In an interview with Harvard Magazine, Wylie said the agency’s negotiations with publishers on e-books were currently on hold across the board.“We will take our 700 clients, see what rights are not allocated to publishers, and establish a company on their behalf to license those e-book rights directly to someone like Google, Amazon.com or Apple. It would be another business, set up on parallel tracks to the frontlist book business,” Wylie said.
Such a "heretical strategy" would likely meet with stiff resistance from publishing houses, the piece notes in response. The Wylie Agency’s stellar list includes authors Martin Amis, Philip Roth and Salman Rushdie, as well as the estates of giants including Italo Calvino, Arthur Miller, Vladimir Nabokov and John Updike.
Wylie also takes issue with the deals publishers are making with Apple, which he says are similar to those entered into by music publishers. "The music industry did itself in by taking its profitability and allocating it to device holders. Manufacturing and distribution accounted for roughly 30 percent of the music industry’s profit. These were conveyed to Apple in the deal for iTunes. But why should someone who makes a machine—the iPod, which is the contemporary equivalent of a jukebox—take all the profit?"
Monday, June 28, 2010
Agent Andrew Wylie Puts All eBook Rights Negotiations on Hold
Powerful literary agent Andrew Wylie, longtime terror of editors at major publishing houses, stays true to form - intent on wrestling the very best 21st century terms for his clients. And he is quite right to do so. That's his job. This comes from Bookseller.com:
Labels:
Agency Model,
Rights,
Royalties