More Books

Yes, I have more new stock. Rounding up the new issues from Prime and Book View Café, we have:

And yes, all of these books are £2.99.

Fantastic Ladies

Continuing the rollout of new books in the store, I have a wealth of wonderful women fantasy writers for you.

Pride of place goes to Prime who are bringing back R.A. MacAvoy. Her Tea with the Black Dragon from 1983 was nominated for a host of awards, including the Hugo, Nebula and World Fantasy. It got second place in the Philip K. Dick Award, won the Locus Award for First Novel, and MacAvoy won the Campbell New Writer award on the strength of it. Her last novel was in 1993. In 2009 Subterranean published a limited edition novella, In Between, but Death and Resurrection is her first novel in 18 years. It is great to have her back.

Another book I am delighted to see in the store is The Lord of Two Lands by Judith Tarr. This World Fantasy nominee from 1993, featuring Alexander the Great, is much loved and I’m delighted to see Book View Café making it available again. They have also sent me Tarr’s The Dagger and the Cross, which is a sequel to Alamut which is already in store. Both are novels set during the Crusades.

Back with Prime, I also delighted to see Sarah Monette find a new publisher. Thus far they are offering her collection, Somewhere Beneath These Waves, and a new edition of her Kyle Murchison Booth mystery, The Bone Key.

Finally, with 2012 just over the horizon, someone had to write a Mayan novel. Step forward, Brenda Cooper and Prime. Mayan December could easily be just an exercise in cashing in, but the reviews look very promising so the book is worth checking out.

I’m pleased to report that, like Prime, Book View Café are selling their ebooks for £2.99. You can’t go wrong at that price, can you?

Prime Year’s Bests

Continuing the upload of new Prime titles (and especially for Tero), their 2011 Year’s Best collections are now available in the store. I’m not entirely sure what year they refer to, but they certainly contain some great stories. Also I have been playing with a few new layout features in the store, so even if you are not planning on buying you might like to take a look. The books are:

Did I mention that they are only £2.99 each?

New Anthologies from Prime

I’ve just added several new anthologies to the Wizard’s Tower bookstore. They are all from Prime, and therefore all at the great £2.99 price. They are:

Vampires from Paula Guran contains a selection of recently written short stories about the toothy undead, including contributions from Holly Black, Caitlin R. Kiernan and Kim Newman.

Halloween is another of Paula’s anthologies, this one being a celebration of the season of things going bump in the night. Authors include H.P. Lovecraft, Thomas Ligotti and Peter Straub.

Still with Paula, New Cthulhu features modern stories influenced by H.P. Lovecraft, with authors including Neil Gaiman, Elizabeth Bear, China Miéville, Sarah Monette and Charlie Stross.

Creatures from John Langan & Paul Tremblay is a survey of thirty years of big, bad nasties. Authors include Clive Barker, Kelly Link and Jeff VanderMeer.

Finally we have Lightspeed: Year One, in which JJA picks his favorites from the stories he has published in the first year of Lightspeed magazine.

All of them fabulous value. Much as I love paper, the trade paperback editions are around three times the price, and mostly only available in the USA.

Prime Price Drop

I did promise you some good bookstore news. Here it is. I’ve received instruction from Sean Wallace that I can reduce the price of all Prime titles to £2.99 (about $5 or €3.50). There are two exceptions: Rudy Rucker’s The Ware Tetralogy is still £6.49 because it is an omnibus containing four complete novels. And Ekaterina Sedia’s The Secret History of Moscow has always been £1.99. Aside from that, all Prime titles are now at the new price. So, if you fancy picking up, say:

then head on over as they are all available at the brand new £2.99 price.

Online Price Checks Hit High Street

There has been a certain amount of concern in the book business of late about a new initiative from Amazon. What they are doing is encouraging consumers to report the prices that are being offered by bricks and mortar bookstores so that Amazon can ensure that they are not being undercut by anyone. There’s a financial reward for consumers who participate.

This behavior is not confined to Amazon. ASDA (Walmart) is running a similar promotion for its UK supermarkets. And indeed it is a familiar problem to any online retailer. One of the reasons I don’t offer sales in the Wizard’s Tower Bookstore is because if I do Amazon is liable to reduce the prices on the books in their store to match, and then not put them up again when my sale ends. Unless you happen to be a big name publisher with enough clout to negotiate one of those “agency pricing” agreements then you have no control over what price Amazon sells your books for, and I only stock books by indie publishers. I can’t put them at risk.

