Category Archives: Guest Posts

Compassion – An idea whose time has come: Eleanor Stoneham introduces her book, Healing This Wounded Earth

Eleanor Stoneham

Eleanor Stoneham

MY THANKS TO ELEANOR STONEHAM for providing this fascinating and challenging introduction to her book, Healing This Wounded Earth (O Books, 9781846944451). Eleanor is another writer I met online in the ACW (Association of Christian Writers) facebook group, and I’d encourage any Christian booksellers reading to join the group: it’s a fantastic opportunity to get to know and interact with some of the authors (some well established, others up-and-coming) whose work is your stock-in-trade, the very life-blood of your business — who knows, get involved and you might even be able to persuade one of them to visit your shop for a signing session?

To all Christian writers, wannabes and well-known alike: I salute you! And now: over to Eleanor…

Part 1: Compassion – An idea whose time has come

It took a massive mental breakdown, now many years ago, to launch me into this world of writing. Because it gave me the time and space and opportunity to reassess my life, to change what I was doing, to take up new things, including writing and a more active life in my church.

How many realise that their pension funds may be supporting arms manufacture or child abuse: or that what they eat may be harming the planet or involve appalling animal cruelty? How many understand the flaws in our economy and the wisdom of the alternatives to be found in the Bible’s Jubilee Land Laws, and rules for debt cancellation? How many understand the full global significance of what they may be unwittingly supporting as they go about their day to day lives at work and at play? And do we care? These are important questions for us all, but Christians should be deeply engaged with them as a matter of faith.

I’ve tried to do a brave thing in my book: to explore these questions and many more in the context of compassion, spirituality, love and healing. I’ve tried to open people’s eyes as gently as possible to the results of our actions and the need for changes in how we all live our lives as I explore these qualities in business and finance, in the way we treat the living world around us, in our faith, in our art and creativity and the media, in our healthcare and in our communities.

It’s not always comfortable reading, but then who ever said being a Christian was meant to be easy? John Stott in his wonderful book Basic Christianity wrote of the scandal of “nominal Christianity.” Large numbers of people have covered themselves, he writes,

with a decent, but thin, veneer of Christianity. They have allowed themselves to become somewhat involved: enough to be respectable but not enough to be uncomfortable. Their religion is a great, soft cushion. It protects them from the hard unpleasantness of life, while changing its place and shape to suit their convenience.

Healing This Wounded Earth

Healing This Wounded Earth

Those words are often as true today as they were when Stott wrote them in 1958 or thereabouts! And I suppose I want to reach out to those “nominal Christians.” Because my book was born out of a deep frustration that too many people seem to forget what they heard at church on Sunday when they go back into their workaday lives on Monday morning. And so often we don’t even realise what we are doing wrong, the effects our behaviour may be having beyond our own limited field of experience. We would often be horrified if we knew! So that’s why I wrote Healing this Wounded Earth: with Compassion, Spirit and the Power of Hope.

It is not just for Christians although it’s certainly a useful handbook for us. And Christ is of course at the heart of healing and compassion. The book was also written for and should appeal to those of all faiths or indeed simply those of Good Faith, who want to make a difference in the world, through finding and nurturing more compassion in their lives. The ideas are further enhanced by many inspirational quotations. I had great fun collecting these together, from the great world leaders and influencers past and present, people such as the Dalai Lama, Martin Luther King, Mother Theresa, and others. We would do so well to heed their wisdom. And the book is also practical, with lots of ideas to follow up, to bring a compassionate world nearer for us all. I’ve therefore included detailed endnotes and references, and a final Appendix, “Journey of Hope – Words into Action.”

So I really hope people not only enjoy reading it but make some changes in their lives as well, to make a contribution to healing our wonderful but deeply wounded earth.

My website can be found at www.eleanorstoneham.com where there is more information about the book, details of my background and links to my blogs.

Part 2: So what is the story behind that breakdown and completing the book?

I was running my own accountancy practice, absurdly overstretched and over stressed. And I was worried about what I saw around me. I could see so much self-centred, selfish behaviour, an alarming erosion of moral and ethical values, and a general lack of empathy and compassion for our fellow beings. The Me-Millennium, we’ve called it, and not without good reason.

It needed that breakdown and the convalescence spent lazily by a pool in the Turkish summer heat, to give me my Ah-hah moment: to inspire me to do something about this. My companion on my sun-lounger was Michael Ford’s biography of the spiritual writer and Roman Catholic priest Henri Nouwen, author of the best selling book The Wounded Healer. Of course! Nouwen was such a wonderful living example of the Wounded Healer; so wounded himself and through his own vulnerability such a source of healing for those he came in contact with. His books had helped me enormously. And something he had written about the need for healing the many problems of the world triggered a thought deep within me. That was it! I decided then and there to explore this further. How could we all help to heal the world through love and compassion, perhaps even through our own woundedness?

So I came back home from that holiday not only feeling much better for the sun and sea and relaxation, but also fired up to start my research. Amazingly the internet was then in its comparative infancy, and was nothing like the useful research tool it can be today. Frequent trips to Guildford University library were needed, where I spent day after fascinating day in their stack, surrounded by papers and journals and books and articles, collecting together the information I needed.

What was my background to qualify me for this task? I was a scientist. I’d written a scientific paper and a thesis to gain my PhD as a research postgraduate. For various reasons I had retrained as a Chartered Accountant, later adding the skills of a Tax Consultant, Independent Financial Adviser, and successful businesswoman to my bow. I even became a jobbing amateur theologian. Yes, in mid life I felt called to the Anglican priesthood, but was rejected at selection conference; I know they tell you it’s not rejection, but that’s really how it felt! I’m now an altar girl and verger in the Anglican Church, gardener and enthusiastic allotment holder. And I’ve experienced plenty of mental health care first hand! I had the eclectic knowledge and experience. I just needed to make sure I was up to date with my ideas.

So far so good. But what would I know about writing and publishing?

