Just What Makes An Audiobook “Original”?

Though still a fraction of the overall book market, audiobooks continue their double-digit annual growth: the global audiobooks market is expected to reach $35.04 billion by 2030, and U.S. audiobook sales topped ebook sales for the second year in a row. At last count, more than seventy-five thousand titles have been published, a number that will dramatically increase as AI narration brings cost and production time down.

Most audiobooks are narrated renditions of already-published print or ebooks, but the category’s success has led to increased experimentation, with “audiobook originals” or “audio first” productions gaining traction — and fans.

But defining what makes an audiobook an “original” is not easy. Audible co-opted the term early on to describe any title that was its “exclusive,” regardless of whether it had a print life as well. When we talked to a range of producers, publishers and industry vets about this, it became clear that, as Joy Smith, Head of Audio at Rebel Girls admitted, this is a “hazy” term.

Audible notwithstanding, most agree that audiobook originals are released exclusively in audio format, without a corresponding print or ebook version. There seem to be some broad rules; these audiobook originals are (often):

  • An author’s first foray into another genre or medium
  • Written specifically for audio format OR reimagined as an audiobook
  • Frequently (but not always) shorter in length (3-5 hours) than typical audiobooks
  • “Immersive” — produced with music and sound effects, multiple voices, better production quality, etc.
  • A way to connect to fans who may not have listened to audiobooks, e.g. podcast enthusiasts, book and ebook readers, fans of the author’s music, acting, comedy, etc.
  • A way to get to market quickly (a production timeline of four vs. twelve-plus months)

Smith says that originals “written with audio-first in mind are a different craft.” Whether that’s a podcast that is edited for an audiobook audience, or written specifically as an audiobook, it’s a different beast from a text-first project.  (Rebel Girls’ own podcast program is “Goodnight Stories for Rebel Girls.”)

She believes that, as with print books, “if you have a good story, that’s what brings the audience” —though, she adds, nothing happens without discoverability. Many we spoke to admit that Audible is the main conduit for audiobook sales, approaching 90% of market share, though some listeners go to Apple, Kobo, or (through libraries) Overdrive.

Simon & Schuster and Penguin Random House are among those publishers that are devoting more resources to creating audiobooks that originate outside of the traditional text-based book-ebook-audiobook formula. S&S’s Lara Blackman is focusing on these originals: “This is a good way to introduce podcast listeners to audiobooks, or when introducing authors and franchises to a new audience.” For example, Star Trek: No Man’s Land was a tie-in with the tv show. And S&S just published William Kent Krueger’s The Levee, a novella, as an original audiobook. Kruger explains on his author page that “storytelling is an oral tradition…When writing a story, I read that story out loud, both as I’m composing it and when it’s completed. To me, a good story ought to flow easily off the tongue. And when I listen to the words, the sentences, the paragraphs, I hear not only the clunk that ought not to be there (so that I can edit it out) but also the beauty in the cadences I’ve created, the truth of the scenes I’ve imagined, the reality of the characters I’ve created with nothing but words.” That’s a ringing endorsement of audio (and his work).

No one is quite sure when publishers started creating “originals,” but Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman, released in 2015 and featuring an original musical score and large cast (including Michael Sheen as Lucifer), is one of the best known in this category. Other examples of recent well-known recordings include PRH Audio’s publication of Erik Larson’s No One Goes Alone, his first-ever work of fiction; Audible’s production of Dolly Parton’s memoir-set-to-songs, Dolly Parton, Songteller; and S&S’s original “Audio Drama,” Star Trek: Picard.

These “productions” are not audio transcriptions.  They are, says Robin Lai, Head of Audio Custom Shop at John Marshall Media, new creations. For instance, screenwriters “concepted” Anatomy of Desire, a reimagining of Theodore Dreiser’s An American Tragedy, as a multicast audio drama, though there is a derivative book as well. HarperCollins published Woke Up This Morning, an audiobook based on a series of podcasts about The Sopranos by Steve Schirripa and Michael Imperioli. PRH worked with historian Timothy Snyder on a forthcoming “audio-exclusive” version On Tyranny, now with a subtitle: Updated with Twenty New Lessons from Russia’s War on Ukraine. It took six weeks from proposal to finished recording.

