The first week of my new life is a lot like my old life. Poeple are asking where their money is. somethings never change. :)
But now I can say "Someone else is responsible for that and I've been told they are on top of it. If you haven't heard from them in a week or so, let me know, and I'll forward your information to the right people."
Other things that don't change, but sort of do... I've got a lot of production work that I need to process and hand off. Hopefully over the next few months, my work on the the production side of things will start to go away. Maybe I'll still be involved in some of the art direction decisions, or maybe I'll just be a guy with opinions that are sometimes listened to, and sometimes not. We'll see.
First and foremost though, it seems like I'm back to acquiring books. So I'm offically putting out the call for submissions.
If you already submitted something to me in the last 12 months and haven't heard back from me, please send a query. SF, fantasy and horror. That's what I'm looking for. It has to be good of course. Please querry first.
For now, I'm only open to agented submissions, or if you come with a reference from someone I know. A lot of Night Shade's best titles came in through the transom via a recommendations. Some even came from random hookups at a convention bar. That sounds kind of naughty. I don't mean THAT kind of hook-up. I mean randomly discovering passionate, interesting writers at cons, whom I tell to send me something. and then that something turns out to be awesome, and I buy it. It happens. Crazy, huh? The convention thing might not happen this year though, as I don't think I have a travel budget anymore. We shall see.
At some point in the future, my email address might change... but for the next month, hit me up jlassen@nightshadebooks.com
Query first. But only if a full manuscript is ready.
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Monday, June 3, 2013
Fifteen Years of My Life...
So that’s a chapter of my life that has ended. Night Shade
Books is now an imprint of Skyhorse Publishing and Start Publishing. I always said
that if it ended tomorrow, that would be fine because I was proud of what we
managed to accomplish. I always said
that because it always seemed like we were on the verge of going out of
business. That never changed, right up
to the end. The number of zeroes at the end of checks increased every year, and that in
and of itself was a kind of monument to our success. We
started out very small, with very little. And in the end our successes were
very big, and our failures were very costly.
For everybody who wants to take shots at Jason Williams and
myself for being bad business people, that’s fine. I don’t begrudge anybody their
opinion. Obviously, if we had been better business people, we would have ended
up with money in our pockets when we sold our company, instead of tax bills
that we can’t afford to pay. But the majority of these “bad” business decisions
involved being too “writer friendly” - both in terms of royalty rates and contracts, and in terms of many other very
author-friendly decisions we made over the years. I won’t bother listing them
or going into the details, because even if all of the information were made
available to interested parties, it wouldn’t changed the minds of people who
have already judged us. In the construction of many people’s inner morality
plays, we have been cast us as either outright bad guys or incompetent
buffoons or some combination of these two things. Many of the people who made those judgements have done so publicly. For the record, I'd like to point out several things.
First and foremost, my long time business partner made enormous financial
sacrifices to keep Night Shade running. Whether it was not taking owner-draws
on months when cash flow was dangerously low or when it came to investing
personal money, he always stepped up and never hesitated.
He will probably be very mad at me for sharing this anecdote, but
I know he won’t share it himself, and I believe the record should reflect his
personal sacrifice. In the summer of
2012, when Night Shade had just transitioned from one distributor to another,
sales were lower than expected. Returns were 2-3 times higher than they had
historically been, and Night Shade was approaching the end of a royalty period with not
enough cash on hand. Jason got money
from his father… money inherited from a recently deceased grandmother, and
dumped it all into the company. And I’m not talking a few thousand dollars. I’m
not talking tens-of-thousands-of-dollars either. I’m talking six figures. He dumped that onetime pot of family
inheritance into the company so that authors would get paid their
royalties on time, and so that the wheels would not come flying off during a
time when we had made systemic changes which had hoped would lead to a stable
company. That was probably a "bad business decision" but he made it without hesitating.
Unfortunately, the distributor change did not result in the
kinds of increased sales (and decreased returns) that we were hoping for. Six
months after Jason's contribution, we were better off than we had been prior to the distribution
change, but we were still not meeting the goals we needed to meet. But that
influx of personal cash from Jason put the company into a position that made it
attractive to buyers… attractive in a way that it would not have been otherwise… attractive in a way that allowed our
unsecured creditors to get paid. And by unsecured creditors I mean our authors and
production free-lancers.
So every check that gets cashed in the coming weeks exists
because off the extremely significant financial sacrifice that Jason
made. I will go further than that,
though. Every one of those checks exists because of the hard work that Jason, myself
and our employees put into this company, year after year.
We all worked hard to ensure that every book published was a
significant event… Because it was a Night Shade book. We had a carefully
cultivated brand that instantly brought attention to the many first novels, mid-list career reboots, and
other titles we chose to publish. I
firmly believe that not only did we do our best for our authors, but I believe that
our best was pretty good. For some
authors, that just wasn’t enough. For others, external events and timing got in
the way - the same way it does for every publisher out there. But to all of our
authors who harbor a grudge, or feel like we were “a rolling shit train” that
"did nothing" to support their books, I’ll take full responsibility for your
sales figures. I’m sorry I didn’t do better by you and your work.
We published a lot of authors over the years, and I believe
that while some of them would have eventually found publication elsewhere,
there are many who would otherwise not have made their way into print, and
would not have found the readers that they did.
Night Shade paid a lot of money, year after year, in
royalties and advances. And while people in the SF community often heard about the tardiness of
some of those payments, the truth is we put hundreds of thousands of dollars
into many people’s pockets. Night Shade’s new owners chose to make last years total dollar sales public. Keep in mind
we paid significantly higher royalty rates (30-50% on ebook and 10-12% of cover
on print editions), and a significant number of our titles last year did not earn out their
advances, so Night Shade paid out more than just earned-royalties
on those sales. I’ll let interested
readers estimate for themselves how much money we paid out. And that’s just to
the authors. Don’t forget all the freelance editors and artists we paid last year.
And we did that year after year. Last year’s sales were actually a 3 year low
for Night Shade. That frustrating fact is obviously one of the things that led
to the sale of the company. We could have given up on Night Shade many years ago. But we didn't.
Night Shade kept the train going forward for a lot of years.
And money went out to those people who earned it, year after year. It went out to our
authors; to our freelancers; and to our employees. And the last thing we did as
publishers was to make sure that the money got paid out to the people who earned it. I’m proud of
the work we did, and I feel we operated with integrity. I feel we did right by
a lot of people, for a long time. I gave 15 years of my life and my
professional career to the field that I love. I have nothing but respect and
admiration for all the authors I’ve worked with over the years, and I wish them
the best of luck going forward.
To our readers who supported us over the years. Thank you. You
supported us when we took risks… you supported us when we published challenging
books that didn’t fit neatly into predefined categories. You helped spread the
word, via many different outlets… be it face-to-face at conventions or online
at various social media outlets. You all helped create something that has had a
lasting and significant impact on the Science Fiction community and publishing world. Thank you. I’m
honored to have helped you find the authors and books that you otherwise would
not have found. Putting the right book in the right reader’s hands is hard… but that, more than anything else, is
what the hard work of publishing really is. I’m proud to have done it for these past 15 years.
To the new owners of Night Shade: Thank you for taking a leap of faith. I’m hoping that this new incarnation of Night Shade will continue to have a significant and positive impact on the science fiction community.
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