Realising this gap in my knowledge I took myself off to the internationally respected Winchester Writer’s Conference – twice – and learnt much about the whole writing and publishing business. I spoke to and networked with “wannabe” and published authors, publishers, agents, marketing consultants, soaking up lots of advice, but they were all very secular in their approach and ethos. One agent told me that mentioning Jesus in my draft script was a huge mistake! No one would want to touch it! Then I bumped into that well-known Christian whodunnit author, Veronica Heley, who in a passing comment suggested I look up the Association of Christian Writers. I’m so glad I did. Networking with members really helped me focus on my faith in my writing; they were a great support network and of course nice people to be with!

And I also found O Books who liked my kind of book!

So here I am with Healing this Wounded Earth: with Compassion, Spirit and the Power of Hope. The original book title was Ripples of Hope, inspired by a Robert Kennedy speech at Cape Town in 1966:

Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.

The publisher didn’t like that title so it was changed, but I still pray that people will not only enjoy reading the book, and discover more about themselves and the lives they lead, but also use it to help them start their very own Ripples of Hope for a better world for us all.

The Truth Behind ‘A Darkly Hidden Truth’ – Introducing Donna Fletcher Crow and the Monastery Murders

Researcher at work: Donna Fletcher Crow amongst the tombstones

Researcher at work: Donna Fletcher Crow amongst the tombstones

CONGRATULATIONS to Donna Fletcher Crow on the publication of A Darkly Hidden Truth, the second book in her ‘Monastery Murders’ series with Monarch Books. Donna is another writer I met in the ACW (Association of Christian Writers) facebook group: she is the author of 36 books, mostly novels dealing with British history, her best known work being the award-winning Glastonbury, an Arthurian grail-search epic that covers 15 centuries of English history. Book 1 in the ‘Monastery Murders’ series, A Very Private Grave, was her re-entry into publishing after a 10 year hiatus, and she is now at work on book 3, An Unholy Communion, scheduled for 2012.

Without further ado, then, over to Donna to whet your appetite for adventure:

The Truth Behind ‘A Darkly Hidden Truth’

Wednesday 28 September was the big day! It was circled on my calendar. Was it on yours? Well, probably not — or if it was, probably not for the same reason: 28 September was the official release date for A Darkly Hidden Truth: The Monastery Murders 2, from Monarch Books. Book 1 in the series, A Very Private Grave, has been out for just a year and many readers have been kind enough to ask, “When will the next one be out?” So I’m hoping a few others will have the date marked as well.

Those who have read A Very Private Grave will know that Felicity Howard, my set-the-world-on-fire, headstrong American heroine learns something even more important than the identity of the murderer of her beloved Father Dominic (and just in the nick of time to save her own life) — she learns that she doesn’t know everything.

And she also learns, in keeping with the theme of the book, that Christianity is valid, that personal holiness can be a reality. So now, Felicity — who never did anything by halves — is off to become a nun. Which means she can’t possibly help Father Antony find the valuable missing icon. And then her overwhelming mother turns up unexpectedly. And a good friend turns up murdered…

Although this is a contemporary mystery series the historical backgrounds are of great importance to me. As a matter of fact, with each book I started with the historical story I wanted to tell and wove my modern plot around that.

In A Very Private Grave I tell the marvellous story of St Cuthbert and the Christianisation of the north of England as Antony and Felicity flee from The Holy Isle of Lindisfarne to Jarrow, Whitby, Whithorn and Durham, chasing and being chased by murderers.

A Darkly Hidden Truth, in keeping with the theme of motherhood, tells the story of two of the most remarkable women writers of the middle ages: Julian of Norwich, whose Revelations of Divine Love was the first published book in English to be written by a woman, and Margery Kempe, who wrote The Book of Margery Kempe, the first autobiography in the English language, even though she was illiterate.

And once again, Felicity’s journey of discernment that takes her from the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham to the inner sanctums of the Knights Hospitaller in London and on through the most sodden parts of the Norfolk Broads reveals even greater truths about herself than about the murderer she seeks.

Look for it in fine bookstores now!

Book Cover: A Very Private Grave

A Very Private Grave

Book Cover: A Darkly Hidden Truth

A Darkly Hidden Truth

To whet your appetite further, a brief review by Mike Orenduff, 2011 Lefty Award Winner, The Pot Thief Who Studied Einstein:

Readers who enjoyed ‘A Very Private Grave’, the first in Donna Fletcher Crow’s Monastery Murders, will be delighted with the second in the series. ‘A Darkly Hidden Truth’ finds Felicity Howard tangled again in a mystery with roots in ancient church history, in this case all the way back to the founding of the Knights Hospitaller in 1061. With this book, Crow establishes herself as the leading practitioner of modern mystery entwined with historical fiction. The historical sections are much superior to The Da Vinci Code because she doesn’t merely recite the facts; she makes the events come alive by telling them through the eyes of participants. The contemporary story is skillfully character-driven, suspended between the deliberate and reflective life of religious orders in the UK and Felicity’s “Damn the torpedoes, full steam ahead” American impetuousness. Her descriptions of the English characters read like an updated and edgy version of Barbara Pym. A Darkly Hidden Truth weaves ancient puzzles and modern murder with a savvy but sometimes unwary protagonist into a seamless story. You won’t need a bookmark — you’ll read it in a single sitting despite other plans.

… and for those who want still more: visit www.donnafletchercrow.com for donna’s blog, a video for A Very Private Grave and pictures from Donna’s garden and research trips.

My thanks to Donna for providing this guest post.

So you want to be published? First, you need to be able to write: Ali Hull explains how not to be rejected…

Ali Hull

Ali Hull

IF YOU’VE BEEN in the Christian book trade for any length of time, odds are you’ve heard of Ali Hull; you may even know her. But if not, that’s not surprising: she’s one of those remarkable people who work away in the background, helping authors turn their ideas into books, one of the unsung heroes without whom the book trade as we know it today simply wouldn’t exist.