Meanwhile, James Patterson has a multi-project and first-look development deal for a slate of audio-only projects with Audible. In a Hollywood Reporter article, Zola Mashariki, head of Audible Studios, says that Audible is also able to give creatives the ability to pursue passion projects in a way that may not be possible through the traditional studio model: “Audio is much cheaper, [so] we can take much more risk and say, ‘Let’s try that and let’s see,’ because we are building for a future that is unknown…”

Agent Kimberly Bower sold Corinne Michaels’s You Loved Me Once to Audible, in part because the author was going beyond her typical romance cetagory into women’s fiction, which might have confused her loyal readers.  But it was an extra incentive when she found out that actress – and Audie winner — Julia Whelan would narrate the book.  Bower says that originals are harder to do now that so many publishers insist on owning audiobooks rights when they acquire a book.

Michele Cobb, the head of the Audio Publishers Association and Executive Director of The Podcast Academy, notes that original audiobooks are still a small piece of the market. Some publishers, like L.A. Theatre Works (which does staged plays) and GraphicAudio (“a movie in your mind”), have been aware of the potential for a long time. But as audiobook sales are growing, people are willing to experiment more. Originals can promote an author or narrator, an event, etc. – and it’s instructive to see how many Audie Award nominees fall into categories that are not transcription of books, nor represented by traditional audiobook publishers.

There’s general agreement that audiobooks and podcasts influence each other and are increasingly seen as synergistic. For instance, Pushkin Industries, an audio production company co-founded by Jacob Weisberg and Malcolm Gladwell in 2018, does podcasts and (some) audiobooks based thereon. But, says Audiobook Editorial Director Kerri Kolen, enhanced, original audiobooks are mainly being created because there’s an audience for them, especially among younger listeners. Featuring music, sound effects and high production values, these originals are coming into their own. While some consumers (and literary agents) are still trying to understand what these new downloads are, the response from listeners is overwhelmingly positive. And the creative synergy between authors and producers is exciting: Kolen, who was once an Executive Editor at PRH, enjoys “taking chances and trying new things” in these yet-uncharted waters.  One recent project, which is nominated for an Audie, is Heartbreak, based on a memoir by Florence Williams but significantly changed from the original text version. It is one of the few audiobooks to get a separate review in The New York Times. Other “audio firsts” include Miracle & Wonder by Paul Simon and Malcolm Gladwell, which is also nominated for an Audie.

An area still (so to speak) in its infancy is children’s audio. Neil Patrick Harris’s The Magic Misfits series was an early example of original children’s audiobooks, and more recently, Jamie Lee Curtis’s “show,” Letters From Camp, made successful audiobooks. But Shira Schindel, who has worked for both Audible and Blackstone, echoes others when she prophesies that “there will be money to be made in children’s audio, but it may need a new platform, because Audible is not ideal for children’s subscriptions.” She mentions Yoto and similar audio devices that often come pre-loaded with stories. A new one, Storybutton, promotes itself as the antidote to screen time, but COPPA rules and a lack of focused marketing mean that this will take time to develop. Still, with parents wanting children to get away from screens, there’s untapped opportunity, say several of those interviewed.

Where is the market for “audiobook originals” going? There seems to be a consensus that, wonderful as podcasts are, a fickle advertiser base means they don’t earn the sort of return that books and audiobooks do. Audiobooks have a following, but to engage new listeners, an enhanced version of the book, podcast or production may be the Best Next Step. The creator community is excited, but now it’s time to sell it to the Listener.  “And that,” says Kerri Kolen of Pushkin, “is going to take time.”

Top 5 Publishing Articles/Blog Posts of the Week 3/13-3/17

­Red Number 5Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know.

What makes bookstores “recession-proof”?

Can sensitivity reading combat long-standing literary tropes?

How does immigration reform matter to the industry?

Why is so much of Gen Z sticking with print books?

What does the end of Kindle Newsstand mean for genre magazines?

Bonus: IBPA has launched PubSpot, an online repository of book publishing knowledge.

Top 5 Publishing Articles/Blog Posts of the Week 3/6-3/10

­Red Number 5Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know.

Who can afford to work in publishing?

What are book bans “protecting” children from?

Despite strong numbers for Ron DeSantis, book sales slipped last week.

Are publishers using sensitivity readers critically or cynically?

Will artificial intelligence ever surpass human creativity?

