OrlandoNative wrote:JohnRoth wrote:
The year-long lead time is mandated by the distributors for major releases.
Then we need to break that "mandate". To be honest, it seems a lot like what used to be known as "prior restraint of trade".
Just like there used to be a mandate that retailers sell at "MSRP". That went by the wayside as well.
Well, if they were just sitting on it for a year for the sheer heck of it that would be true, but there's a lot going on in that time, and lot of demand for that time.
They've got to proofread and edit the draft manuscript (which can take a few months all on it's own), and then do all the typesetting magic to get it ready to go to print. Maps, graphics, and cover art need to be integrated and set. Then you've got to schedule the print run itself, and from what I've read that can be a bottleneck that has to be scheduled well in advance, as there isn't massive excess printing capacity just sitting around. Then you need time for marketing, shipping, and agreements from the retailers to buy some in that time frame.
Publishers are able to cram all of that into 3 months, and we've seen them do it to make a business time table. Editing is usually the first thing cut when that happens. It probably also irks all the other authors who get their works bumped to facilitate the special snowflake going through.
Now, you could argue that the Mad Wizard doesn't need a lot of resources from the publishing grind other than book prints themselves, as his eARCs are amazingly close to the final version, with very thorough authorial editing. Many other writers aren't that talented in that regard, though, even if they otherwise pen a great story.
If you're a fan at all of Brandon Sanderson, look at the very detailed info he keeps constantly updated on his website on the progress of his books. It's an amazing dedication to transparency - he updates the percentage of the book he's completed as he's writing the first draft, then once the draft is turned in to Tor he tracks all of the publishing/distribution processes that take place in that 'mandated' year for major releases, and it's a lot of work. His Stormlight Archive books are monstrous 800+ page tomes (and great reads), so they're comparable to the MWW's longer novels. The first, second, and third draft proofreading and editing took a good 6 months after draft submission, then he tracked the building of the full submission print, the galley proof, and finally the final pass proofread. The book will hit shelves almost exactly one year after the first draft was submitted.