Ali is a Commissioning Editor who has been commissioning books since 1999, and is currently working for Lion Hudson. She has edited over one hundred titles, and worked with most of the leading UK Christian authors, including Jeff Lucas, Nick Page and Adrian Plass. She has also been running (and speaking on) writers’ courses since 2003 and is an active member of the ACW (Association of Christian Writers) facebook group. In this post she explains to would-be authors…

How not to be rejected

One of my favourite jobs, as a Commissioning Editor, is going through the slush pile. There are two reasons for this – the first is the hope of striking gold, in the form of an excellent manuscript or idea: well presented, clearly written, properly thought through, and ideal for our market.

A girl can dream …

And the other reason? Sheer amusement.

I have a file on my laptop labelled ‘Insane proposals’. And while it is not full, it should be, and would be, if more of these arrived by email, rather than by post.

Most of those that do come by post come without that simplest of accompaniment – the SAE. Our website specifies that we need one, and won’t respond without one: people do not send them. Having ignored the guidelines – and most publishers do put these onto their websites – what else do writers do that ensures their work hits the bin in a matter of seconds?

They don’t look at what we publish: they don’t look at what anyone publishes. They send novels that are 200,000 words long. They send the Bible, in rhyming couplets. They send short stories. None of these fit our list.

No matter how often you tell me, I do not believe that God dictated your book to you.

Their writing is poor. Their stories have no shape (I don’t deal with fiction, but see memoir and autobiography – and this needs to be as well structured as a good novel). Their characters are two-dimensional at best: their dialogue lacks credibility. Most of us hate being bored, but we are quick to bore others. Their descriptions rely heavily on adjectives and adverbs; they don’t know when to show, when to tell, or what I mean by showing not telling. They wouldn’t go near a GP who hadn’t studied, yet want to let their writing loose on the world without ever having thought about honing their writing skills. They don’t understand how language works. They often don’t want to write – they want to be published. You have to love writing for its own sake.

They have no idea why their books should be picked up and bought, or read. They have a completely misguided belief – make that a delusion – that, as soon as their books hit the shelves, the bookshop will be surrounded and the shop assistants crushed in the rush to seize their precious title.

Finally, no matter how often you tell me, I do not believe that God dictated your book to you. What I do find interesting is the good writers – who could perhaps be forgiven for thinking that He had a hand in their work – never claim it. The poorer the writing, the more likely it that God is apparently responsible for every inappropriate word and misplaced comma.

Whatever you do, take your writing seriously, and make it the best writing it can possibly be.

What remedy? Waterstone’s stocks quite a few books on writing and being published: and my three current favourites are Write to be published by Nicola Morgan: Creative Writing, edited by Linda Anderson, and How to Write, edited by Philip Oltermann. Join the Association of Christian Writers. Read, read, analyse and read. And there are courses out there, and if you want one that will give you access to a commissioning editor, as well as the former Publishing Director at Authentic media, check out www.lakesSchool.com

But whatever you do, take your writing seriously, and make it the best writing it can possibly be.

Links Revisited (and more)

Last but not least: all of the books Ali mentions should be available to order from most bookshops, not just Waterstone’s, including any Christian bookshop with a mainstream wholesaler’s account such as those signed up to Gardners’ Hive. Any Christian booksellers reading, please feel free to shout out for your shop if you can supply these books…

Introducing Fiona Veitch Smith and Crafty Publishing: David and the Hairy Beast claws its way to market

Fiona Veitch Smith

Fiona Veitch Smith

I MET FIONA VEITCH SMITH online via the Association of Christian Writers facebook group, where she was telling us a bit about her experiences of trying to persuade Christian bookshops to stock her new children’s book, David and the Hairy Beast.

Curious to know more, I checked out her website where I found, to my delight, an excerpt — and loved it. Hopefully, you will too — and you might even find your customers like it as well, but there’s only one way to find out about that…

I invited Fiona to tell us all about it. She writes:

David and the Hairy Beast claws its way to market

When we read of bookshop chains shutting down, publishing contracts becoming scarcer than a footballer without a super injunction and the bogey man of the e-book market changing the way we consume books, then you would be forgiven for raising an eyebrow at a new company launching its pilot title – in hard copy. Add to that the fact that the pilot is ‘self-published’ and the more business savvy among you may well be tutting in disdain. And yet, that’s what Crafty Publishing is doing. My husband Rod and I felt called to start Crafty Publishing using some of the redundancy money he received after being ‘released’ from the NHS. Our vision is to test out the market and distribution chains with a series of children’s picture books that I’ve written and then, if all goes well, start taking on other titles.

But we’re not going into this blindly. I am not a wannabe author who is so desperate to see her name in print that I’d sell the family silver to see it happen. I am already published and produced in a variety of genre including theatre, film and books. I’m currently working on a non-fiction book contract with Lion Hudson and a devotional booklet contract with CWR as well as continuing to work on a series of ghost-written children’s books for the secular market. In addition, I have worked as a freelance editor for Tafelberg Publishing in South Africa as well as for a number of magazines (in the UK and SA).

So why am I publishing my own work? I got a taste for the business side of self-publishing about eight years ago. My first book, Donovon’s Rainbow, was published in South Africa by Vineyard International Publishing (who have subsequently discontinued their children’s line). The book was not distributed beyond Vineyard bookshops in the UK, so when I moved back here in 2002 I asked permission from the publisher to distribute it. Effectively then I took on the job of a self-publisher. I entered the book for the Writers’ News best self-published / independently published children’s book of the year award in 2002 and won. The award gave me confidence to tackle the market and I was able to distribute the book to around 20 bookshops in the UK (secular and Christian).

It was a steep curve and I quickly had to learn about things like wholesale discounts the pros and cons of sale or return, the horrors of cold calling and the shaky financial footing of independent booksellers. I also realised that the title I was trying to sell did not fit easily into existing age categories and that the cover made it look as if it was for a younger readership than it actually was. Despite that, the book went into profit, but we would not do it the same way again.