People Round-Up, Early March 2023

PEOPLE

Nina von Moltke, President and Director of Strategic Development at Penguin Random House, is leaving the company in May. In other PRH news Marissa Secreto joins Penguin Random House Audio as Marketing Associate. At Random House Children’s, Isabelle Snyder joins as Junior Designer, Brand and Licensed.

At HarperCollins, SVP, International Sales David Wolfson has retired and SVP, Sales and Associate Publisher for the children’s division Andrea Pappenheimer has departed the company.

Publisher Christine Carswell will retire from Chronicle in April.

Chiwoniso Kaitano joins MacDowell as Executive Director, succeeding Interim Director Philip Himberg. Most recently she was Executive Director of global NGO Girl Be Heard.

Nathan Rostron joins ZE Books as Interim Publishing and Marketing Director. He was most recently Editorial and Marketing Director at Restless Books.

At Longleaf Services, Chris Granville joins as Director of Editorial, Design, and Production Services. He was formerly Production Manager at Duke University Press.

At Humanoids, Holly Aitchison, previously Consumer Marketing Manager at Oni Press, joins as Director of Sales. Esther Kim, previously Marketing Manager at BOOM! Studios, joins as Director of Marketing.

Mark Haber, author and formerly Operations Manager at Brazos Bookstore, joins Coffee House Press as Director of Marketing.

Sarah Rucker joins Usborne Books, which is now distributed in the US by HarperCollins, as Sales Director. Rucker was most recently Sales Director at Gibbs Smith.

At Oxford University Press, Zachary Haynes has left his position as Director of Global Business Development.

Sarah Brody joins Sourcebooks as Associate Art Director. Most recently she was Senior Designer at Penguin Random House. Jackie Olmos joins as Associate National Accounts Manager. Jay Farahani joins as PHP Web Developer.

Associate Art Director Matt Roeser has left Candlewick Press and can be contacted at roeser.matt@gmail.com.

Meg Reid will become Executive Director and Publisher at Hub City Writers Project on April 1. She was previously Director of Hub City Press.

At the Strand Book Store, Paul Colarusso, lately Communications Director at Aperture Foundation, joins as Communications Director.

Tattered Cover Book Store CEO Kwame Spearman is taking a leave of absence in order to focus on his mayoral campaign. CFO Margie Kennan will assume his day-to-day responsibilities.

In agency news…Lauren Spieller joins Folio Literary Management as Literary Agent; she was previously Literary Agent at Triada US. Elise Howard, Founding Publisher of Algonquin Young Readers, joins DeFiore and Company as Agent. At Triangle House Literary, Noah Grey Rosenzweig, current Editorial Fellow for Roxane Gay, joins as Literary Agent. Ashley Reisinger joins Triada US as Assistant Literary Agent.

At The Baffler, Matthew Shen Goodman has been named Editor-in-Chief.

Janice Stillman is retiring as Editor of The Old Farmer’s Almanac, having served in that position since 2000. A search for the new, fourteenth editor is underway.

At Weldon Owen, Edward Ash-Milby joins as Executive Editor. He was a buyer at Barnes & Noble for almost thirty years.

In addition to the closing of Catapult’s magazine and writing class programming and consequent layoffs, there are departures on the book publishing side: Associate Editor Summer Farrah, Counterpoint Assistant Director of Publicity Sarah Jean Grimm, and Counterpoint/Catapult/Soft Skull Publicity Manager Alisha Gorder.

Laura Lutz joins Hachette Book Group as Children’s School & Library Marketing Manager. She was previously a school librarian. Kelly Moran joins Little, Brown Children’s as Senior Publicist; most recently she was Public Relations Associate at Villanova University. At Orbit, Stephanie Lippitt Clark, lately Brand Manager, Books for Riot Games, joins as Editor. Joanne Redmond, lately Associate Publicist at Columbia University Press, joins Basic Books as Publicist. At Public Affairs, Kimberly Meilun joins as Associate Editor. Most recently she was Assistant Editor at Portfolio.

At Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group, Alexandra Quill joins as Senior Marketing Manager, School and Library, moving over from Macmillan’s academic division. At Macmillan, Ben Allen joins St. Martin’s Press as Managing Editor; he was previously Associate Managing Editor at Mulholland and Voracious. Travis Porteous joins as Senior Financial Analyst and Randi Moore joins as Associate General Counsel. Jocelyn O’Dowd, formerly Production Manager at Penguin Random House, joins as Senior Production Manager. Heather Niver joins as Associate Managing Editor. At Picador, Sarah Haeckel joins as Publicist; she moves over from her former position as Associate Publicist at St. Martin’s.

