Star Wars on Trial (27 page)

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Authors: David Brin,Matthew Woodring Stover,Keith R. A. Decandido,Tanya Huff,Kristine Kathryn Rusch

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A work-for-hire novel is a book on which the novelist is a hired hand, so to speak, rather than the original creator and exclusive copyright owner of the work. One very common form of work-forhire-a form which you may well have read without even realizing it-is the ghostwritten novel; this is a novel written by someone other than the purported author. For example, the well-muscled, golden-haired, Italian-born model Fabio did not write the romance novels that bear his name. Those books were written by a ghostwriter. (I apologize if this revelation comes as a terrible shock and you feel your innocence has been irrevocably destroyed.)

However, a ghostwritten book is merely one type of work-for-hire. Many work-for-hire novels are actually written by the person whose name is on the cover. The distinguishing feature of a work-for-hire novel is not who wrote it or who's taking credit for writing it, but rather, who owns the intellectual property rights to the work.

When a novelist thinks up an idea and writes the book (for example, my next novel, Doppelgangster, due out in December 2006), she is the sole creator of the work (unless she turns out to be a plagiarist, in which case we have a moral obligation to dismember her slowly with rusty implements), and she owns the intellectual property rights to that work (unless she signs a really bad contract). Such a novel is referred to as an "original" novel. This doesn't mean the author had a brand-new, never-before-explored idea or has produced a staggering work of breathtaking originality; it means that the author is the exclusive creator and copyright owner of the material.

As copyright owner of the work, she (and, later on, her heirs) has the right to license the novel for publication. This is habitually referred to as "selling" a book; but, in fact, novelists don't actually sell books in most instances, despite that common phraseology. We typically license publication rights to a publisher for a specified period of time. For example, my original novel Fallen from Grace (a romance novel which I wrote under the pen name Laura Leone) is licensed for exactly three years from the date of publication. (Most licensing arrangements are much more complicated than that, but I can't imagine that you really want the tedious details.) After three years, the publisher of Fallen from Grace will no longer be entitled to keep printing copies of the book; and at that point, I will be entitled to "sell" it to another publisher. (Whereas if I try to resell the novel prior to expiration of the licensing agreement, the publisher can sue me for breach of contract.) And if, by some chance, I become internationally famous after death, my heirs will able to sell Fallen from Grace again, this time for a blue fortune, and toast my memory with Dom Perignon. (It sounds improbable, I know. But, hey, look at what happened when T. S. Eliot's Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats was adapted for the stage, years after the poet died. It became Cats, the long-running international hit musical with the prophetic motto, "Now and Forever." And Eliot's estate became one of the richest in publishing history.)

In addition to such vulgar considerations as mere money, copyright ownership also means that, unless I sign a really bad contract, I have artistic control over my material. No editor or publisher can make substantive changes to my text without my permission (which-editors everywhere, please take note-will never be forthcoming). For example, no one can legally rewrite one of my characters as a raccoon. I mention this because it actually happened to a friend of mine who signed a really bad contract. (I'm not kidding.)

None of the above, however, applies to a work-for-hire. Instead, a novelist is contracted to write material to which someone else owns the intellectual property rights. She may be treated with deference and her written work scarcely altered by anyone; or she may be dropped from a project 100 pages into the book, and her positioneven the material she's written for the project-offered to someone else. I mention this because it happened to me on the only ghostwriting project I ever worked on. (And, as is often the case with ghostwriting, I signed a confidentiality agreement, so I can say nothing about the book or who hired me. However, I was paid fairly, treated courteously, and I agreed with the decision to drop me from the project on the basis that my writing style wasn't right for it.)

As previously mentioned, ghostwriting is just one kind of workfor-hire book. The most common type of work-for-hire in the science fiction/fantasy genre is known as the "media tie-in" novel. This refers to any book whose creative origins are derived from a media entity, such as cinema, TV or gaming. Examples of media tie-in series in SF/ F include Star Trek, DragonLance, Highlander, The X-Files, Roswell and Tomb Raider books. And, of course, the single most successful and prominent media tie-in series ever to flood the bookshelves is probably Star Wars.