Nicola Griffith has an interesting blog post in which she makes the point that what bookstores need to do is offer a better shopping experience than Amazon. But how do you compete? There’s exclusivity of course, but you can only negotiate exclusivity deals if publishers think you are big enough. Guess who qualifies. Amazon knows that they sell 80% of all ebooks, probably more than that for books from independent presses and individual writers, so actually giving Amazon an exclusive in return for better promotion might make good sense to individual publishers. It is also worth noting that one of the reasons why Amazon is so successful is that it has put a lot of time and effort into delivering a top class shopping experience.

It is a difficult problem, and one I certainly don’t have an answer for right now, primarily because I have neither the time nor the money to invest heavily in new ideas. Still, I’ll keep trying, and I do have some good bookstore news coming soon.

Spectrum Awards

The short list and winner of the Best Novel category of the Gaylactic Spectrum Awards (for works published in 2010) have been announced. The short list contains three books that I am proud to have in stock. They are:

  • Bob the Book by David Pratt (Chelsea Street Editions) — A story about a gay book, who gets separated from his partner and interacts with other books and people as he tries to find him.
  • A Book of Tongues by Gemma Files (ChiZine Publications) — Weird Western with lots of action, magic, crime, and a gay couple at the center of it all.
  • The Wolf at the Door by Jameson Currier (Chelsea Street Editions) — New Orleans, ghosts, and a gay hero blended into scary story with wit and sentiment.

I don’t have the winner, Under the Poppy by Kathe Koja, but you can find out all about it on The Writer and the Critic, and you can buy it from Weightless Books.

The full results are available on the Outer Alliance blog.

Bearded Women Reviewed

I was intrigued when ChiZine sent me Teresa Milbrodt’s collection, Bearded Women Stories, to sell, but I don’t have time to read and review every book I stock so this one just went on the “interesting” list. Thankfully Larry Nolen has had time to read the book, and he was very impressed with it. Here he is talking about the story, “Mr. Chicken”:

What makes this story so effective is that Milbrodt carefully develops the narrator’s situation, as she goes into reflective monologues surrounding her awkward interactions with Mr. Chicken about how men react when they learn that she shaves every morning. Their stammering responses and subsequent “escapes” leave hanging in the air, ready to explode upon contact, the discomfort many males feel about “masculine” and “feminine” roles, particularly when a woman seems to be violating those seemingly rigid divisions.

And here’s his summing up:

There were very few dips in story quality and the collection as a whole serves to reinforce through reiteration and re-exploration the themes of strangeness and feminine struggle for acceptance. Bearded Women is one of the best debut short story collections I’ve read over the past few years and Teresa Milbrodt will be a writer whose future I shall follow with keenness, as she already displays more command over her stories than several veteran story writers. Highly recommended.

You can read the whole review here, and buy the book here.

While I’m talking about the bookstore, I should note that we have two new books from Lethe for sale today. They are:

Beatts on Bookstores

This morning over breakfast I listened to the latest episode of Alisa Krasnostein and Jonathan Strahan’s podcast, Live and Sassy. This featured an interview with the owner of one of my favorite bookstores: Alan Beatts of Borderlands Books in San Francisco. It is well worth a listen, if you are at all interested in the book business.

Alan talks mainly about the impact of ebooks, and Amazon in particular. The most notable point he makes is that if we, as readers, buy just 1 in 4 of our books online, without increasing the number of books we purchase, then most bricks and mortar bookstores will go out of business, because they can’t survive a 25% drop in turnover. The chain stores will go first, as indeed Borders already has, and independents will suffer a brief renaissance in their absence, but ultimately most of them are doomed.

Where I got most interested is where the discussion turned to “what next”. Assuming that bricks and mortar books stores do vanish, where will we buy books in future. Amazon obviously. ABE books for second hand? Oh, they are owned by Amazon. The Book Depository? Oh, they are owned by Amazon. See where I’m going with this?

Alan says that he thinks publishers will increasingly try to sell books direct to the customer. Gollancz’s SF Gateway ought to be a good example of this, except that it isn’t because they don’t sell the books themselves, just point you to Amazon. Angry Robot, with far fewer resources, managed to get the job done right.

Of course creating an online bookstore does cost. Alan says it is far too difficult for a small press. That’s not actually true. Lee Harris managed it for Angry Robot, and I used the same software to create my store. The problems here are twofold. First, there’s currently no off-the-shelf store software that does ebook purchase as seamlessly and conveniently as Amazon. Hopefully that will change soon (and indeed I’m working on something myself). The other problem is volume. Licensing the store software is expensive, and if you don’t have much turnover then you won’t make any money. One of the reasons I started a bookstore is to attract more customers and sell more books, because there is no way it would have been economic just selling my own books.