So when my husband and I decided to launch our own title this year, we had some background to draw on. In addition, since 2002, the internet has become a much more effective marketing tool and as he is a professional software developer, he has been able to tackle that side of things.

But it’s still a scary world out there for a new publisher, not least when dealing with some bookshop managers who consider any ‘retelling’ of a bible story with the same abhorrence they normally reserve for Satan (or Rob Bell). However, there are some great folk too and in the month since the title’s been launched, five bookshops have agreed to stock us and our online sales are ticking over very nicely.

David and the Hairy Beast

David and the Hairy Beast

Our pilot title is called David and the Hairy Beast (retailing at £5.99) and is the first in a series of six books about the childhood of King David. The illustrations are by my design partner, Amy Barnes. We’re working on the next book, David and the Kingmaker, now. It will be ready for distribution in October, in time for the Christmas market. We’ll see how sales go in the New Year before launching the third in the series David and the Giant.

To find out more, please visit www.craftypublishing.com

Fiona Veitch Smith
e: Fiona AT thecraftywriter.com
www.thecraftywriter.com
www.craftypublishing.com
facebook.com/pages/Crafty-Publishing/229271997105270

Opinion – Support your High Street – Local retailers and small shops

Listening to Liz Pilgrim, a riot-hit small retailer from Ealing on BBC R4 tonight was an inspiration, providing a strident rallying call for support to the High Street.

Events of this past week have demonstrated that the UK High Street is hurting badly – in more ways than one. Shops in riot affected areas will have an uphill struggle to get their businesses back on track. Retailers everywhere are finding it hard work to make headway against strong and adverse economic headwinds.

If these local businesses are forced to leave their High Streets, it will be very hard, if not impossible, to open them again. Does that matter? Yes, I think it does. Those communities losing local traders are negatively impacted in a considerable way. We could all do much more to help – by stopping to think whether we can buy locally, by switching our purchasing from the internet to local shops (where possible) and from chain stores and supermarkets to the local trader. Yes, there’s often a price differential and I know that we all have time constraints but there is a positive social impact.

Some of you might say that it’s already too late. It’s not. You can make a real difference locally.

So much of retail in the UK is comprised of fairly small units and these outlets provide considerable levels of local employment in so many of our towns and cities. It cannot be all about Tesco’s and Debenhams.

Use local markets wherever possible as these too continue to help commercial life to thrive in our neighbourhoods and communities. Yes, it’s hard to do this but it’s also worthwhile. At the moment, any help for smaller retailers, and sole traders in particular, is very welcome.

 If you agree with this please post it elsewhere and let’s help bring more footfall to our High Streets. Do we really want to live in a homogenous world? Do we want all of retail life to move online? We all have to buy ‘stuff’. The only question is; where will we actually do our purchasing?

So go on – Support your own High Street. Support your local retailer. Support your small shops. Support your local Market. You might even enjoy yourself!

Christian Resources Together 2011 – Full workshop text (Eddie Olliffe)

ALBATROSS, DODO OR JEWEL

‘Is there still a place for Christian bookshops to sparkle on the High Street’?

Introduction

Last year I was asked to give a lecture on Christian Retailing to the Librarians’ Christian Fellowship and Steve Briars of CRE invited me to deliver similar material at this year’s Christian Resources Together.  I am delighted to do so – although the two audiences are quite different!  Since that lecture in April 2010, things have moved on a pace and we are learning to live with constant challenges and change. However, there is no lack of evidence that we are involved in changing people’s lives on a daily basis.

I aim to address four incontrovertible facts facing all Christian retailers;

  •  The UK is increasingly secularised and less open to Christian forms of spirituality
  • Formats, methods and channels – but not the content – are changing almost on a daily basis
  • Consumers, and particularly younger people, are not buying as many physical books as before
  • The Christian industry – Booksellers and Publishers – is undergoing a serious and prolonged period of retrenchment and rationalisation

I have invited three practising retailers -

  • Andrew Lacey, Manager of GLO Bookshop, Motherwell, Scotland
  • Melanie Carroll, Owner of Unicorn Tree Books and Crafts, Lincoln
  • Steve Mitchell, Retail Director of Wesley Owen

each representing different facets of our trade – to address this question;

  • How can our trade best communicate the Good News in an increasingly post ‘bricks and mortar’ era and to a progressively digital generation?

Which of these three images describe and/or sum up today’s Christian book trade;

  • Albatross; large seabird, majestic in flight or as in Coleridge, a ‘burden or encumbrance’
  • Dodo; flightless bird known only in history; extinct, long gone, utterly dead and finished
  • Jewel; beautiful to look at, highly valued. precious to its owner, ‘the jewel in the crown’

A brief trade overview

  • The very first UK Christian Bookshop opened in Derby in 1810 – Just over 200 years ago!
  • The Derby and Derbyshire Auxiliary of the Religious Tract Society opened this shop in the Cock Pit area of Derby. It then moved to The Strand around 1900 (where it was renamed The Bible and Book Shop) and on to Irongate before finishing up in its present location in Queens Street. Subsequent owners have included; Scripture Union, STL/Wesley Owen and now it is owned and operated by Koorong of Australia.
  • Just to add ecumenical balance, the next Christian bookshop was opened in Bristol in 1813 by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. SPCK as a society had been established much earlier in 1698 by Dr Thomas Bray, a clergyman. SPCK went on to open their second shop in London in 1836.
  • Many commentators would argue that to be a truly national retail chain, you need around 300 to 600 outlets to be represented in the main towns and cities. No Christian operator has ever come close although at one point in the 1990’s there were probably over 600 Christian Bookshops of some shape or size across the UK, but most operated independently.
  • Those numbers have dwindled and are dwindling still. There is some evidence of new players entering the market year-on-year but, in my view, numbers of Christian bookshops are consistently down.  I would estimate there are around 220 bookshops in the Christian niche capable of carrying out a viable trade.
  • Due to its unique history, Northern Ireland remains the strongest market for Christian product when compared to its population size; this region continues to sell more Christian books per head than anywhere else in the UK. Scottish shops are mostly sited in the major central belt conurbations and there are virtually no Christian bookshops in Wales outside of the Cardiff area.