Lizzi Middleman joins Algonquin Books as Senior Marketing Manager. She was previously Senior Manager, Marketing & Sales Promotion at Gibbs Smith.

At DAW Books, Kayleigh Webb joins as Senior Publicist. Previously she was Senior Publicist and Marketer at Saga Press.

Peter Behravesh, formerly Editor at Seven Seas Entertainment, joins Mandala Earth as Senior Editor. Colleen Lindsay has left her position as Senior Marketing and Publicity Strategist at Insight Editions.

At Simon & Schuster, Ian Straus joins as Editor on March 13. He was previously at Little, Brown, where he helped launch the Spark imprint. Zakiya Jamal joins Atria as Marketing Manager; she worked previously as Senior Manager of Social Media for Scholastic.

At Scholastic, MacKenzie Kurtner joins as Proprietary Planning, Sales Planning. She was previously Custom Publishing Coordinator at Penguin Random House. Additionally, Daisy Glasglow, previously Marketing Coordinator at W.W. Norton Young Readers, joins as Associate Marketing Manager.

Nick Whitney joins Soho Press as Assistant Editor, acquiring and editing for Soho Crime. Previously he was Assistant Editor at Feminist Press.

At the American Psychological Association, Janette Lynn Neal joins as Contract Production Editor.

At Writers House, Tom Ishizuka joins as Media Rights Manager. Previously he was Creative Executive at Warner Bros. Discovery.

Cassie Youngstrom joins the American Booksellers Association as Education Project Coordinator, while Cedar Fields joins as Member Relations and Registration Coordinator and Zoe Perzo joins as Content Coordinator.

Yun Shen joins Open Road Integrated Media as Business and Growth Analyst.

At Pacific & Court, Paris Norman joins as Digital Marketing Coordinator.

Film critic A.O. Scott has moved to the New York Times Book Review.

 

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Top 5 Publishing Articles/Blog Posts of the Week 2/27-3/3

­Red Number 5Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know.

Who benefits when women outpublish men?

Is the future of audio becoming harder to predict?

Has AI become the publishing conference topic du jour?

What does “editorial objectivity” mean during a culture war?

How are Republican voters responding to book bans?

International Bestsellers, February 2023

Every month, Publishing Trends runs fiction international bestsellers lists from four territories–France, Germany, Italy, and Spain. This month, our four regular territories are joined by two more: Bulgaria and Norway. Those books that have been published in English are listed with their official English-language title. All others are translated as literally as possible from the original. Where applicable, the US publisher is listed after the local publisher, separated by a “/”. The lists are taken from major newspapers or national retailers, which are noted at the bottom of each list.

Download the full list as a PDF here.

Top 5 Publishing Articles/Blog Posts of the Week 2/20-2/24

­Red Number 5Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know.

Is editing Roald Dahl‘s books commercially savvy or ultimately pointless?

Can generative works be copyrighted?

How have library ebook bills changed since last year?

Do professional conferences have a public health responsibility?

What effect are floods of ChatGPT-generated submissions having on smaller publishers?

Top 5 Publishing Articles/Blog Posts of the Week 2/13-2/17

­Red Number 5Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know.

How many publishers are actually adding AI to their workflow right now?

Has critique of BookTok been oversimplified?

Whose real voices are AI audiobook narrators trained on?

Why is distasteful content an important use case for IP out of copyright?

How can “the apps” create new possibilities for literary romance?

Top 5 Publishing Articles/Blog Posts of the Week 2/6-2/10

­Red Number 5Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know.

What about writing remains exclusive to humans?

Is the contraction of the traditional publishing industry inevitable?

How are book removals in Florida schools affecting students?

Are Russia’s wartime book restrictions working as intended?

In the world of BookTok, do aesthetics undermine content?

People Round-Up, Early February 2023

PEOPLE

Madeline McIntosh is stepping down as CEO of Penguin Random House US. At Random House Group, Angelin Adams, Editorial Director, Design & Culture, adds the title of Editorial Director, Potter Gift. She succeeds the recently-retired Lindley Boegehold. At Knopf, Quynh Do joins as Senior Editor. Most recently she was Senior Editor at Zando. Jessica Kastner Keene, formerly Publicist at Rowman & Littlefield, joins WaterBrook Multnomah as Publicity Manager. At Penguin Press, Jamie Lescht joins as Senior Publicist; she was previously Publicist at William Morrow.