Alan also talks about websites that sell books through affiliate schemes. You can do that, and you might look like a bookstore, but it is really hard to make any money that way. If I sell books through a bricks and mortar store like Watestones they are liable to want 35% or more discount before stocking them. If I sell ebooks through Amazon they take at least 30%. My own store takes 15%, because I’m trying to help small presses. I’m not making money at that rate. Amazon’s affiliate scheme promises “up to 15%”, but you generally only get that much on big ticket items and selected best sellers. You normally get a lot less.

Also, as Alan mentions, Amazon has a patent on the way in which their affiliate scheme works, which makes it hard for other stores to do such things as well as they do. And of course if your “bookstore” is essentially just a front for Amazon then you are not really increasing competition.

There are a few people trying to do genuinely independent ebook stores. Baen’s Webscriptions, Small Beer’s Weightless Books, and my own store, are all examples within the SF&F community. But is it much more difficult to make this work than it is with a bricks and mortar bookstore.

How do you compete? On price? No, Amazon ruthlessly monitors rival stores and will reduce prices to match any offers. On selection? No, Amazon sells everything. On convenience? Very difficult, as Amazon has far more money and can develop much better software than you can. By being local? Well only if you live in a country without an Amazon store, and they are starting to expand.

The thing about online retailing is that it makes to very hard to differentiate yourself from anyone else. And that means that it is difficult to see any future for bookselling except direct from major publishers, or from Amazon.

As someone who has spent much of her career in economics breaking up monopolies, this worries me a lot.

Ben Gets Reviewed

One of the best things about being a publisher is finding out that people enjoyed a book that you produced. When they write a long and smart review saying so, that’s even better. If you would like to learn more about Ben Jeapes’s short story collection, Jeapes Japes, you can check out what Paul Wilks has to say over at The Future Fire.

And, as the publisher, it is my duty to point out that you can buy the book here.

Cat In Store

When I announced the publication of Clarkesworld #62, I waxed lyrical about a book that Neil Clarke was publishing. That book is Myths of Origin, a collection of four novellas by Catherynne M. Valente. I am delighted to say that the book is now available from the Wizard’s Tower ebook store. As always, the book is DRM free, and has no region restrictions. You can buy it here.

Two of the four novellas included in the collection were reviewed in Emerald City. If you want to see what I had to say, check out The Labyrinth and Yume No Hon: The Book of Dreams.

New From ChiZine

I have a couple of new books from ChiZine in the bookstore. First up is Bearded Women Stories, a collection of decidedly weird tales by Teresa Milbrodt about, “mothers, wives, and lovers: all of them trying negotiate a world that is quicker to stare than sympathize”. It has a fabulous cover, which I’d post here to amuse my genderqueer friends even if I wasn’t selling the book. More information here.

The other book is Enter, Night by Michael Rowe, which is a more classic text featuring a 300-yea-old horror in a small, remote Canadian town. It sounds like a fine read for fans of fear. Details here.

Bookstore Arithmetic

Yesterday I saw someone on Twitter encouraging his friends to buy Tim Maughan’s book, Paintwork, from Amazon. Now of course people are free to buy from whoever they please, but if you want to help British writers such as Tim who are publishing their own books, or going through small presses, I’d like to explain why you might want to order from Wizard’s Tower Books instead.

Amazon, being a very big company, is required to charge VAT on all ebooks it sells. (The UK government classes ebooks as “software”, not as “books”.) So before Tim gets any money you have to take off the government’s share. On a £2.14 book that’s 36p. Also, Amazon only gives Tim 70% of the revenue from his sales, so by my reckoning he gets £1.25 per book. (Correct me if I’m wrong, Tim.)

Because my business is very small, I don’t have to charge VAT. I’d like to charge less than Amazon, but I know that if I do that they’ll lower their prices to match mine, so I charge exactly the same as they do: £2.14. When you buy from me, PayPal takes a cut on the transaction. That can vary, but at a conservative estimate that’s 5%. I then give Tim 85% of the net revenue. So for a sale from me he gets £1.73 — 48p more than he gets from Amazon. That’s a 39% increase.

This doesn’t apply to people buying from the US, because Amazon US doesn’t have to charge VAT (and does its level best to avoid having to charge sales tax). But for a UK or European customer it makes a big difference to the writers and small presses that I deal with.

Here are a couple of books you might want to encourage people to buy:

New In Store

The beginning of the month is always a busy time at Wizard’s Tower with new magazines coming out, but pride of place today goes to a small collection of short fiction. Tim Maughan will be known to most of you as the anime correspondent of Tor.com. To us in the south west of Britain, however, he’s one of the rising stars of the local fiction scene. Paintwork contains three stories that take digital technology to the streets. I bought a paper copy at BristolCon and am looking forward to reading it. In the meantime you can get the ebook version here.

As for those magazines, well I have already talked about Clarkesworld #62, which you can buy here.

