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November 2008

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Skypecasts

My Skypecasts



March 28, 2008

Bully on the block?

Book publishers and authors are abuzz with the news that representatives of online retailer Amazon.com have been approaching high-volume publishers utilizing the print-on-demand services of Lightning Source, Inc. (LSI) to get them to set up their titles for printing by Amazon.com's own printing company, BookSurge, or have the "Buy" buttons removed from their books' listings at Amazon.

PublishAmerica 's March 27, 2008 press release confirms that Amazon.com gave the company an "ultimatum, demanding the right to print" its almost 30,000 titles or else Amazon.com "will retaliate by disabling the 'Buy' button on all of its PublishAmerica listings."

In other words: Let us print your books --and collect more money from you -- or we won't sell your books any more.

The "Buy" buttons to many if not all PublishAmerica books listed on Amazon.com disappeared late this week.

PublishAmerica says it "will not comply with Amazon's ultimatum, and will not allow that company to dictate who will print PublishAmerica's books, and at what conditions."

Angela Hoy of Booklocker broke the Amazon.com story publicly yesterday in her Writers Weekly e-newsletter. Click here to read that article and find links to further reportage, including articles in the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post and Publisher's Weekly.

Some in the industry are referring to it as an "offer you can't refuse." Terms like "strongarm tactics" and "bullying" are also being used -- and, admittedly, come to my mind.

The threat carries punch especially for small publishers and subsidy publishers (the latter including companies like  iUniverse/Authorhouse , Lulu, and Booklocker) because Amazon.com is the biggest online book retailer, and it's difficult for small publishers and subsidy publishers to get their books into brick-and-mortar bookstores.

Print-on-demand (and short-run digital printing) is a relatively new development in the publishing industry, but it has boomed in the past few years. Small publishers often use print-on-demand and short-run digital printing by companies such as LSI to cut down on the costs of printing and storing inventory. Instead of printing thousands of books at a time (for thousands of dollars) and paying to store them until sold -- and destroying or remaindering them if not sold -- print-on-demand technology allows printing of only one copy of a book at time, if desired, which means a book need not be printed until it is sold/ordered.

More than 50 percent of all academic presses utilize print-on-demand printing, according to the Wall Street Journal. Even the big commercial publishing houses use print-on-demand technology to print "backlist" titles.

While several printing companies offer print-on-demand services, LSI is the largest. It's attractive to publishers largely because of its affiliation with Ingram, the large book wholesaler.

It's difficult for small publishers (and subsidy publishers, no matter what their size) to get their books carried by Ingram or other wholesalers or distributors. But most bookstores want to buy books wholesale through Ingram or another wholesaler or distributor, not directly from publishers. They want to place one order for a shipment of books, not hundreds of orders from hundreds of different publishers.

Utilizing LSI for printing allows small publishers (as well as subsidy publishers and academic presses) to get their books listed for sale through Ingram, which makes the books available for sale through online retailers as well as (usually through special-order) brick-and-mortar stores. Even the "big boy" traditional commercial publishers often use LSI for "backlist," slower selling books to keep them in print without having to maintain piles of such books in inventory. 

Pearlsong Press, the publishing company I founded in 2003, uses LSI as our printer. We haven't been approached by Amazon.com (yet?) about switching to BookSurge because we're small potatoes, with 13 titles in print and 2 more being published in April and May. (But we're very tasty small potatoes, I might add.:-) Subsidy publishers like iUniverse/Authorhouse and Lulu have thousands of titles in print. Booklocker alone has 1,500.

What does this mean, exactly, for publishers? And authors? And readers?

There are costs in time and money to set up books for printing at BookSurge as well as at LSI. BookSurge uses a different file format than LSI, so existing book files would have to be reformatted to their specifications. Book interiors and book covers are separate files, so each title would have 2 files needing reformatting. PublishAmerica, for instance, would have to reformat almost 60,000 files to set up all its titles for printing by BookSurge.