Lyssa Keusch joins Grand Central as VP, Executive Editor. Previously she was Executive Editor at William Morrow.

At Ingram Library Services, Carolyn Morris returns as VP, succeeding Pamela Smith. Most recently she was Director of Content Solutions at SirsiDynix. William Daniel, formerly Chief Technology Officer at Intersoft Data Labs, joins Ingram Content Group as VP of Application Services.

Barbara Cohen joins International Literary Properties as VP, Legal and Business Affairs, North America. Most recently she was VP and General Counsel at Oxford University Press.

The board of directors for Coffee House Press have chosen consultant Linda Ewing as Interim Executive Director and will now begin a search for a permanent executive director and publisher.

Sarah Falter joins Morrow Group as Director of Publicity. She was previously Director of Publicity at HarperCollins Christian Publishing. Lindsey Kennedy, lately Assistant Director of Publicity at Random House, joins as Associate Director of Publicity. And Lara Baez, previously Communications Manager at Twitter, joins as Marketing and Publicity Manager.

At Scholastic, Rachel Schwartz has been named Director of Cross Channel Marketing. She was previously Director of Program and Product Marketing at Scholastic Book Fairs.

Lia Brown joins Kappa Publishing as Editorial Director; formerly she was Senior Executive Editor of the children’s division at Callisto Media.

At Tuttle Publishing, Laura J. Ferguson joins as Sales and Marketing Director. Previously she was Director of Special Sales at Abrams.

Sarah McEachern joins Deep Vellum and Dalkey Archive Press as Rights Director. Formerly she was Senior Foreign Agent at Trident Media Group.

Kristen Luby, formerly Senior Marketing Manager, School & Library at Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group, joins Abrams as Associate Director, School & Library Marketing.

In agency news…Madeline Shellhouse, formerly International Rights Agent at Folio Literary Management, joins Ultra Literary as Foreign Rights Director. John Ash, lately of London’s PEW Literary, joins Creative Artists Agency as Literary Agent. At Curtis Brown, Alexandra Franklin joins as Associate Agent, Dramatic Rights; she was previously Associate Agent at Vicky Bijur Literary Agency. At KT Literary, Hannah Fergesen rejoins as Foreign Rights Manager. At the CAT Agency, Aliza R. Hoover joins as Associate Agent; she was previously Art Coordinator Associate at Candlewick Press. And in scouting news, Georgia Panitch joins KF Literary Scouting as International Literary Scout. She was previously International Scout at Mary Anne Thompson Associates.

James Melia will join Gallery as Executive Editor on March 6. Previously he was Executive Editor at Holt. Alison Hinchcliffe, lately Publicity Manager at William Morrow, joins Atria as Senior Publicity Manager.

Richard Narramore, previously Executive Editor at Wiley, joins Stanford University Press as Executive Editor.

At Zando, Sarah Ried, formerly Editor at HarperCollins, joins as Senior Editor.

At ReaderLink Distribution Services, Mary McGee, previously Lead Operations Specialist at Cepheid, joins as Senior Inventory Manager. Cyndee Pietrus joins as Manager of Supply Planning. Eduardo Munoz joins as Sales Support Coordinator. Amelia Meyer joins as Merchandise Presentation Specialist. And Arielle Amante joins as Assistant Product Manager.

Benny Sisson, lately Marketing Coordinator at HarperCollins Children’s, joins the University of Washington Press as Marketing Manager.

At Melville House, Yezanira Venecia joins as Editor. She was previously Assistant Editor at Soho Press.

Allison Hunter Hill, formerly Editor at Starry Forest Books, joins Nosy Crow‘s US team as Editor, based in Boston.

At Graywolf, Caelan Ernest Nardone joins as Publicist. Most recently they were Director of Publicity at Nightboat Books.

Yun Shen joins Open Road Integrated Media as Business and Growth Analyst.

At Holt, Micaela Carr joins as Associate Editor.

At Northwest Review, Meakin Armstrong joins as Editor-at-Large, acquiring two to four novellas a year. In the past he served as Senior Fiction Editor for Guernica Magazine.

 

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