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Bookselling today: Did the author get paid?

woman reading book

You support authors you like. You buy their books, therefore you support them, right? Yes, but… Where and how you buy a book can matter as much to the author’s bottom line as whether you bought it at all. Sadly, the publishing industry operates on a set of archaic rules so lopsided that even if a book becomes a bestseller, its author may still lose money.

The hidden, ugly thing about bookselling

When a bookstore orders copies of a book, it isn’t the straightforward sale it appears to be. The book retail industry has historically operated more like a consignment arrangement. A retailer, whether it’s a Barnes & Noble, an independent shop, or a big-box store like Target, orders books from a distributor, stocks them on shelves, and then, if the books don’t sell within a relatively brief period of time, two or three months, sends them right back for a full refund.

This practice of “returnable” inventory was baked into the bookselling industry during the Great Depression as a way to encourage retail booksellers to take risks on unknown authors. The logic was reasonable: if a bookstore could return what it didn’t sell, it would be more willing to stock titles with uncertain commercial appeal. In theory, this should have opened doors for authors, but in practice, it created chaos.

Publishers, anticipating demand that may never arrive, routinely overprint. Bookstores, fearing they’ll miss a hit, overbuy. And when the books don’t move, they get shipped back. For titles by debut or small-press authors, the number of returns can be staggering. In trade publishing’s big-box retail model (think Costco, Walmart, and Target) return rates of 30 to 40 percent are not unusual. Those numbers are crippling for a small press and its authors.

When a “sale” isn’t really a sale

Here’s where it gets particularly painful for authors.

When a retailer orders a book, the money flows, briefly, in the right direction. The retailer buys at a wholesale discount (typically 55% off the cover price) from a distributor. The distributor passes royalties to the publisher, who pays the author their contracted percentage. So far, so good.

But that initial transaction is what the industry calls a “soft sale.” If the book comes back, those royalties come back too as a negative line item on the author’s royalty statement. The author has already been paid; now they owe it back. Distributors also charge a per-unit restocking fee on returned copies, meaning publishers, and by extension, authors lose money coming and going.

This system evolved for reasons that once made sense. But it has calcified into something that harms the very people doing the creative work, and there’s been no regulation to address it.

The big-box and algorithm problem

The returns crisis is inseparable from the broader shift in who sells books and how they sell them.

When trade publishing orients itself toward high-volume retailers with massive floor space and razor-thin margins, the inevitable result is aggressive ordering followed by aggressive returns. A celebrity biography ordered in bulk by a big-box chain can come flooding back the moment public sentiment turns, and books tied to news cycles or seasonal trends vanish from shelves before they find their readers.

Meanwhile, Amazon makes 60% of all book sales today, and that gives it unreasonable leverage over publishers’ terms, discounts, and visibility. For readers, the algorithm feels helpful, with recommendations, one-click purchasing, and overnight delivery. For authors and small publishers, however, the reality is more complicated. Royalty structures vary dramatically depending on the platform, the price point, and whether the author goes through a publisher or self-publishes.

The point is that authors—especially debut, independent, and small-press authors—are the least protected participants in a system that treats books like produce: stock the shelves, and if it doesn’t move, send it back.

What you, the reader, can actually do:

Here’s the good news: readers have more power than they know. Every deliberate purchasing decision is a small vote for the kind of publishing world we all want to exist. Here are a few suggestions to help you to help the author (and the small press) the next time you buy a book:

  • Buy directly from the author or publisher when possible. A direct sale from an author’s or publisher’s website typically puts 20 to 30 percent more money in that author’s pocket than a sale through a major retailer. Purchasing direct cuts out multiple middlemen and ensures that more money goes to the creators of the book.
  • Request books at your local independent bookstore. Even if the store doesn’t stock a title, walking in and asking for it creates a demand. Readers asking for a book are more persuasive to a bookseller than an author asking for shelf space, and getting a book onto physical shelves opens the door to discovery that no algorithm can fully replicate.
  • Leave reviews. On Amazon, on Goodreads, on your own social feeds. Reviews improve an author’s algorithmic visibility and they also help the next reader make the decision about buying that book. For independent and small-press authors, a handful of genuine reviews can really shift how a title performs.
  • Recommend books vocally. Word of mouth is still the most powerful sales engine in any field. A personal recommendation, whether by text message, a post on social media, or a mention at book club can drive sales in ways no marketing budget can replicate.
  • Borrow from the library, and then tell the library what you loved about the book. Library checkouts of physical books or digital books also generate royalties, and library purchase requests help small-press titles reach institutional collections. Librarians listen. (And come on! You’re supporting libraries at the same time… We need libraries!)
  • Support literary culture broadly. Subscribe to literary magazines. Attend author readings. Follow small presses on social media. The infrastructure that produces good books depends on an ecosystem of support that goes beyond individual transactions.

The bottom line

Publishing is a business built on optimism. Every book represents a bet by the author, the press, and the bookseller that someone will care about that book. Readers are crucial to those bets paying off.

So, buy the book directly from the author or publisher if you can. Bookshop.org is a good alternative if you would rather shop on line. Then tell someone about the book. Ask your local bookstore and library to carry it. Leave a review. The authors you love are counting on more than your enthusiasm; they’re counting on you to help keep the lights on.