Such reformatting would take time, attention and money away from preparing new books for publication. That will affect authors as well as readers -- fewer books accepted for publication, fewer new books being published. Not to mention less income for publishers (and smaller royalties for authors) as sales decline during the interim in which publishing energy is directed toward meeting BookSurge's specs and Amazon.com's demands.

New titles will incur a setup fee. BookSurge also demands a higher discount from publishers than LSI does, so publishers will make less money from each book printed and sold through BookSurge/Amazon.com...unless they raise the price of said books.

I don't know yet how this will affect Pearlsong Press or other small publishers who use LSI for book printing but aren't subsidy publishers. (Subsidy publishers -- aka "vanity presses" -- are publishers that charge authors to publish their books. Traditional publishers, whether they use print-on-demand technology or not, don't charge authors for publication. It should be noted that PublishAmerica considers itself a traditional publisher, but most in the industry consider it a type of subsidy press.)

I do know, though, that I don't like the way Amazon.com is reportedly doing business. (Even if its representative is quoted in the WSJ as claiming they're just trying to "better serve" their "customers and authors.")

This small potato isn't interested in being masticated by a corporate behemoth more interested in making money than ensuring the viability of independent presses.

And I personally am planning to cease making any purchases from Amazon.com until -- or unless -- the company quits its bullying.

In the meantime, Pearlsong Press books ARE still available for sale at Amazon.com....but also at BarnesandNoble.com (which also offers free shipping options, by the way), and the independent bookseller Powells.com, as well as other retailers. And you can also, of course, purchase our books directly from us -- many of them autographed -- via our website (www.pearlsong.com).

May 15, 2007

Ask Your Library to Order Your Favorite Pearlsong Press Books

Can't find your favorite Pearlsong Press book at your public or school library? We've made it easy for you to request it be added to their collections.

At the Library Book Request Form page on the Pearlsong Press website, you can find links to PDFs of Library Request Forms for each Pearlsong Press book.

Simply click on the book cover graphic or the book title to access the pertinent form, print it out, and fill in your information at the top. Then hand, mail or fax the completed form to your librarian.

Easy, huh? Thanks for supporting Pearlsong Press and our authors!

New romantic suspense from the Queen of Rubenesque Romances -- The Best Man

TbmthumbSparks fly the night Lana Clarke meets to plan her sister's wedding--and not just because curvaceous Lana announces she's stopped dieting and doesn't care if she's fat as maid of honor.

The strong-willed sister of the bride attracts the attention of the groom's devastatingly handsome best man, Anthony Angelino. But when the sparks become flames, Lana's in trouble.

Tony's first wife died mysteriously. Will Lana be next?

Pat Ballard's new romantic suspense novel, The Best Man, is now available from Pearlsong Press. Buy an autographed copy from the Pearlsong Press website, or shop online at Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, Powells.com or your favorite bookseller. The Best Man can also be ordered by any brick-and-mortar bookstore.

January 22, 2007

Women of Wisdom blog features excerpt from The Singing of Swans by Mary Saracino

Tsoscover2_7

The Women of Wisdom CONNECTIONS blog is featuring an excerpt from Mary Saracino's newest novel, The Singing of Swans.

Read it here.

Women of Wisdom is a nonprofit organization for the empowerment of women through programs that offer healing, spiritual awareness, personal development and community.

January 05, 2007

The Red Web Foundation lists The Singing of Swans among its recommended resources

Tsoscover2_5 The Red Web Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting a positive societal view of girls' and womens' bodies and menstrual cycles from menarche through menopause, has listed Mary Saracino's The Singing of Swans among the recommended resources on its website.

The Singing of Swans, published by Pearlsong Press in October 2006, tells the story of a contemporary woman's spiritual quest to reclaim her life. The novel blends into the contemporary tale historical information on the Divine Feminine, including the ancient menstrual rites and returning first menstrual blood to the Goddess through the Earth.