The ‘Missional’ nature of Christian bookselling

  • For the past 30 years I’ve had the privilege of being engaged in the vocation of Christian literature distribution in its various forms. I have been involved as a bookseller, an author, a distributor and a publisher. I retain a fundamental belief in the importance of maintaining a Christian witness on the High Streets of our country. I therefore cannot but help feel that the loss of any Christian shops on the High Street is detrimental and I, for one, mourn the demise of those that have closed.
  • Controversially, I have long pondered whether the historical separation of Christian bookshops into a specific subset of the wider book trade will turn out in the longer term to have been a mistake? Would it have been better for our specialist outlets simply to have remained part of the wider general bookselling community as it is elsewhere in the world? To outsiders, our bookshop names must inevitably seem a little twee and out-of-touch. Does such a separation help or hinder our aspirations for engaging in Christian witness?

A quick look at the wider social environment

  • The UK is a largely secularised, post-Christian society with a significant multi-cultural population. There is clear anti-Christian bias throughout the media and in politics and militant atheism is on the increase. Christian TV & Radio has very low penetration, making product mass marketing difficult.
  • Regular church attendance is in decline in most of the traditional denominations. However, there are bright spots; the Black majority and Hillsong churches are growing. Cathedral attendance is increasing and the Emerging Church movement gaining ground.
  • There is a general decline in book readership in society; not just amongst Christians.  Competing media and digital attractions vie for our time and the lack of time affects all of us however much we enjoy buying and reading books

Some thoughts about channels and digitalisation

  • The way books are being bought is changing rapidly. An experienced international bookseller said to me only last week that, in over 30 years, he had not known a time of such momentous change as there has been in the past two years. Someone else has described the current upheaval as ‘a perfect storm’.
  • There are enormous structural and societal changes taking place. These have been described as being as immense as the transition from parchment to the printing press. Most are outside of our control and are being imposed on us from outside of the trade. It therefore should go without saying that it is foolish to fall out amongst ourselves over changes which are so outside of our control and which are affecting the whole of retail.
  • Woolworths, the 45 Borders UK stores and the Irish Bookseller, Hughes & Hughes have all left the UK High Street in the past couple of years. Since Christmas this year, WH Smith bought 22 British Bookshops and Stationers stores, Borders USA entered Chapter 11 – and is effectively bankrupt – and the REDgroup in Australia went bust leaving big UK publisher debts. HMV put their Waterstones chain up for sale selling it for a knock-down £53m in the last few weeks to a Russian tycoon.
  • Supermarkets now sell one in every five books purchased and UK Libraries are under massive pressure due to imminent Government spending cuts.
  • The issue here is primarily about the explosion of differing routes to market. Print no longer dominates in terms of the delivery of ideas. Content will continue to remain key.
  • There are parallels with the development of digital television. More channels = fewer viewers.   In our field, more ‘books’ (however those are defined; print or digital) equals a dispersed customer base which is no longer dependent on the traditional bookseller.
  • Due to digital delivery channels, it is easier to self-publish now than at any other time. Blogs and social networks proliferate but some would argue that this only leads to the problem of quantity at the expense of quality.
  • Territorial Rights are clearly a problem in the context of a global marketplace. Old-style publishing rights are not always recognised in the internet environment as single copy orders are taken and shipped – often across national boundaries – on a daily basis.
  • Paradoxically, more printed books are being published year-on-year in the UK. Book production figures in the USA rose 5% last year despite a huge increase in eBook sales.

Impact of the Internet esp. Amazon, downloads and ePublishing

  • Online sales make up 17% of all UK retail spending – and growing.
  • Digital downloading is beginning to affect the sale of print items, especially newspapers.
  • Book purchasing via the internet is no longer an exception, it is the norm. Amazon recorded their first £10bn sales quarter in early 2011.
  • Several eBook Readers are competing for attention and rapidly gaining traction in the market; Sony’s eReader (Waterstones), the iPad (Apple Stores) and Kindle (Amazon).
  • There has been an inexorable rise in the sale of eBooks with PA figures showing that eBooks grew to 6% (£180m) of £3.1bn UK book market. This may grow to 10% in 2011.
  • Amazon are selling more eBooks than paperbacks; 105 on Kindle to every 100 in print. Four authors have already sold over 1 million eBooks each. Amazon lists 945,000 Kindle generated eBooks. Analysts expect 2011 sales to be $5.4bn in Kindle generated eBooks.
  • However, despite these figures, over 90% of sales continue to take place via print. Black and white text books are struggling but print Bibles and Children’s books remain strong sales lines.

Where might all this change be heading? What is the future for our trade?

  • Retailing is hard graft for many categories. Shopping habits are changing fast and there is much less time available for those trips to the High Street. When time is found, then competition for time and money is increasingly fierce.  Supermarkets dominate.
  • BBPA figures earlier this year show that the quintessential English Public House is closing down at the rate of 30 per week.
  • One in seven retail outlets in the UK were surveyed as being empty in September 2010. UK shop leases are the Achilles heel for all retailers. Most are expensive, with ‘upward only’ increases and, if not carefully drawn up, extremely inflexible. Many businesses struggle with high establishment costs and Business Rates for non-charity shops are high.
  • Christian bookshops are obviously not immune – and many are having a torrid time. There have been some major shake-ups in the past couple of years, with a lot of shops going and, thankfully, a few coming.  The SPCK meltdown in 2008 and the IBS-STL debacle at the end of 2009 has badly destabilised Christian retail in this country.
  • Demographics also conspire against these specialist shops. Church attendance in the traditional denominations is largely declining and newer Churches with their younger audiences, such as Hillsong, are self-contained in terms of their resource requirements.

