Scattershooting, while wondering about the book publishing biz:
• The crowd at the Georgia Indie Book Fair was diverse. We had all races and ages, but we also had diverse interests and tastes: fantasy, mystery, romance, crime. Most of the people I talked to were serious readers. They had developed and refined their own tastes. They were at a fair featuring independent publishers because they wanted something different. People who read a book a week said their genre had become predictable and repetitive. The book they wanted to read hadn’t been written.
• I love the major publishers. I buy their books. But I’ve been writing books because I’ve gotten to that same place as a reader. I wanted to see whether I could write the kind of book I want to read. I haven’t succeeded. I also haven’t given up.
• Small publishers can afford to be more innovative. The larger the company, the costlier the mistake in judgment about what readers want. This is not ideology. It’s just business. The bigger the company, the higher the overheads. Our family business can afford a press run of 40 books. It’s not a windfall if it’s a hit, but it’s not a disaster if it’s a miss.
• The Wise Woman and I have had a long-running argument. I would like to stay at home and write books. She says we have an obligation to put our work before readers to test it, to see if our judgments about what’s worthwhile resonate with those of others. She retired as an English professor, so she can recite the history of small presses, telling how many innovations in literature came from the little guys. She would win the argument anyway. But it’s nice to hear that history again when I’m schlepping crates of books into the truck. And she’s right, of course. It’s always right to talk to readers, to see what they think.