The novel's contemporary heroine, Madalene, is visited in her dreams by three women from other time periods in history whose stories and spiritual lineage intersect. One of the stories includes the initiation and rite of passage into womanhood after first menstrual period. As the Red Web Foundation listing notes,

Another character in the story is an environmentally compromised lake, Lake Pergusa. The ancients linked Lake Pergusa with the menstrual mysteries because the Lake "bleeds" every 7-10 years (a biochemical process wherein bacteria act upon the algae in the lake, turning the waters red).

December 17, 2006

Sacramento Bee mentions Ellen Frankel & Beyond Measure in article on heightism

Beyondmeasurecoverdraft_14 Ellen Frankel, author of Beyond Measure: A Memoir About Short Stature & Inner Growth, was interviewed (and quoted by) the Sacramento Bee in a Dec. 16, 2006 article on heightism.

Read the article here.

ArtVoice recommends The Singing of Swans in its last-minute holiday gift guide

Tsoscover2_4ArtVoice.com includes Mary's Saracino's newest novel, The Singing of Swans, in its list of books recommended as last-minute (and can't-miss) gifts. ("A book is a fail-safe gift," they write. "Even if the recipient doesn't love it, at least it says that you think she or he is smart.")

Reviewer Anthony Chase calls the novel "engaging and well-researched...a fun introduction to the Sacred Feminine." Read the rest here (scroll down on the page after clicking the link).

December 09, 2006

Abigail's Revenge now available in Adobe PDF eBook format

AbigailsthumbRomantic suspense from the Queen of Rubenesque Romances is now available in Adobe Reader (PDF) eBook format!

Abigail's Revenge by Pat Ballard (published in original trade paperback by Pearlsong Press in October 2005) can now be purchased in eBook format & downloaded immediately from the Pearlsong Press website. The eBook version of Abigail's Revenge should soon be available at your favorite online eBook stores as well.

The 204-page ebook -- including a bonus of Pat's "10 Steps to Loving Your Body (No Matter What Size You Are" not in the original paperback -- retails for $5.95.

Abigail Avery was falsely convicted of the murder of her father and sent to prison when she was only 18 years old. The supposedly good citizens of Leaky Springs, MS were silent as an innocent young woman was orphaned, accused, swiftly tried and locked away. Her only clue in the travesty of justice is that a bunch of crooked "good ole boys" -- headed by the judge who presided at her trial -- keep pestering her to sell the family farm.

Now, a decade later, Abigail's out of prison and heading back to Leaky Springs. It won't be a pleasant homecoming. She's out for revenge on the people who stole 10 years of her life. Especially the judge.

"Pat Ballard has once again woven a tale intense with mystery, intrigue and romance," says Janet Elaine Smith, the bestselling author of Dunnottaur. "This is one that will keep you guessing..."

Read an excerpt online here.

March 12, 2006

Red Polka dot org loves Taking Up Space

The anonymous bloggist at redpolka.org has posted a review of Pattie Thomas, Ph.D.'s book Taking Up Space. Click here to read it.

The gist:

This book rocked.

End of review!

OK, she does say more...

...it's the sort of book I've been waiting for. It's an Official Fat Chick Book that has something serious and smart to say - equal parts memoir and sociological study, as promised, but also a guide to living in and changing a world that really hates fat people.

Woo hoo!

Now, if we could just get Amazon.com to correctly list Pattie as the author, instead of Paul Campos, who wrote the foreword....

February 17, 2005

Coming soon from Pearlsong Press....Unconventional Means by Anne Richardson Williams

UnconventionalcoverComing in June 2005...

Sixteen-year-old Anne Williams, shattered by a family tragedy, tries to cope through art and reading. She eventually finds solace in Nevil Shute's novel A Town Like Alice. His heroine's passage through the tribulations of war to find love and a new home modeled after the town of Alice Springs, Australia gives teenage Anne hope that "there is something on the other side of the terrible things" for her, too. Some day, she promises herself, she will go to Australia and to Alice Springs.