Madville Publishing is an independent literary press committed to supporting authors and building a more equitable publishing ecosystem. Browse our catalog and purchase directly at madvillepublishing.com.

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Support your favorite authors without spending a dime

Pale Yellow Lettering and illustrated books stand out on a red background. The text reads: Support Your Fave Authors, Give Them Nice Reviews, Swipe for instructions

Wanted to support your favorite authors somehow beyond just buying their books? We all have a favorite author or artist, someone whose work we love and would like to support. However, sometimes, times are tough and we just don’t have the spare cash to buy a book right away. Or our favorite author may not have a new book for us to buy in the first place.

What can we do to support them so that they can still afford to write the books we enjoy?

#1: Leave reviews.

This is true for any business today, and that is what writing is–a business. Products with higher star ratings and a larger number of reviews tend to sell more, and in this, the era of Amazon, more reviews makes them more likely to be seen. Amazon and Barnes & Noble (the two biggest marketplaces for books in the United States) both require a minimum of at least 30 reviews before they will start to feature a product in a customer’s “recommended” section on their websites.

A lot of people feel overwhelmed at the idea of leaving reviews–especially on books. Our theory is what we like to call PTECD (Post Traumatic English Class Disorder). Don’t worry, this is an E for Effort classroom. Something as simple as “I liked it” is immeasurably helpful. We don’t require full book reports to pass. 😉

#2: Request copies at your local bookstore or library

Despite common misconceptions, authors and (indie) publishers love libraries, because they make their books readily available in an otherwise financially blocked market. By requesting a library stock a book from by your favorite author, you are helping that author and his or her publisher to earn an income while you gain access to the book at no cost to you (as long as you don’t accrue late fees–tsk, tsk!). You are also making the book available to other people who might enjoy it and who may also write a review for it (full circle).

I want to write a review, but I don’t know how!

Here are instructions for writing reviews on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and our own Madville Publishing (the website you’re on right now).

It is important to note that there are many other places where you can leave reviews such as Goodreads (owned by Amazon) and StoryGraph. Our list is not exhaustive, but it will get you started. Every little review (the more stars the better) helps.

Amazon

After making sure you are logged in to Amazon (or Amazon Smile to also have a portion of any proceeds from your purchases go to a charity of your choice), look up the book you would like to review and select it. In the sample image, I have searched for What Magick May Not Alter by JC Reilly which already has two (wonderful) reviews. It does not matter whether you choose the paperback or kindle edition of a book, they both go to the same place.

Once you have selected the book, scroll down to the bottom of the page. In the sample image I have prepared here, you can see a lovely 5 star review from Linda Austin. There is a grey button labeled “Write a review.” On mobile, it is under the other reviews. On Desktop, it’s to the left of them.

Once you click on this button, you should be taken to a new page with several blanks to fill. 5 star ratings are obviously the most helpful rating for an author and publisher. You can add an image if you’d like. Then, of course, the written review itself. As I said before, this can be as simple or complex as you’re comfortable with. “I liked it” is good, “I couldn’t put it down” is better, and a full essay is simply spectacular. Either way, we are eternally grateful.

Barnes & Noble

Much like Amazon, the first step to leaving reviews on Barnes & Noble is to login or sign up for an account. Then, search for the book you want to review.

In my sample image, I’m searching for Stand In The Traffic: A Himalayan Adoption Story by Kate Sauders.

As with Amazon, it doesn’t matter whether you click on the Nook version or the paperback version in the search results. They both take you to the same page.

The review link isn’t obvious if you are the first reviewer for a book.

If there are no other reviews, there will be green text beneath 5 blank stars that reads “Click here to be the first to review this product.” If there are other reviews, there will be a blue button labeled “review.” Click on whichever one you see.

Just like Amazon, B&N wants a star rating, a title for the review, a photo if you feel like it, and a review itself.

“Great Read!” is still very much appreciated.

B&N also has a few optional boxes to tick. These help their search algorithm put the book in front of people who would actually be interested in reading it–boxes to tick like, “Would you recommend this book to a friend?” or adding tags that you feel describe the book (tearjerker, laugh out loud, feminist, inspirational), whether or not your review contains spoilers for the book, and what kind of reader you would describe yourself as (casual, literary, book club reader, etc.)

MadvillePublishing.com

All publishers appreciate reviews on their own websites, as well. We are no exception.

Say it with me, kids: Make sure you’re signed into the website first!

To sign in or sign up for an account on Madville, click either “Sign Up” or “Account Details” on the black menu bar at the top left of the screen. If you can’t see the black bar, it might be hidden behind the dismissible purple banner at the top of the page. Click “dismiss” and the black bar should be made visible.

Once you are logged in, the process begins to sound familiar. Navigate to the book you’d like to review. In my example image above, I’m using Mistakes by the Lake by Brian Petkash. A little less than halfway down the page, you should see three tabs: Description, Additional Information, and Reviews. Click on “Reviews”.

When the tab loads, you should see any existing reviews as well as stars for a star rating, a text box for your review, and a submit button. Fill these out, please and thank you!