The specific characters and universes of these various series are the intellectual property of the media conglomerates which own the rights to the films, the games or the TV shows that are the basis of the books. If I tried to publish and profit from a novel about the frankly dysfunctional Skywalker family of the Star Wars universe without getting the written permission and legal cooperation of Lucasfilm, I would almost certainly be ruined by the massive lawsuit they'd bring against me to protect their intellectual property. Del Rey Books, a division of Random House, can publish Star Wars books because it has a licensing deal with Lucasfilm to do so. And the novelists who write and deliver these books to Del Rey are engaged in work-for-hire; they are neither the original creators of the Stars Wars characters and universe, nor do they control the intellectual property rights to these books. Additionally, their artistic control of the Star Wars novels they write is limited by Lucasfilm. A work-for-hire novelist may wish with all her heart to kill off Han Solo permanently in her book, for example; but unless Lucasfilm agrees to this (which seems unlikely), the book will never get published (and the author will never get paid). Han Solo is not the novelist's character, and his destiny is not under her creative control.

Such books are at the heart of the debate that led one SFWA member to publicly describe a number of his colleagues as "brain-dead chimpanzees." Quite a large number of his colleagues, in fact: hundreds of media tie-in novels written by dozens of SF/F writers have been published over the past decade or two. And Star Wars alone accounts for a large percentage of that figure, since it has endured as a popular publishing phenomenon longer than any other series (with the possible exception of Star Trek, which began its tie-in publishing venture back in the late 1960s, though there was a definite lull for a decade or two after that brief flourish).

Like most other media tie-in series, Star Wars probably hit its commercial peak in the 1990s, which was when media tie-ins became a notable fiscal force in SF/F publishing, as well as a notable physical force, taking up a lot of shelf space in the SF/F section of bookstores. Since that peak period, the phenomenon has receded a bit, but it has by no means faded away, nor does it seem likely to do so in the foreseeable future.

And "shelf space," far more than Nebula Award recognition, is the key issue in the debate about media tie-in novels. A question posed often among SF/F writers (and not always in the most rational, re spectful terms, it must be admitted) is whether the shelf space inhabited by media tie-in novels should instead be reserved for original novels. (To reiterate, "original" means that a book-whether brilliant and innovative, or shamelessly cliched and derivative-is the artistic creation and intellectual property solely of its author.)

It's worth noting that no one ever seems to argue that original fiction should be eliminated entirely from SF/F shelves in favor of media tie-ins. (Writers have expressed fear that this will happen, but no one ever proposes it as a jolly good idea.) All debate on this subject seems to be about whether SF/F shelf space should be allotted entirely to original fiction, and media tie-in novels either eliminated completely (in an ideal world); or their shelf space reduced considerably; or the books all moved to some other part of bookstore, opening up their shelf space in the SF/F section for original fiction. And when I say there's "debate" on this subject, I mean there are passionate but probably pointless discussions among writers. Bookstores, after all, have made their decision clear by shelving SF/F-related media tie-in books in SF/F sections nationwide for two decades. So I don't think they're debating this a lot.

Bookstores are retail businesses, and they allot so much shelf space to media tie-in books for one good reason: there's a demand for the books. If readers didn't buy media tie-in books, then the books would be given little or no space on bookstore shelves. The shelving of media tie-ins isn't a plot to destroy original fiction and forcibly turn the world into Star Wars-reading zombies; it's just business.

Similarly, if publishers didn't get a lot of orders from distributors and head buyers for media tie-in books, they'd stop publishing them. Publishing is a business with very narrow profit margins, and those margins are made still narrower by the large chunk of the sales profits that media conglomerates typically demand in exchange for licensing their publishing rights. Therefore, the only media tie-in series that keep releasing fresh books are those that are selling well. If your favorite media tie-in series has disappeared from the shelves, that's because it ceased to be profitable enough for any publisher to renew the licensing agreement.