Decades later, Anne's call to Australia deepens. Now an artist and successful businesswoman, she is reading a book about the continent's Aboriginal people when a photograph of Aboriginal elder Lorraine Mafi-Williams mesmerizes her. She feels an immediate kinship, even though others find it ridiculous that this upper-middle-class Southern white woman and an Aboriginal elder could share more than a common last name.

When Anne finally sets out for Australia, she adds to her desire to see Alice Springs the dream of meeting Lorraine. But with no address, no phone number, no conventional way to get in touch with an Aboriginal woman, Anne must rely on unconventional means -- dreams, visions, meditation and intuition -- to guide her halfway across the world to find the woman whose ancient stories of a land and its people will help heal her.

Pearlsong Press is proud to publish this second edition of Unconventional Means, revised and updated from the 2000 In Circle Press edition.

Pearlsong Press books

  • Frannie Zellman: FatLand
    In the near future the Pro-Health Laws of the United States of America have become so oppressive that people seeking freedom over their bodies have established a new country. In FatLand, life is good and scales are forbidden. Free from the hatred and discrimination of the Other Side, FatLanders have built happy, productive lives. But not everyone is flourishing.
  • Pat Ballard: 10 Steps to Loving Your Body (No Matter What Size You Are)

    Pat Ballard: 10 Steps to Loving Your Body (No Matter What Size You Are)
    The Queen of Rubenesque Romances shares the steps she created -- and used -- to heal the damage of years of dieting. Join her in celebrating size diversity, self esteem, positive body image, and health at every size.

  • Charlie Lovett: The Program

    Charlie Lovett: The Program
    A new weight loss clinic in New York City has an offer for you -- given them $5,000 and they'll make you as thin as a supermodel. You can eat whatever you want and never gain an ounce. Tempted? Fledgling journalist Karen Sumner would be -- if only she had $5,000. When Karen finally walks through the blue and gold doors of The Program, however, she's on the trail of the hottest story of her career. If she and her friends are right, The Program is doing something even worse than creating an army of unnaturally thin women. Library Journal calls The Program "a lively first novel. Highly recommended."

  • Linda C Wisniewski: Off Kilter: A Woman's Journey to Peace with Scoliosis, Her Mother, and Her Polish Heritage

    Linda C Wisniewski: Off Kilter: A Woman's Journey to Peace with Scoliosis, Her Mother, and Her Polish Heritage
    Even before she was diagnosed with scoliosis at 13, Linda Wisniewski felt off kilter. Born to a cruel father in the insulated Polish Catholic community of Amsterdam, New York, she learned martyrdom as a way of life. Off Kilter shows her learning to stretch her Self as well as her spine as she comes to terms with her mentally deteriorating, widowed mother and her culture. Only by accepting her physical deformity, her emotionally unavailable mother, and her Polish American heritage does she finally find balance and a life that fits. Maureen Murdock, author of Unreliable Truth: On Memoir & Memory, calls Off Kilter "a courageous, insightful book, particularly relevant for anyone who grew up feeling physically 'different.'"

  • Pat, Ballard: The Best Man

    Pat, Ballard: The Best Man
    Sparks fly the night Lana Clarke meets to plan her sister's wedding -- and not just because curvaceous Lana announces she's stopped dieting and doesn't care if she's fat as maid of honor. The strong-willed sister of the bride attracts the attention of the groom's devastatingly handsome best man, Anthony Angelino. But when the sparks become flames, Lana's in trouble. Tony's first wife died mysteriously. Will Lana be next?

  • Judy Bagshaw: At Long Last, Love

    Judy Bagshaw: At Long Last, Love
    Big beautiful --and in some cases slightly more mature -- heroines grace the pages of this collection of romantic short stories by Judy Bagshaw.

  • Jack Adler: Splendid Seniors

    Jack Adler: Splendid Seniors
    An inspiring ensemble of 52 people whose accomplishments after age 65 remind us that creativity, passion & influence can not only flower in later years, but bear delicious fruit.