Lightspeed #18 includes an interview with the one and only China Miéville plus fiction from, amongst others, Maureen McHugh and John Crowley.

Fantasy #56 includes fiction from Lavie Tidhar and Ellen Kushner (a reprint of a Riverside story). It also has a lovely cover (see below).

As always you can save £1 if you buy Lightspeed and Fantasy together.

Fantasy #56

Above/Below – A Fascinating Project

One of the best ways to get yourself noticed as a small press is to undertake very interesting projects. Twelfth Planet does this brilliantly. The latest book of theirs that I have uploaded is Above/Below, a back-to-back double containing two linked stories: “Above” by Stephanie Campisi and “Below” by Ben Peek. I quote from the blurb (which is once again top quality):

A tale of two cities, the stories Above and Below make up two halves of another in the TPP Doubles series. Written by Stephanie Campisi and Ben Peek, designed to be self-contained and complete as individual narratives, the two parts can be read in either order, yet also form a single narrative that has been intricately woven and designed to create a single, novel length story. It is a work that suggests not a single way of reading, but rather two, with conflicting morals that will continue to test the reader’s certainty in who, in the cities of Loft and Dirt, is in the right.

Obviously you can’t turn an ebook upside down the way you can with a traditional “double”, book, but Charles Tan has created two versions of the book, one with “Above” first and the other with “Below” first. You can choose which one to buy.

Two Great Books

The trouble with running a bookstore is that you are tempted by far more books than you can possibly read. Today is a case in point. I have just added two new books to the store, and I want to read them both.

First up is ODD?, the first volume in a new series of anthologies from Ann & Jeff VanderMeer. Is this weird fiction, or is it just odd? Who cares, when you have a list of contributors like this: Jeff Ford, Michael Cisco, Nalo Hopkinson, Hiromi Goto, Rikki Ducornet, Leena Krohn, Caitlin R. Kiernan and many more. Also very temping from my point of view is that the Krohn is by no means the only translated story in the book. There are a whole bunch of people whose work will be very new to you. Excited? Check it out (including the cool video trailer that Jeff has had made for it – linked to from the store).

The other new book is our second offering in the Twelve Planets series of Australian short collections from Twelfth Planet Press. This time we have Thief of Lives by Lucy Sussex. I have written enthusiastically about Lucy’s work before (for example here), but she has not been published much outside of Australia. Now, by the magic of ebooks, I’m able to bring you a sample of her work that you can get easily and cheaply. How good is Lucy? Let’s just say that none other than Karen Joy Fowler contributed the introduction. It is rather cool too. Read it here.

Frawgs In Store

I’m delighted to be able to announce that the entire output of Cheeky Frawg Books is now available for purchase in the Wizard’s Tower Bookstore. Currently all but one of the books is by Cheeky Frawg’s owners, Ann and Jeff VanderMeer. However, I know they are working with a lot of good people to bring out other books. I’m particularly looking forward to the promised Finnish translations. Also the book design is by my good friend Neil Clarke, so I can guarantee it is good. As Jeff notes, every book is lovingly hand-crafted, using only the finest 1s and 0s.

Right now you can buy the fabulously silly Kosher Guide to Imaginary Animals, lavishly illustrated by the brilliant Jon Coulthart. If you have ever wanted to know how to cook and eat a Mongolian Death Worm and other equally bizarre beasts, all in an appropriately kosher fashion, this is the book for you.

Cheeky Frawg is also offering Balzac’s War, a small collection of short stories set in the world of Veniss Underground (yes, with meerkats), and a long essay by Jeff on the works of Angela Carter, not to mention more fiction by Jeff and Amal El-Mohtar.

Selling good books makes me happy. I’m sure it makes Ann and Jeff happy too. And it might even make Jeff’s friend Evil Monkey slightly less grumpy.

The Aussies Are Coming!

One of the things I love about selling ebooks is that it enables me to bring books from wonderful independent presses from all around the world to the attention of my customers, wherever they might be. Today I have added my first book from the acclaimed Australian publisher, Twelfth Planet Press. They are doing some fabulous little chapbooks featuring Australian women writers, and the first ebook from the series is something I’ve been excited about for some time: Love and Romanpunk, by Tansy Rayner Roberts.

Why am I excited? Well it is Tansy for a start. Also, just read the blurb. A review will follow, when I get some time to do serious writing.

From Russia With Steam

Thanks to only being able to spend a few hours a day on a computer (and having to give priority to paid work) I am very behind on writing reviews. I have, however, managed to put together one for Ekaterina Sedia’s Heart of Iron. You’ll have to take my word for it that it contains enough to satisfy both alternate history fans and readers of steampunk romance. Seriously. Read the review for more details.

And if you like the sound of that, you can buy the ebook for just £2.99.