Quote of
the day:
"Better to quarrel with friends than to
support enemies."
BOOK BLURBS
Crunch!
G'day
guys,
Authors, publishers, readers and agents argue over
the importance of praise from a fellow writer in selling books. Here is Nick
Clark's view, courtesy of The Independent.
"Bestselling
author Jonathan Franzen decided to take a stand this week, declaring: "I
am out of the blurb business." The acclaimed writer of The Corrections and
Freedom has been spending so much time reading just to provide a positive quote
for a new work that he has neglected his own. He told Time magazine: "I
realised this had to stop."
He is not
the first author to become overwhelmed with requests to help push a new book
with a quote for the dust jacket. Three years ago Stephen Fry said he was
"getting a bit fed up" at the requests, and planned to scale back his
book blurbing activity.
While he
wanted to support emerging authors, with his quotes becoming ubiquitous, Fry
wondered "isn't there a law of diminishing returns at work here?"
Authors,
publishers, readers and agents argue over the importance of praise from a
fellow writer in selling books – or indeed, a newspaper review. Yet, while
blurbs may have declining influence on physical books, they remain important in
the digital age.
There is
little hard data, although anecdotally publishers admit readers claim not to be
swayed by a quote.
Scott
Pack, publisher at The Friday Project, an imprint of HarperCollins, said:
"It's debatable how important the blurbs are for established authors,
although if a buyer is considering buying a book it might reinforce their
decision." It is part of a wider marketing drive to create a shorthand for
readers, which also includes packaging books to make them similar to others.
Blurbs
become more important for first time authors. "If you're pushing a
literary debut you really want some heavyweight authors behind it," Mr
Pack said, adding that sometimes it did not matter what they said.
The
process that one US journalist described as "blurb harvesting" starts
with the publisher suggesting the new author gets in touch with any potentially
useful contacts.
The
publisher will then send a draft manuscript in its final stages to appropriate
authors, as well as others in the company's stable. "You call in favours
from mates," Mr Pack said. "Ideally you want someone who is a
household name, but that's hard. There are people who just won't do it. Others
are too busy to read loads of scripts." No money changes hands.
Others
just allow fellow authors to use their names. One publisher was trying to sell
a debut novel and asked Beryl Bainbridge for a quote. "Just say whatever
you want," she replied.
Gavin
James Bower, an editorial director at Quartet Books and author of Made in
Britain, had a similar experience when he approached an established author to
provide a quote for his first book. He was told: "I haven't got time, and
you shouldn't take the industry so seriously. Just make it up."
Mr Bower
continued: "Did it add value? Were any more copies sold? I don't think so,
but there are lot of established trends in the industry that no one will
challenge."
The
declining muscle of the chain bookstores, as some have gone out of business and
others cut down on special offers and display tables, limits the opportunities
for readers to see such glowing quotes.
The blurb
itself, however, remains important and authors will not see the requests slow.
With the rise of Amazon and ebooks, it is not on the cover image, but the
"book description" section when a browser clicks a title on the
online retailer.
Humourist
Gelett Burgess coined the term blurb, when he tweaked the jacket for his book
Are You a Bromide? to include praise from Miss Belinda Blurb.
George
Orwell called blurbs "disgusting tripe" in 1936 while Camille Paglia
called for an end to it, saying the practice was plagued by "shameless
cronyism and grotesque hyperbole". Friends do review each other's work,
but publishers said they are unlikely to plug something they do not rate.
One US
author, AJ Jacobs admitted in the New York Times that he had become such a
regular blurber, his blurbed books "fill a bookcase in my apartment".
Mr Bower said: "A lot of it is ego stroking and vanity, and approval among
peers," he said. "In the majority of cases blurbs don't make any
difference. But when they do, they really do."
Winning
words: examples of the blurb
When
browsing the shelves, an endorsement from an author you admire can help make
that purchase a bit easier. But dig deeper, and glowing recommendations become
harder to trust.
The
latest paperback edition of Lee Child's Killing Floor, the popular thriller
writer's debut novel, comes complete with some glowing praise from Stephen King,
right. ""All are ripping yarns," the cover says, "but since
this is the first, it seems the logical place to start." The back-slapping
fest between Child and King is well-documented, and Child once described King
as "America's greatest living novelist".
A Trick I
Learned From Dead Men, by former actress Kitty Aldridge, was praised by Liz
Jensen. "Kitty Aldridge has pulled off an astonishing feat of imaginative
empathy: humourous, poignant, wise and utterly convincing. Lee Hart's struggle
to hold his life together – voiced with the clarity and frankness of a
reluctant stoic – could pierce the hardest heart." Both writers share the
agent Clare Alexander.
"Salley
Vickers sees with a clear eye and writes with a light hand and she knows how
the world works. She's a presence worth cherishing," says Phillip Pullman,
right, of Vickers's The Cleaner of Chartres. Just two years ago, Vickers
described Pullman as a "supreme storyteller" in a review of his The
Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ."
Clancy's
comment: I think most authors would just be pleased to have their books in book
shops ... and selling well. End of story!
PS: Have included a new YouTube video on the right hand side - Clancy Tucker Photography: South East Asia
PS: Have included a new YouTube video on the right hand side - Clancy Tucker Photography: South East Asia
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