  • Mary Saracino: The Singing of Swans

    Mary Saracino: The Singing of Swans
    "The Singing of Swans is a remarkable narrative calling--even compelling--us to connect with our own ancestral roots, to seek our own inner wisdom, and to reclaim our own inner voices!" --Margaret Starbird, author of The Woman With the Alabaster Jar & Mary Magdalene: Bride in Exile

  • Ellen Frankel: Beyond Measure: A Memoir About Short Stature and Inner Growth

    Ellen Frankel: Beyond Measure: A Memoir About Short Stature and Inner Growth
    "If you have ever measured your height or your weight and felt good or bad about yourself as a result, you need this book. In its pages, Ellen Frankel makes an important contribution to human liberation by telling the most fabulous story that can be told, the story of a person coming fully into her own. This book is thought-provoking, heart-rending, and a genuine solace for people of all sizes." --Marilyn Wann, author of FAT!SO?

  • Pat Ballard: Abigail's Revenge

    Pat Ballard: Abigail's Revenge
    Injustice, romance and suspense smolder in a small Southern town. Romantic suspense from the Queen of Rubenesque Romances, Pat Ballard.

  • Pattie Thomas, Ph.D.: Taking Up Space

    Pattie Thomas, Ph.D.: Taking Up Space
    "Thomas's incisive blend of sociological inquiry and personal narrative amounts to a provocative treatise on fat oppression in our culture. Taking Up Space is a kind of roadmap through the minefield of the 'war on obesity,' and it offers protection to the reader ready to fight for cultural change surrounding the meaning of fatness." --Kathleen LeBesco, Ph.D., author of Revotling Bodies: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity.

  • Anne Richardson Williams: Unconventional Means: The Dream Down Under

    Anne Richardson Williams: Unconventional Means: The Dream Down Under
    Shattered by family tragedy in the early 1960s, an upper-middle-class Southern teenager finds solace in art and literature. Decades later she is called to the continent whose literature once comforted her, and to a magical connection with an Aboriginal woman transcending race and half a world.

  • Pat Ballard: A Worthy Heir

    Pat Ballard: A Worthy Heir
    When Pam Spencer sees the newspaper ad seeking "a worthy heir" to Fiona Bainbridge's millions, she jumps at the chance to get her brother the medical care he needs after a job-related accident. But Reese Bainbridge, Fiona's handsome grandson--and jilted heir--rushes home in anger when he hears his grandmother has moved Pam and her brother into the family mansion. Sparks fly--and Pam is up to the challenge.

  • Pat Ballard: His Brother's Child

    Pat Ballard: His Brother's Child
    One party, one silver-tongued, double-talking stranger intent on winning a bet, and Faith Carr ends up betrayed, alone, and pregnant. When Edward Brenner shows up on her doorstep intending to right his brother's wrongs, she's scared and vulnerable. But she agrees to marry this stranger to give the baby a father, although keeping him at a distance. She doesn't realize that Edward fell in love with her the moment he saw her. Will her battered self-esteem allow her to see the truth--and her own beauty?

  • Pat Ballard: Wanted: One Groom

    Pat Ballard: Wanted: One Groom
    Wealthy Hanna Rockwell will lose her home and her inheritance unless she marries by her 30th birthday. She's stunned when Matt Corbett, the faded rock start she worshipped in her teens, accepts her brother's offer to bail him out of financial trouble if he'll marry her. Her teenaged fantasies come to life--bringing a few surprises with them.

  • Pat Ballard: Nobody's Perfect

    Pat Ballard: Nobody's Perfect
    Nella Covington can't believe she's agreed to marry arrogant Samuel du Cannon, even if it IS only a marriage of convenience. He needs a mother for his young son, and she needs to keep her childhood home. If Sam's work keeps him on the road enough, she won't have to deal with him much. Sam's never been attracted to plus-size women, so they won't be tempted to have a real relationship. At least, that's what they keep telling themselves--

  • Pat Ballard: Dangerous Curves Ahead: Short Stories

    Pat Ballard: Dangerous Curves Ahead: Short Stories
    Ten romantic tales pack suspense and sizzle into this collection of short stories featuring amply curved women.