1. powvaldefiera:

palahniukandchocolate:

Dear Aspiring Writers (including myself):
Take note. While toiling away, trying to write a meaningful story that justly captures some aspect of the human experience, remember that publishing, like any creative pursuit, is first and foremost a business. You could write the greatest tale that has ever been told, but if no one believes that’s it’s marketable, no one will publish it. Meanwhile, someone who is famous for tanning, teasing her hair and getting excessively drunk in public will get a book published almost instantly because the publisher knows it will make them a lot of money.
Some depressing statistics about books:
33% of high school graduates never read another book for the rest of their lives.
42% of college graduates never read another book after college.
80% of US families did not buy or read a book last year.
70% of US adults have not been in a bookstore in the last five years.
57% of new books are not read to completion.
70% of books published do not earn back their advance.
70% of books published do not make a profit.
Knowing all of this, publishers pander to the lowest common denominator. They are far more likely to publish a terrible book that will sell a million copies than a brilliant book that will sell five hundred copies. Taking a gamble on a book they know almost no one will read is simply not worth their money.
However, you can at least try to take solace in the fact that in twenty years, people will still be reading, analysing and loving Poe’s work, yet no one will remember or care who Snooki is.
[Picture credit: David Schiller]

Literature lives on forever! I love reading… well, only if they’re the books I want to read myself.

I think the problem here is getting the word out on the books that deserve attention. 

    powvaldefiera:

    palahniukandchocolate:

    Dear Aspiring Writers (including myself):

    Take note. While toiling away, trying to write a meaningful story that justly captures some aspect of the human experience, remember that publishing, like any creative pursuit, is first and foremost a business. You could write the greatest tale that has ever been told, but if no one believes that’s it’s marketable, no one will publish it. Meanwhile, someone who is famous for tanning, teasing her hair and getting excessively drunk in public will get a book published almost instantly because the publisher knows it will make them a lot of money.

    Some depressing statistics about books:

    • 33% of high school graduates never read another book for the rest of their lives.
    • 42% of college graduates never read another book after college.
    • 80% of US families did not buy or read a book last year.
    • 70% of US adults have not been in a bookstore in the last five years.
    • 57% of new books are not read to completion.
    • 70% of books published do not earn back their advance.
    • 70% of books published do not make a profit.

    Knowing all of this, publishers pander to the lowest common denominator. They are far more likely to publish a terrible book that will sell a million copies than a brilliant book that will sell five hundred copies. Taking a gamble on a book they know almost no one will read is simply not worth their money.

    However, you can at least try to take solace in the fact that in twenty years, people will still be reading, analysing and loving Poe’s work, yet no one will remember or care who Snooki is.

    [Picture credit: David Schiller]

    Literature lives on forever! I love reading… well, only if they’re the books I want to read myself.

    I think the problem here is getting the word out on the books that deserve attention. 

Notes

  1. anabanananana reblogged this from late-night-halloween
  2. goltrai reblogged this from late-night-halloween and added:
    I’m gonna cry.
  3. late-night-halloween reblogged this from skullgirl22
  4. xx-rapunzel-xx reblogged this from catsandquibblers and added:
    ————- Story time: In my junior/senior year, I had to choose between majoring in journalism (‘cause I guess I was a...
  5. counting-to-infinity reblogged this from lassoaroundthemoon
  6. simply-m3 reblogged this from soulspoken and added:
    why oh why…poe next to snooki
  7. smokeland reblogged this from slaughterhousefive
  8. marthasnc reblogged this from carriehopefletcher
  9. pop-it-rock-it reblogged this from carriehopefletcher and added:
    It’s sad they’re in the same shelf. BTW, Snooki is a girl of the MTV’s reality show Jersey Shore.
  10. sandyjupiter reblogged this from coketalk
  11. starduske reblogged this from coketalk
  12. thisisnotamber reblogged this from illsignyourcast
  13. theneopetqueen reblogged this from beanbun
  14. to-repel-ghosts reblogged this from beanbun
  15. beanbun reblogged this from eeeel and added:
    THOSE STATS GOING TO CRY
  16. beleny reblogged this from palahniukandchocolate and added:
    mall. My mission
  17. mockingjayitssomahogany reblogged this from carriehopefletcher and added:
    WOW. i love books. still cant believe those statistics, love to not be one part of them.
  18. citizenwasp reblogged this from lecochonbleu and added:
    These statistics bother me. Not because I feel like people should read more, but the fact that people think that other...
  19. thesethieves reblogged this from jaanel and added:
    I think the problem here is getting the word out on the books that deserve attention.
  20. jaanel reblogged this from palahniukandchocolate and added:
    Literature lives on forever! I love reading… well, only
  21. victory-marchh reblogged this from theandrewlee and added:
    This is the most depressing thing I’ve ever read. ihaveseenthefuture:
  22. theandrewlee reblogged this from ihaveseenthefuture
  23. ihaveseenthefuture reblogged this from solati and added:
    you’re the reason for the teardrops on my guitar
  24. solati reblogged this from oh-reckless-abandon
  25. andallwaswell reblogged this from oh-reckless-abandon
  26. oh-reckless-abandon reblogged this from palahniukandchocolate
  27. hakuteiken reblogged this from palahniukandchocolate