“Should I pay to be published?”
Not a week goes by when I don’t bump into some
variation of this question. I’m newly baffled by it because, for some reason,
it was one I never asked. I think I respected my work even when others didn't seem
to.
Paying never occurred to me. I was ready to go to my
grave unpublished. As it is, I am ready to go there (though not for sometime, I
hope) un-lauded or never to be published again. I’m ready to never have
this-that-and-the-other rather than pay someone to please, pretty please,
let-me-work-for-you-and-I’ll-even-pay-you.
That’s what vanity/subsidy/co-op publishing is in fact
doing. Whatever the Mot Du Jour these operations use, whatever slick terms they
couch it in, this is what a writer does when engaging with them. Writers then
pay someone for the opportunity to work for them.
I had plenty such opportunities.
I unwittingly submitted to publishers who appeared traditional, and was offered
such contracts. They use language like “we invest in your book as much as you
will,” and “we like our authors to take part in every aspect of the process.”
Well, I have invested in my work. I've invested time, sweat
and tears. I have taken part of the process at every turn when my (traditional)
publishers asked me. But money?
Money flows from publisher
to author, not the other way. Period.
The other day a writer, who was about to sign with a
large press, asked if paying four-hundred dollars for editorial fees was on par
with the market. A few months ago another writer told me her small publisher
asks only for one-hundred dollars to have her picture book set for a print
edition. Doesn't that sound reasonable?
Not to me.
I should add here that there is a difference between self-publishing and paying a vanity publisher. Not all "paying" is created equal.
True self-publishing is a courageous decision to go it alone and be your own publisher.
I’m not courageous enough, so this also isn't for me.
There are good reasons to undertake this. Writers sometime want control of every aspect of their work including the design, title, editorial decisions, cover, and more. These fall into the publisher’s court in a traditional arrangement. True- many self-published, (who now use the term “Indie” for Independent, which used to mean small but traditional publishers) have grown weary and despondent of ever seeing their work in print through the traditional routes. But some have been well-published traditionally and are looking for more control.
The most admirable to my thinking are the self-published who have always dreamed of starting a small press and of being publishers, and so they start with their own books. Many publishing houses had their origins in such an endeavor. Assembling a team that includes an editor, a designer, a marketing person and so on, and you've got the start of a small publishing house. Good luck to you, because you will need it.
I’m not courageous enough, so this also isn't for me.
There are good reasons to undertake this. Writers sometime want control of every aspect of their work including the design, title, editorial decisions, cover, and more. These fall into the publisher’s court in a traditional arrangement. True- many self-published, (who now use the term “Indie” for Independent, which used to mean small but traditional publishers) have grown weary and despondent of ever seeing their work in print through the traditional routes. But some have been well-published traditionally and are looking for more control.
The most admirable to my thinking are the self-published who have always dreamed of starting a small press and of being publishers, and so they start with their own books. Many publishing houses had their origins in such an endeavor. Assembling a team that includes an editor, a designer, a marketing person and so on, and you've got the start of a small publishing house. Good luck to you, because you will need it.
So back to paying a publisher for “services”-
Respect your work. You are the creative genesis of the
business. You are the alpha and the omega. You may get paid a lot or- more
likely- not a lot. But you get paid. The business can and will do without many
of its traditional operators, but never without writers. We are the real deal.
I wouldn't take any other.