
Those days are gone. Jordan has passed away, and even while he was alive his release schedules were intermittent at best and terminally delayed at worst. In today's marketplace maybe only George R.R. Martin, who's on a five year release plan himself, seems capable of this kind of strength. To respond, the Big-6 publishers have embraced the model vetted for the last hundred years by the big market pro sports teams - buy proven commodities and use them until their knees turn arthritic.
A trend that demonstrates this is the glut of thief and/or assassin based low-fantasy novels. Just look at the 2011 line-up:
Farlander and Stands a Shadow by Col Buchanon (Tor)
Shadow Chaser by Alexey Pehov (Tor)
A Den of Thieves, A Thief in the Night, and Honor Among Thieves by David Chandler (Voyager)
Among Thieves by Douglas Hulick (Ace)
Theft of Swords and Rise of Empire by Michael J. Sullivan (Orbit)
The Fallen Blade by Jon Courtenay Grimwood (Orbit)
Low Town by Daniel Polansky (Doubleday)
That's at least one title from all the major U.S. houses with the exception of Spectra who has Scott Lynch's Republic of Thieves due out this year. Along with Republic of Thieves are these expected 2012 titles:
Shadow's Master by Jon Sprunk (Pyr)
Thief's Covenant by Ari Marmell (Pyr)
Heir of Novron by Michael J. Sullivan (Orbit)
Legend of Eli Monpress by Rachel Aaron (Orbit)
The Outcast Blade by Jon Courtenay Grimwood (Orbit)
Shadow Blizzard by Alexey Pehov (Tor)
Alchemist of Souls by Anne Lyle (Angry Robot)
Giant Thief by David Tallerman (Angry Robot)

The Big-6 buy novels that have proven market success. It's really that simple. Don't get me wrong, I'm not necessarily criticizing them. With a flagging economy, a dozen different forms of media available to consumers free of charge, not mentioning the gads of self published work available on-line for free, it's understandable that these for profit entities are going to be, well.... for profit. But, there's a danger in that. If the industry is just trying put butts in the seats, it runs the risk of stagnating. Just like the New York Yankees, who from 1982-1994, despite a tremendously inflated payroll, never made the playoffs.
The Yankees have a lot of money, so even in the worst of times they're able to buy enough talent to keep their head above water (Big-6). Still, a successful sports franchise (or publishing house, or any other business) requires new blood to stay fresh. They have to promote young players from the minor leagues. They draft these players or acquire them from other teams by trade, but without cheap young talent they'll end up marginalized as high priced stars age gracelessly.

Pyr and Baen might also fit in that grouping, but I've heard Lou Anders, Hugo Award Winning Editor for Pyr, say that their brand is 'quality'. I find that both accurate, and incredibly savvy. If I went to the Big-6 and asked about their brand, I suspect in an honest moment they'd say something like 'marketable'. Baen has a very clear brand built around military SF. NSB and AR have become the brand for new and unique voices. These two have found the inefficiency in the marketplace. The Moneyball if you will. They're exploiting risk. Risk the Big-6 aren't willing - or more accurately don't have to - absorb.
Unfortunately, this is where my comparison falls apart. Novel writing is an art form. It's not just about winning (selling) or losing (not selling), but also about producing significance. In publishing, what's more important: producing books readers should buy or producing content readers will buy? Looking at the smaller houses I'm seeing large numbers of titles from the former with a belief that it will drive the latter. Zoo City by Lauren Beukes (Angry Robot) is such a pastiche that I don't even know what to call it. Kameron Hurley's God's War (NSB) also fits that lack of a marketing window. Thomas World by Richard Cox (NSB) is such trippy novels I'm not sure who read it (other than me). NSB alone brought 15 new authors to print last year all of which have provided new and vibrant voices to the genre.

I have no doubt that in the years ahead the Big-6 will find many of these smaller press authors in their catalogs. At the end of the day small markets develop talent only to lose them to bigger contracts, but without these feeder systems the larger markets will stagnate. Just imagine for a moment though what could be if the Big-6 committed to risk, driving the market not just responding to it. Putting resources behind not just books that can sell, but books that should be read. In the sports world, that's called a dynasty. I guess for all the small and medium presses I'll keep my fingers crossed that doesn't happen.
[Before the comments get going, yes I realize the Big-6 do take risks on unknown authors. That's not the point I'm making. The point is they don't take many, if any, risks on things that have a questionable market. Also, keep in mind this is a piece meant to provoke discussion, not to demagogue an issue that ultimately I am only tangentially informed on.]
Interesting stuff. You're going to write more things like this, right?
ReplyDeletePeople seem to like them - so yes? I should have another one Friday where I lob some bombs at friends to make a larger point. Should be fun!
ReplyDeleteBut in general, the vibe I get from Night Shade and Angry Robot and Pyr is that they ARE trying the unknowns, the not-yet-greats.
ReplyDeleteGreater risk to develop an unknown author or three into tentpoles.
Isn't that what I said? Those 3 are not the big-6. They're the feeders.
DeleteGood points again, Justin. I noticed recently that I started pointing out in my reviews what AR and NSB tend to publish, or at least what I've come to expect from them. If I end up spotting it with my thick head, there's definitely a trend there! You've summarized it accurately and made a comparison with baseball that's spot on. Great article.
ReplyDeleteInteresting article, but...the Tor logo as a flame?
ReplyDeletetor (noun): a rocky pinnacle; a peak of a bare or rocky mountain or hill.
Well shit, fuck me. I've been thinking it's a flame for 20 years. WTF is wrong with me?
DeleteThat's funny, I was thinking I had the rocky mountain thing all wrong.
ReplyDeleteGreat article and I've noticed that all I really have on my reading list are NSB, Angry Robot, and Pyr. The Whitefire Crossing is one the biggies never would have taken a chance on but it was one of my favorite reads last year. I wonder what we've been missing for so long.
How long have the little 3 been in existence anyway? I know Pyr's relatively new.
AR and Pyr are both pretty new ('09 and '05 respectively). NSB has been around for a longer time ('97), but only did anthologies, reissues, and lesser known works from bigger names for a long time.
DeleteWINDUP GIRL really served to put them on the map and I suspect they used the huge windfall from that to launch their huge push last year with the 15 debut novels.
Great article! I also have to wonder if maybe some of the authors themselves aren't somewhat influenced by what's already being published. Seeing the successes and reading the books, maybe. If a person is trying for a book deal and saw the sheer volume of thief-like books out there, it would make sense to think, "well ok, if thats what publishers want..." Or maybe even become inspired by what's on the shelves, out of "I could've wriiten it better" or had their creativity sparked while reading.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting topic. Keep these articles coming!
GENERALLY, I don't think that's the case. AMONG THIEVES (Hulick) was conceived long before LIES OF LOCKE LAMORA ever saw the light of day. I'm sure that's true for most of the titles above.
DeleteI think if you're looking to influences it would be to Fritz Lieber, Robert Jordan, George Martin, Stephen Donaldson, Michael Moorcock, etc. If there's shared inspiration, I'd say this generation of authors is drawing from that.