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Archive for the ‘SF Publishers’ Category

The Coming Online SF/F Renaissance

Filed Under: SF Publishers, Speculative Fiction

Tor Will Make a Big Splash

A few years ago, we were all upset when SCIFICTION was dropped by the SciFi Channel. The genre lost its best paying market, and arguably the highest quality publication, online or in print. Its departure from the scene left a hole that many have tried to fill, to varying degrees of success. But the world has changed significantly since then.

Today, nearly every publisher, large or small, has some sort of online component. No longer is digital content being largely ignored, as it was when I first came onto the scene in 2001. Baen, Prime Books, Small Beer Press, Tor, just to name a few that have recently or regularly released content online for free. Tor’s coming social networking/publishing site might be the final piece of the puzzle that ties the SF/F community together under one roof (depending on the extent of their social networking tools). I eagerly await the chance to beta test their site.

SCIFICTION and Strange Horizons stood mostly unopposed for a very long time. Smaller, respectable markets flourished, but none of us had the audiences of these two publications. Baen came onto the scene, and shook things up, but I don’t know much about them because their model of the subscriber wall keeps me out. Tor is going to bring in the existing online audience, and I think they have the clout and stable of authors to bring even more readers to online short fiction.

Tor’s entrance onto this stage is going to elevate everyone’s game. With a new giant player on the scene, the smaller publishers are going to be working harder to innovate, harder to stand out. We’ll see even more experimentation. We started out with the online fiction itself as the experiment. Tor’s entrance proves that experiment’s central thesis. People will and do read fiction online, and in great numbers. What’re more, I believe it validates the model of the short fiction as advertisement for long form publishers. Prime Books, Clarkesworld, and Subterranean have pioneered this.

I can’t help but think that we have Cory Doctorow to thank for much of this. I’m sure many people released books online for free before him, but did many who had traditional publishing contracts release their books online in conjunction with the print release? It’s almost certainly his influence that has led Tor to developing their coming site–I’m sure others, such as Patrick Nielsen Hayden and semi-anonymous Tor employees at who I do not know are ultimately responsible for the project, and I don’t want to minimize what they are doing. But Cory blazed the path. That path is turning into a paved road. Soon, it may be a highway.

Who Falls Behind?

I like the fiction in Asimov’s and F&SF very much, but they are beginning to look a bit like large warm-blooded bird ancestors prone to massive extinction by meteor impact. F&SF has made some strides in the online world, with it’s free fiction and blog, but the fiction is mostly pretty old, practically ancient in online terms, and their presentation leaves much to be desired.

Asimov’s web presence has not changed significantly since I first visited their website. It’s a mess, frankly. It’s great that you can buy it for the near-mythic Kindle, and they’ve been available in various e-formats for a long time via Fictionwise. But they have utterly failed to take advantage of the web as a medium. And no, I do not count their septic forums. I haven’t paid much attention to Analog, but I suspect they’re in a similar place, being owned by the same publisher.

What Next?

Who will make the next innovations in publishing? I think it will still be the small, fleet-footed publications like Futurismic, Clarkesworld, Fantasy, and so on. Podcasting, once the sole domain of EscapePod, now has several other major players on the field, even excluding the various EscapePod spinoffs. And remember, their number of listeners outweighs the readership of any print magazine out there. I also think that their listeners are not the same people as the subscribers of magazines. It’s a completely different audience, and ignoring the podcast audience would be like throwing money away at this point. I predict more will offer podcasting supplements to their web presences. Small publishers will begin to investigate developing for the mobile web, and this may call for a different type of fiction, something shorter and leaner. The use of multimedia and artwork is going to grow. A simple site like the Fortean Bureau looks like an Amish buggy compared to the hot rods we’ll be seeing in the next couple of years. I don’t know about you, but I’m very optimistic and excited about the things that are to come. We may not get paid much in the short fiction world, but there are more and more opportunities to connect with audiences. And for readers, there’s never been so many options for your reading experience (which presents its own set of problems).

To Save SF Short Fiction, We Had to Destroy It

Filed Under: SF Business, SF Publishers, Speculative Fiction

(Warning, the below is poorly thought out and written hastily. I will write more later this week.)
Doug Cohen has recently launched a subscribe to a SF magazine drive via his Livejournal.

I have a suspicion that telling the SF writing blogosphere to subscribe to short fiction magazines in an effort to save short fiction is like instructing a bunch of buggy whip makers to buy buggy whips to save the buggy whip manufacturing industry.  I know Doug means well, and I don’t mean this as a criticism of him, but I am very doubtful that telling a small group of active online fandom to subscribe to magazines will make a bit of difference in the general decline.   I’ve been just as guilty

The gorilla in the room that we rarely acknowledge is that nobody wants to read short fiction.  If they did, then there wouldn’t be this mess. I’ve heard and read hand waving about the changes in distribution models, but honestly, I don’t buy it.  In this day and age, if you have a burning desire to read science fiction short stories, you can Google up a magazine in less than a second.

Do I think that the public could be marketed towards to encourage the reading of more short fiction? Maybe.  A good marketing team can sell just about anything.  Do I think anyone has the money to back a large campaign like this?  No.  SFWA would be the only organization that I could see such an initiative coming from, and they’re a massive joke; an organization dedicated to internal politics and rumormongering more than the decline and collapse of the industry around it.

There is no solution.  The public’s interest has moved on.  If you’re a writer, go write video games, movies, television, or books, in that order of popularity.  That is where the public’s interest is right now, and if you don’t like it, then I’m afraid that you should probably get used to the idea that short fiction is a small, niche hobby of little importance.  I’m fine with that.  I find that I enjoy writing it, and that’s enough for me.  Short fiction for me is a way to learn writing, but I won’t regret leaving it behind if I were to crack another (more popular and better paying) medium, or find some amalgam of several of my own.

I don’t support the record industry for its failing business model. I don’t think the SF print magazine world deserve special treatment either.  I do, in fact subscribe to quite a few magazines.  But it’s not out of any effort to save them from the dustbin. There’s plenty to read online, and will be as long as weirdos like me keep writing it.

I’ve been around and around the funding models for online magazines in my head.  I’ve concocted the most ridiculous Web 2.0 models for online publishing that you can imagine.  But none of them will work, because there’s no evidence what-so-ever that there is enough public interest to justify the building of such a thing.  Every model fails, because there just aren’t enough people interested in reading and supporting a magazine monetarily for it to even sustain itself.   Don’t quote Strange Horizons at me, either.  Their fund drive doesn’t seem to be doing too well this time around.

Science Fiction, meet the long tail.  It’s not the first, and it won’t be the last.

About Me

Hi! My name is Jeremiah Tolbert, but you can call me Jeremy. I am a fantasy and science fiction writer, photographer, and web designer living in Northern Colorado. I am currently starting a new job and cannot take freelance work at this time. Drop me a line if you have any questions or comments. I love hearing from new people and I now have a lot more time to chat.

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