Jill Marshall started her publishing company, Pear Jam Books, with the best of intentions but failed to deliver many of her promises. Photo / Getty Images
Jill Marshall started her publishing company, Pear Jam Books, with the best of intentions but failed to deliver many of her promises. Photo / Getty Images
 
It started so promisingly and ended so horribly. Twenty months ago Jill Marshall was a local hero, albeit an adopted one. In 2011, Next magazine chose her as its Woman of the Year (arts and culture), an honour still listed on her profile on internet site LinkedIn.
 
Marshall is now back in England, having left behind a posse of irate and disillusioned authors, a trail of debt and no forwarding address. A "desperately-seeking-Jill" message by one of the authors on Marshall's Facebook page has gone unanswered, attempts to contact her by email and via the two vice-presidents appointed to her company have proved equally fruitless.

Two authors have won Disputes Tribunal claims, another has hired a copyright lawyer to stop what he claims are "unauthorised" sales of his book by England-based companies, and a complaint has been made to British police about what became of the proceeds of a charity book.
All of which is a far cry from how Marshall's venture into publishing began.

Full story in NZ Herald



Leading children's bookseller John McIntyre (right) has responded to the story in the Herald and his comments follow:
 
 
 
An important warning for writers on the perils and pitfalls of "assisted publishing". Bear with us here -we think this is a really serious matter. The article below is from the "Herald" this morning- August 3rd.

It gives us no pleasure to post this story, nor to say that we saw it coming. It is a sorry tale with no winners, and it is about raised hopes, dashed dreams, broken promises and any number of other cliches. It involves really good established authors who believed a friend and colleague, and new and hopeful writers who thought they'd found a mentor.

We had serious doubts about the viability of the "Pear Jam" concept from the first time we heard about it, which was not until after the first books had been published.  

1) This is not to be immodest, but as a major specialist children's bookseller we would have thought someone launching a children's book publishing company would have spoken to us as part of their market research.
Many people do ask: Julia Marshall from Gecko, Johanna Knox and Walter Moala from Hinterlands Press and Mark Sommerset from Dreamboat Books all consulted us and many others extensively: and we are always willing to give our views.
We would have advised a cautious approach, starting with maybe two books, watching their sales trajectory, covering your costs, and then maybe commissioning another two or three. Gecko, Hinterlands and Dreamboat all built themselves around this strategy.
We had minimal contact with Jill Marshall- and when we did was to arrange a flyer of her titles to include in one of our school mail-outs.
The expense in publishing is all at the beginning, the returns much later, and cash flow is always an issue.

2) The domestic market for NZ children's fiction is small and is not growing. It is also not lucrative, and there is virtually no international market.

3) Whilst a few of the early books were written by known authors we admire, too many of the subsequent releases were by first time authors with no established reputation, and sadly, they were stories that needed work.

4) The production quality was poor. As the "Herald" says - poorly designed covers, editing faults- they may have been great stories, but we can't sell shoddy books.
There are really reputable companies out there who do "partnership publishing" - Steele Roberts, Egan Reid - but the crucial thing to remember is that they provide you with a professionally produced books for YOU to sell.

The lessons from this- if established publishers are rejecting your manuscripts, it is probably because it isn't good enough. Ask as many people you know and trust for their opinion - no matter how unpalatable the answer may be- BEFORE you publish your book. Beware of anyone claiming to be a "writing coach" -it is a term we have never heard before. Beware too of anyone claiming to put the "authors first". Successful publishers are successful because they put themselves first.

Don't pay up front unless you can afford to lose your money. If you do partner publish or self publish - make sure that you are very good at marketing, distribution, debt collection and the myriad of post-production skills required. When you decide on a print run, count up the number of friends you have, and divide it by three - print that many, and if you sell out reprint the same number.

We have written this with a heavy heart but with the best of intentions. We are genuinely sorry for everyone caught up in this horrible mess. - John
 
John McIntyre
The Children's Bookshop
Shop 26 Kilbirnie Plaza
Kilbirnie
Wellington
t 04 3873905
f 04 3873288
e
books@thechildrensbookshop.co.nz