Final thoughts

  • The challenge we face today is to ask, what should the Christian bookshop of the 21st century look like?  Will it, as an entity, soon cease to exist, lost as an irrelevance in our increasingly secular world or can it be reinvented in an increasingly ‘post-bricks and mortar’ era and for a progressively digital society?
  • Although I sincerely wish CLC, Faith Mission and Koorong well in their endeavours, I am no longer convinced of the chain model when it comes to running Christian bookshops. For a variety of reasons, so many major book chains have simply failed over the years. It would appear that, in many cases, their high central costs have acted as the drag on the business and this, in a crisis, hinders rather than helps. Once I would have argued strongly for the efficiencies of scale and the need for central buying that the chain model provides. Now I am no longer so sure.
  • In my view, there is still a lot to be said for a very good independent shop operating solely at the local level. Perhaps we’ve just gone full circle?
  • In my view, internet retailers can win every time on the basis of price, range and convenience.  If ‘Bricks and Mortar’ booksellers are to succeed in the future, they have to provide that illusive and intangible ‘sense of experience’ to their customers.
  • Nick Page has written elsewhere that ‘average’ is no longer good enough.  For a future, these bookshops have to be ‘really good’ and run by people who love books and love selling books. They have to be ‘exciting, memorable, fascinating’, places where events are held and reading encouraged. In short, such a bookshop must have ‘personality’!

A final meditation from 2 Corinthians (NIV);

2:17‘Unlike so many, we do not peddle the word of God for profit. On the contrary, in Christ we speak before God with sincerity, like men sent from God’.

4:1 ‘Therefore, since through God’s mercy we have this ministry, we do not lose heart. Rather, we have renounced secret and shameful ways; we do not use deception, nor do we distort the word of God. On the contrary, by setting forth the truth plainly we commend ourselves to every man’s conscience in the sight of God’.

Eddie Olliffe is Charity Manager at CWR in Farnham, Surrey, UK

Glenn Myers: Why I started telling stories to tell the truth

Glenn Myers

Glenn Myers

SOME FOOD FOR THOUGHT over the weekend from Glenn Myers, indie publisher and author at Fizz Books as well as Mission Journalist and Website Editor at WEC International. Glenn has published extensively with Authentic Media, Christian Focus, Scripture Union and WEC Publications, titles ranging from his fresh-out-of-college World Christian Starter Kit through to the more recent Life Lessons (Christian Focus, 2010).

Like so many others, Glenn has been watching the chaos within the Christian book trade over the last few years with some concern; here he reflects on the power and importance of storytelling and wonders whether that’s part of what’s missing from many of our bookshops…

Why I started telling stories to tell the truth

I have worked for around twenty years in mission journalism (and you may even have stocked some of my books), but I rediscovered something while walking the dog one summer evening about six years ago: my first love was comic fiction. So I went part-time at work and wrote a novel, didn’t sell it, formed my own publisher, and am now discovering the joys of indie publishing — a familiar enough story.

It has opened my eyes, though, to the power and virtues of storytelling. Here are a few:

  • Humans have an insatiable desire for stories.
  • We learn truth through stories, by putting ourselves somewhere in the intersection between the story we are living and the story we are being told. Who, for example, hasn’t heard the story of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector and not wanted to pray like the Tax Collector?
  • Stories bring a heart-learning, not a head-learning: exactly, in other words, where we want the gospel to go.
  • Three-quarters of the Bible is story.
  • Jesus told stories all the time (except when he was teaching his disciples). In fact, when he talks about the farmer sowing the seed, he’s not talking about ‘preaching the gospel’, he’s talking about telling stories.
  • Jesus’ stories were (a) highly entertaining and (b) designed to make the hearers yearn for reconciliation with God, for a better world.
  • Stories give people space to think things through for themselves, and thus learn deeper and better. Stories fit people’s hearts.

My experience of Christian bookshops is that they are not nearly so story-filled as our culture or our Bible. And I agree with Philip Yancey that it is curious what books Christian bookshops typically don’t stock.

To take a couple of random examples: I’ve just finished The Language of God by the former head of the Human Genome Project, Francis Collins. Published in the UK by Simon and Schuster, it’s a moving story of Francis Collins’ conversion to Christ, and it’s also as accomplished an account of the differing roles of science and faith as I have ever read. Or take the novels of Marilynne Robinson, which have won both the Pulitzer Prize and the Orange Prize for fiction and are just magnificent in their accounts of grace and prodigality within a context of Christian ministry and life. That’s before you start trawling the ocean of classic novels with their redemptive themes. It would be an interesting exercise to get Christian people to list the novels and biographies that cause their hearts to burn and yearn after God. And then stock them.

I expect there are many difficulties with this idea. But Christian bookshops have plenty of difficulties anyway! And isn’t this where Christian bookshops belong? Imagine a curated collection of novels and biographies, from whatever publisher, that are (a) very good and (b) cause people to yearn to meet God. This would be a bookshop that truly was for the High Street; that had a wonderful offering for anyone who was looking for a book for themselves or a present for a friend; and that truly did sow seeds of life.

Nice to dream anyway…

  • Which novels and biographies, as Glenn puts it, make your heart “burn and yearn after God”?
  • Do you stock fiction in your shop?
  • If not, why not?
  • If so, which titles/publishers would you recommend to other booksellers wanting to get started in this area or expand their range?

Mike Norbury retires from Kevin Mayhew: Reflections from Spain

Mike Norbury

Mike Norbury

CONGRATULATIONS to the one and only Mike Norbury as he rolls up his sleeves and relaxes in sunny Spain following his retirement from Kevin Mayhew Ltd — and what a day to retire: Mike’s 65th was May 21st 2011, the day the world ended and we were all left behind. Mike, however, has never been one to be left behind, so when he told me he’d retired, I invited him to offer us some reflections from his years in this turbulent trade… and if he was feeling brave, I suggested, perhaps he’d like to take a tentative look towards the future?

