From the category archives:

Authors

Flickr / bass_nrollWell, the battle is over (for now). The Australian Government has today announced that current copyright legislation forbidding parallel importation of books will remain unchanged.

The Australian and Bookseller+Publisher have reported the news and the full statement from Dr Craig Emerson, Minister for Competition Policy and Consumer Affairs, can be found here.

I like Sophie Cunningham’s take-home message best:

The rise of e-culture, freemium models, copyleft and open content is already, for better or worse, exuding huge pressure on the local industry. No one has the answers to the many issue that arise and, in a time like this, writers and publishers need the energy and space to begin forging the way ahead, rather than just remaining passive. As Jeff Sparrow from Overland pointed out a while back, ‘we need to go on the offensive. Rather than simply saying, leave us alone, we have to articulate a vision of how we want literature to work.’ The decision today will, hopefully, give us room to do that – to move and experiment and take risks without the roof coming down over our heads. Link to Meanjin

Authors and publishers can count this as a victory, and independent booksellers will be spared increased price competition from retail chains and discount department stores. However, it’s been interesting to observe the Australian book industry tackle this issue over the past year and I’m left hoping we will have an increased appetite for improvements and innovation. Creating the industry structure you want is better, after all, than having one imposed upon you.

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Aviva Tuffield, you’re my hero

August 10, 2009

There’s a common category of many government-funded arts programs in Australia: “young and emerging.” This is for programs aimed at artists of a fairly arbitrary age range, typically 18 to 25 years, sometimes up to 30. It’s prevalent throughout all tiers of government and whole systems of funding, arts infrastructure and public programs have sprung [...]

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Nick Harkaway’s epistle to the publishers

July 10, 2009

Nick Harkaway has one of the most attractive author websites I’ve ever seen. It is so pretty (and clever) it momentarily distracted me from the awesome post he has written calling on publishers to get their act together on eBooks. It strikes me that from an industry point of view, you can’t just throw books-as-files at [...]

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Big advances hurt authors and publishers

July 10, 2009

Author John Green, who wrote the seriously excellent YA novels Paper Towns and Looking for Alaska, has argued on his blog that higher royalties win over big advances. He breaks down the myths writers hold on to about big advances and explains why they are a liability for authors in the long run. Compelling. Currently, [...]

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HarperCollins responds

January 17, 2009

Overnight, Authonomy site administrators posted a response to the criticism on the forum: This will be another free feature of the site. It certainly isn’t about exploitation. It won’t be compulsory. It is part of the authonomy toolkit. Like forums, messaging, RSS feeds, watchlists etc., we won’t be forcing anyone to use these features, but [...]

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