This is also why the suggestion, sometimes made in a plaintive wail, that publishers might start acquiring and publishing more orig inal SF/F fiction (or at least invest more in marketing the original fiction they acquire) if they'd just stop acquiring and publishing so much of that damn media tie-in fiction, is naive. Publishing houses publish media tie-in novels for the same reason that booksellers order them: there is a market for them. If a publishing house closed down a profitable tie-in program, this would not improve the fiscal resources of the house; and it takes fiscal resources to finance the expansion of any publishing program (such as increasing the quantity of original SF/F fiction that the house acquires). If you don't believe me, go buy stock in a publishing house that's restructuring or starting to expand its publishing program. You'll learn quickly.

Therefore, it's more logical to assume that, if anything, the existence of a profitable media tie-in program at a publishing house is a good thing for its original-fiction program, because there are probably some profits flowing into the house; if not, though, the tie-in licenses will not be renewed. Indeed, despite the precarious climate of the current publishing market, Del Rey, which publishes the popular Star Wars tie-ins, is currently expanding its original-fiction program in SHE

So, okay, publishers and bookstores are businesses, they're in this for the profits, they publish and shelve media tie-ins because they make money doing so. But what about the writers? Are they braindead chimpanzees churning out this talentless stuff simply in pursuit of a profit? What about readers? Are they the real brain-dead chimpanzees, gobbling up formulaic novels about movie characters instead of reading worthy original fiction?

Well, first of all, brace yourself for a shock: although I don't know any writers who got into this business for the money, we all need money and like money. Some of us sometimes even write something strictly for the money. Or, as my father, science fiction writer Mike Resnick, has been known to say on occasion: "It's noble to starve for your principles, but it's chicken shit to make your wife and children starve for your principles." I myself have occasionally written something just because I wanted the money. And I imagine that a few media tie-in writers have written a few books (perhaps even a few Star Wars books) just because they wanted the money.

However, most media tie-in writers enjoy the work and are pas sionate about doing it. I know, because they're always saying so (firmly, loudly and sometimes belligerently) when original-fiction writers accuse them of doing it just for the money, or because they don't know any better, or because they lack principles, or because they're not as talented as we are, yada yada yada. Many tie-in writers are fans of the TV shows and movies they write about, and they thoroughly enjoy writing novels set in those universes. Many of them are good writers, and most of them also write their own original novels when not busy writing tie-ins.

Despite the fact that writers like and need money just like mere mortals, no one ever got into this business for the money; we write because we like to write. (Or we at least have a love-hate relationship with writing.) And we generally write what we like to write, too. I write fantasy instead of horror because I like fantasy and I don't like horror. I don't write tie-ins because I'm not interested in tie-ins, but I write essays because I am interested in essays. In this respect, I'm not unusual: I am much better-and much more successful-at writing what I like to write than at writing what I do not like to write.

So rather than being unprincipled opportunists in it strictly for the money, or brain-dead chimpanzees who can't write anything else, most Star Wars work-for-hire novelists like writing the books. It's true that in many cases, their original-fiction careers are not as lucrative or busy as their Star Wars careers; but then again, I like writing romance, and my romance career is not as lucrative or busy as my fantasy-writing career. That doesn't mean I'm in fantasy for the money or because I can't do anything else; but it does mean that I sensibly invest more of my time in writing fantasy, where my work is in demand, than in writing romance, where it is not. To assume that someone only writes a Star Wars novel because he wants the money or isn't a good enough writer for original fiction is to assume that media tie-in books are necessarily "lesser" novels.

Which is the same assumption that goes along with criticizing someone for reading tie-in novels. I am frankly not a fan of Star Wars novels or any other media tie-in novels. I also don't like horror novels, techno-thrillers or sagas, and I am not a fan of the original fiction of Isaac Asimov, Danielle Steel, Stephen King or Ernest Hemingway. Your mileage may vary. All art is subjective, and there are indeed me dia tie-in writers who I consider better novelists than some prestigious award winners I've read. Readers are entitled to find the SF/F that they want to read, be it a Nebula Award-winning original-fiction novel or a Star Wars book. Whether one is better than the other is strictly in the eye of the beholder. And if anyone ever tries to make me read another Thomas Hardy novel, I will complain to the UN High Commission for Human Rights.

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