See below Mike’s ruminations for some brief notes about Kevin Mayhew accounts in the newly dawned post-Norbury era. That’s enough from me: over to Mike…

I HAD BEEN Sales Manager for a buying group that works into the newsagents and card shops industries but had been getting a lot of attack from “the management” especially when I refused to support a Hallowe’en promotion they were doing for one of our linked distributors. I was looking elsewhere and, having applied for various positions and got nowhere, God prompted me to simply write a letter to this company in Exeter telling them my current situation. The answer to that was an invitation to see Steve Thornett at Christian Art which resulted in a job!

Following the merger between Christian Art and Kingsway and the redundancies that followed I spent a short time freelancing, but one evening received a phone call asking if I was interested in a full time job: the company was Kevin Mayhew Ltd and that was almost sixteen years ago. I think the trade was already starting to change at that time although perhaps we couldn’t see it. There had already been “warnings” from the USA about future trends but, as often happens, perhaps we ignored them.

The two most obvious changes which the trade has had to face (apart from changes of distribution) have been the move in music away from CDs towards downloads and the decline in the purchasing of books from bookshops. The former has been partially addressed by companies allowing retailers to link to their downloads and sell them through their websites (as Kevin Mayhew does), but this is an area that requires very careful marketing and promotion. The latter, that of book purchasing, is far more complex.

I remember going into a store in East Anglia and being told that we were selling hymn books direct through Amazon cheaper than that retailer could purchase them through us; a quick investigation found that we had not — and incidentally still haven’t — given Amazon trade terms: the hymn books could have only got onto Amazon via one source, a Carlisle source. Later Amazon dealings became more open as they advertised the sources as part of their marketing.

So the growth of Amazon has certainly had an effect, but I believe that there is a greater one: whereas there has certainly been a decline in books aimed at the more traditional denominations, the decline in more evangelical/charismatic has, to me, been more apparent. The truth, backed up several years ago by a survey of ministers done in Derby, is that as the church’s evangelical side is growing — thus recent increases in numbers attending church rather than the previous decades of decline — so too very important elements have meant a decline in reading. As an example, in the church I attend, out of a membership of about 250, I am the sixth or seventh eldest. The vast majority are younger families with children and jobs. Also we tend to be a church where people are involved in ministry, not only within our congregation but “Go ye into the world…” with Christians Against Poverty, Street Pastors, Healing On The Streets, Schools Ministry, Community Cafe, Feeding The Roofless, etc. etc., all ministries which not only take us into the highways and byways but — at long last — have straddled the denominational divides that have previously restricted the one church of Christ being “seen” in the community, bringing brothers and sisters in Christ together representing and reflecting Jesus outside the confines of our buildings.

Talking to fellow Street Pastors, the majority admit that they now read far less than they used to because they are spending more time in ministry and, as part of that, in prayer – either in groups or by themselves.

I have often felt that everything we sell in our shops is a “luxury” rather than a necessity. When I have mentioned this to customers, almost all have said straightaway, “Apart from the Bible, of course!” Then we start reflecting on how many Bibles each of us has in our homes already!

This is, of course, a simplification of the situation. It would take a book or a ridiculously long and tedious report to put down all the facts and incidents that have changed our trade during the last twenty years or so — and another to look into the future. However our emphasis needs to be better focused: the expansion of the Kingdom. After all, that’s the only reason we’re here, isn’t it?

Below are three actions that I think are very positive actions to develop trade in shops, most of which have previously been mooted from time to time:

Re-address the stock balance in the shops: if books and CDs are declining, what is increasing? Answer: Better quality gifts and greetings cards. I am so delighted that Kevin Mayhew Ltd decided just prior to the recession to develop these areas.

Talk to the churches: hold once a year meetings for some of them; hold schools/junior church evenings; take the pastors/ministers/priests out for a coffee every so often and talk to them about THEIR needs and how you can help them.

Introduce other products and services: do you have areas in your shop where you could sell products which would attract Joe Public in off the street? Our trade does tend to be a bit exclusive. I remember one of my first visits to Northampton and seeing that Joe Storey had completely filled one window with gift wrapping paper at a silly price — people were coming into the shop to buy it and suddenly finding cards, CDs and children’s books they were also buying. In North Wales one shop is also the main stationery outlet for their town whilst another sells maps, tourism books, children’s books and secular cards as well as having a snack bar and internet café, which draw in both locals and visitors. Many have poo-pooed the Living Oasis concept of having a quality coffee shop at the front of the store, but what an excellent way of bringing people in to find what else we have to offer! What else could we do? What else are we doing already that others may like to copy? Is your local Post Office closing: could you invest in developing an area in your store to take it? (Might sound extreme but you never know).

OK, that’s enough of my ramblings as I intend to write neither a book nor a report!!!

Last Saturday was my 65th birthday and I have no doubt whatsoever that God made it clear that I was to officially retire from fulltime work on that day — OK, I know all the jokes about Christians never retire and that I’ll be far busier once I do!! — but after a year in which I lost my lovely wife, Jackie, very suddenly from illness, it is obvious I need a bit of a rest. Thus I am writing this near Mazarrón in Spain, having a well-earned break.

Oh yes, I shall be at the High Leigh event next month and you will see me at other events as the company has asked me to help them in that way, and I’m sure there will be other ways in which I will be involved. Nevertheless this will give me time to rest, reflect, pray and seek — with emphasis on the rest at the moment! — and see what God’s plans are for me in the future, while I’m still young enough to fulfill them! I got a message from friends in Bedford who are both turing 65 within these few weeks which said, “Welcome to the OAP club.” My reply was very simply, “I have no problem with the P but what’s this about OA?”

It has been my privilege and pleasure to have served God full time in this amazing Christian Distribution Industry. Visits to shops have developed into an extension of church, a wonderful church without walls that crossed the differences of denomination and stream. To have true friends — fellow worshippers — spread across these islands from Jan in Orkney to Julie in Jersey and from Padraig in Cork to Graham on Lindisfarne is an amazing thing! Thank you to all of you for your support, friendship, love and prayers over the years. I pray that you will each be guided by God in the direction that He has in mind for your respective shops. Bless you.

