It is impossible to
discourage the real writers—they don't give a damn what you say, they're going
to write- SINCLAIR LEWIS
American author, John Grisham reportedly had his
first novel, A TIME TO KILL (written in 1989) rejected by many publishers
before it was finally accepted and became a bestseller. And afterwards, it was
adapted into a movie in 1996 starring Matthew McConaughey, Samuel L. Jackson
and Sandra Bullock.
British author, J.K Rowling was a single mother
living on welfare when she began the first part of her successful 7 book series,
the Harry Potter franchise, using a
manual typewriter. She too faced rejection from several publishers before her
manuscript was finally accepted by Bloomsbury. Today she is the highest paid
children’s author and each book got adapted into a movie by Warner Brothers;
the titular character played by Daniel Radcliffe.
In more developed countries, the worst thing a writer
goes through is his/her manuscript being returned, along with a
rejection slip, claiming the story isn’t good enough or it’s not what the
publisher is looking for Yet we hear
success stories of writers who suffered rejection and then eventually went on to sell millions of copies of their works.
Nigerian authors face more than rejection… they face many issues and obstacles
preventing them from selling or getting their works published. Professor Chinua
Achebe’s 1958 debut novel Things Fall
Apart paved the way for many African authors whose works got published
under the Heinemann African Series. Yet, what most people don’t know is that
Professor Achebe’s path to getting his book published wasn’t a smooth one. For
several months he received no feedback from the London typing service company
who was supposed to send him a type written copy after he submitted the only handwritten copy of his future masterpiece. His boss from NBS radio, Angela Beattie (who
travelled to London for her annual leave) visited the company at his request
and found it abandoned at the corner of an office. Even after Ms. Beattie’s
intervention, it was still a hard road for Achebe. Many publishers rejected it because
according to them, fiction from African writers don’t have ‘marketing
potential’. But as fate would have it, it was finally accepted by Heinemann and
Chinua Achebe made his triumphant debut. Today, his signature novel still sells
millions of copies, translated into several languages and used in schools. Yet,
one would wonder if Professor Achebe would have gotten Things Fall Apart and his subsequent books published if he had gone
to a Nigerian publisher. He had a literary agent who had the task of taking it
to several publishers until it was accepted. Even so, he was initially met with
scepticism and ridicule when he began promoting it in Nigeria. Other Nigerian
authors came after him; Cyprian Ekwensi (Jagua Nana, People of the City), Flora
Nwapa (Efuru, Idu), Elechi Amadi (The Concubine, The Great Ponds, The Slave),
Buchi Emecheta (In the Ditch, The Joys of Motherhood, Second Class Citizen)
etc.
These days, Nigerian authors are known as ‘hungry
authors’ because of the long list of difficulties they face getting their books
published. Only a few are lucky enough to get their books out on the
international market; writers like Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Purple Hibiscus, Half Of A Yellow Sun, The
Thing Round Your Neck, Americanah)
or Helon Habila (Waiting For An Angel,
Measuring Time, Oil on Water). Linda Ikeji is a successful blogger, her
blog posts earning her a substantial income every day. But sadly, the struggling writers out weigh
the successful ones.
The difficulties Nigerian authors face these days
are several- from the harsh economy to lack to literary agents, from picky publishers
to piracy, from readers who prefer foreign books to low or unpaid royalties. Established publishers like Macmillan long
discontinued the publishing and printing of novels and now focus more on publishing text
books to be used in schools. Other publishers simply refuse to give most
Nigerian authors a chance unless they happen to have connections. Even so, it
may take ages- like a year or more- before the book is actually published and
then they would have to wait longer for their royalties to be paid, as the
books have to be successfully sold first, or so they are told.
At this point, most Nigerian authors are forced to
self-publish their books and have the backbreaking job of marketing them. They
would go to schools, hoping to generate interest and make a good sale or go out
in public and manage to sell copies from the boot of their cars. Others are
lucky enough to launch their books and get hefty checks after the event. A few
manage to sell them online via Amazon, Smashwords or Jumia, in Kindle form;
where they barely break even. The online option is now a much chosen one
because another sad truth is, most prestigious bookshops in Nigeria actually refuse
to sell books by Nigerian authors.
Sinmisola Ogunyinka, a Nigerian author currently
based in South Africa, spoke of her experience and difficulties in an interview a few months back. She now sells most of her books online and while the sales are
slow, at least she is not getting turned off for being a Nigerian author. “It’s
not easy to write,” she said. “You spend two years working on a book; somebody
picks it up and finishes reading it in a day! It’s no small task.”
Cyril
Warmhoney, a novelist and poet, also spoke of his experience and the challenges
Nigerian authors face these days. “Many Nigerian authors now use the English
version of their native names or abbreviate their surnames to look like foreign
ones, so as to attract patronage. Many of us try to self publish in order to
showcase our gifts. Unfortunately, many marketers don’t accept local authors as well as self published
ones. These include organisers of both National and International writing
contests. In all these, the local author comes out as a loser. I have written
60 books, fiction and non-fiction, drama, poetry and motivationals. I could only
publish very few due to financial constraints. Let me tell you some of the major
challenges of our authors in this country. Financial constrains; he can’t publish because
of poor economy. Nigerians believe our authors have nothing upstairs, so they
don’t give us a chance. No market for
books. Little or nothing paid to
authors. Piracy is uncontrolled. No libraries for research. No means of advertising. Poor government
patronage. We are simply hungry authors in this country.”
Another writer, Lola Leigh said, “We writers say we
write for the love of writing but we have to look at the practical side also,
making actual money from our work. We
don’t have literary agents here; they approach the publishers and negotiate
royalties and all that. We are pretty much on our own here and are the worse
for it. And also there’s the piracy issue, how are we expected to be motivated
to write and put ourselves out there when there are thieves ripping us off by
making cheap and inferior copies of our sweat? It is really bad.”
Unless these issues are addressed, the future of
writers in Nigeria is very bleak indeed and Nigerian Literature itself may be
in the danger of basking in past glory.
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