, by an uncanny coincidence, have published my works), plus Small Beer, Tachyon, Golden Gryphon, Prime/Wildside,  and Edge Publishing of Calgary.. Many of their new authors are launched in affordable trade paperbacks.

If you're looking for new SF authors -- or for a second book by one of last year's little turtles -- why not take a look at what the small presses are doing? Among these publishers who are willing to lose a thousand, future Tolkiens may be found.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Casey Wolf has a few pieces of writerly news:

Casey's short story "The Brídeog", (Escape Clause, ed. Clélie Rich. 2009), has been reprinted on the Brigit-related blog Brigit's Sparkling Flame .  Her short story "Eating Our Young" was sold to Chase Publications for their upcoming horror anthology The Speed of Dark. (There is still time to submit to this paying market. Deadline 30 December.   Read the guidelines here. )

And finally, Casey answered Susan McCaslin's call for tree poems, to be used as a part of the effort to save the trees of Glen Valley, BC. Please consider sending your own tree poems for posting on the threatened trees. For details, and to read Casey's poem "making way" go to http://cjunewolfden.blogspot.ca/2012/12/urgent-call-for-poems-about-trees-from.html
The Lonely Cry is an informal west coast association of Canadian science fiction and fantasy writers. Our members are Mary E. Choo, Dave Duncan, Matthew Hughes, Eileen Kernaghan, Linda DeMeulemeester, Clélie Rich, Casey Wolf and Rhea Rose. Visit our website at www.lonelycry.ca