After Mike…

Mike’s position with Kevin Mayhew was Retail Trade Manager. Mark Lee takes over Mike’s accounts in the Midlands, North, Scotland and Ireland; Malcolm Corden takes over his key accounts in the south.

A new Sales Manager, Nicola Bullivant, has also been appointed, taking over from Tim Messinger who has left to develop his own events management business.

Jonny Gallant, Diet Coke and eBooks: into the future with Alban Books

Jonny Gallant, MD, Alban Books

Jonny Gallant, MD, Alban Books

MY THANKS to Alban Books‘ new Managing Director, Jonny Gallant, for his prompt response to my invitation to introduce himself in his new role. Jonny writes:

IT WAS WITH SOME TREPIDATION that I accepted Phil’s kind offer of writing a short guest piece for the UKCBD blog by way of introducing myself as the new Managing Director for Alban Books. Should I attempt to write some short biography, lightening the dullness of it with references to my passion for cricket or my increasingly worrying addiction to diet coke? No – it would still be boring and a bit too self-centred. Should I write some sort of ‘State of the Trade’ mission statement? No – I’m desperately under-qualified. Should I write about all the great things that Alban does and I hope will do in the coming years? No – too much like marketing.

Perhaps I can work all those aspects together into a form that Phil will be happy to put up on this esteemed trade mouthpiece. Here’s a shot:

About seven or eight years ago, at the dawn of my career in publishing, I joked with a friend at Canongate that digital books were undoubtedly coming, but hopefully we’d both be retired before it happened. On reflection, that seems spectacularly naïve, but I think that may have been how 90% of people in publishing felt at the time: “Let’s keep our heads down and get on with these lovely blocks of paper and ink and hopefully it will all be OK”.

When I moved down to London and ended up working for Alma Books, the whole company’s philosophy was (and remains) rooted to the idea of the “book as an aesthetic artefact”. I was happy to exploit all the digital world had to offer in terms of marketing and promotion, but an eBook still felt like a very distant prospect.

I returned to Edinburgh to take my first job in Christian publishing at Saint Andrew Press and found that Christian publishing brought with it a whole new range of challenges beyond the impending ‘Digital Armageddon’. It’s been an extremely turbulent few years in the trade since I started at Saint Andrew Press – the SPCK/Brewer Brothers debacle, the demise of Borders, Waterstones’ Hub, STL and Wesley Owen, the list goes on… My final year at Saint Andrew Press proved to be a turbulent one too and I’m glad that Saint Andrew Press’ future now seems more secure at Hymns Ancient & Modern and they have some brilliant books coming out this year.

When my predecessor, Wendy Rimmington, was offered a job she couldn’t refuse at Nelson Thornes, I was fortunate enough to be chosen to take up the helm at Alban. I’ve now been here for three weeks and am greatly impressed by the excellent team that has been built in the course of Alban’s 16-year history. Their diligence and commitment to a list of some six-thousand titles and our thousands of trade and direct customers is our greatest asset. We will have to tackle the great challenges faced by the book industry as a whole – some harder than others – but the opportunities are even greater… But you know all this already. With our fantastic range of publishers, Abingdon Press, Augsburg Fortress Publishers, Ave Maria Press, Eerdmans, Hendrickson Publishers and Orbis Books, I’m really looking forward to working with my colleagues to steer a clear path through Alban’s exciting future.

Jonny Gallant
Managing Director
Alban Books Ltd
Edinburgh

Personally I’m hoping that Jonny can be persuaded to say a little more about the ‘Digital Armageddon’ and how Alban Books in particular are dealing with it: the end may not have been nigh last weekend despite all the hype from the USA’s prophets of doom, but unless the Christian book trade begins to get to grips with this particular publishing revolution, I suspect the end may well be nigh for even more bookshops — perhaps some publishers too — before too much more time passes…

What topics would like to see Jonny exploring further if we can persuade him, and what questions would you like to put to him in his new role?

Desert Wells: Bridging the divide between life-in-church and life-in-the-world

DESCRIBED BY THE PUBLISHERS, Darton, Longman & Todd, as written for “anyone who knows deep down that they would like to live and love differently, [Desert Wells] is a fresh approach: ten original short stories written to help us explore paths that deepen our humanity, such as slowing down, listening, forgiving – living in the present.”

I invited Alice Bates, the book’s author, to tell us what inspired her to write those stories. She writes:

Alice Bates

Alice Bates

I’m nagged by the divide between our life-in-church and life-in-the-world as Christians; it seems to me that God never meant that divide to be there, and that God is nothing if not present and working in our everyday lives, the non-church days. And I’m sure that, ever since Jesus came to be a man on earth like us, God is incarnate in every leaf and twig of his creation — is everywhere — only we can’t see him there very clearly.

So how do you recognise God in ‘normal’, everyday life, in the people and things all around? Jesus told stories, usually not ‘religious’ stories, to bring the Scripture out of the synagogue and into the streets, into everyday life — to ‘earth’ it there. To heal that church/everyday life divide. Desert Wells is an attempt to do the same for us, in our world now.

So I’ve taken a verse from the Bible together with a concern we’re likely to share — such as how to listen, forgive, live in the present — and told a story in the light of both, which I hope has something to say about how we live now. The stories don’t mention God; that is part of the point; but I hope they speak of him.

In her foreword Jane Williams ended by urging people to ‘read (the stories) and start to pay attention to the people and things all around that an lead to freedom, growth and joy.’ That was precisely my aim, and I’m so thrilled she put it so succinctly.

Desert Wells Desert Wells
Alice Bates

Darton, Longman & Todd, 2011
9780232527902
£9.99

Trade availability: Direct from DLT, via STL, Gardners or any other DLT stockist.