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Please see below. Note Oct 30 deadline.

 

 

Dear Marika,

 

FYI.  Please do pre-order a copy of the upcoming Inkshares edition of Ama.
If you do so before the October 30 deadline, it shouldn't cost you a penny
(taking Inkhares credits into account.) Please spread the word.

 

Regards

 

Manu


Leading U.S. publisher dumps prize-winning African novel of the Atlantic
Slave Trade without explanation: a call for solidarity.


 

On August 26, 2015, Open Road Integrated Media, the publisher of my novel
Ama, a Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade, wrote to me as follows: "We have
decided to revert the rights to you." 

 

They followed this with a request for me to sign a document which read in
part as follows: "The parties hereby confirm that the Agreement will
terminate in all respects effective as of September 30, 2015 (the
"Termination Effective Date").

 

Termination. I had a vision of a condemned man being led to the gallows. A
harassed bureaucrat pursues him with a sheet of paper. "Please, sir, you
must sign this," he begs. It is a form of consent to the victim's own
execution.

 

I didn't sign. Open Road put the termination into effect without my consent.


 

In what follows I tell the back story, describe my response and ask you, as
a gesture of solidarity and support, to perform a simple task, probably
cost-free, which will help to bring Ama back into print in the U.S.A.

 

Publishing history

Ama was first published in the U.S. by E-Reads in 2001. In 2002 it won the
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth_Foundation_prizes#Commonwealth_W
riters.27_Prize> Commonwealth Writers Prize for the Best First Book. In
April 2014 Open Road took over E-Reads' list, including Ama.  My formal
written contract with E-Reads had long since expired but our relationship
had continued as if it were still in effect.  Open Road agreed to continue
on the same basis, honoring the E-Reads year 2000 contract. At their
website, they described the Ama as colorful, entrancing, gripping, deeply
engrossing, spellbinding and unforgettable.

 

 <http://www.openroadmedia.com/> Open Road

Open Road Integrated Media boasts on its website that it publishes "more
than 2000 authors, 10,000 books." In the second quarter of 2015 it sold 156
copies of Ama.

 

Use in Academia

Over the years, Ama has been taught at several U. S. universities including
Harvard (Prof. Emmanuel Akyeampong), East Carolina University (Prof. Kenneth
Wilburn), Carleton College (Prof. Martin Klein, University of Toronto) and
Boston University (Prof. Heidi Gengenbach, University of Massachusetts).
Students visiting Ghana from Grand Valley State University under the
leadership of Prof. Sherry Johnson have twice used Ama as the focus of their
studies as have others from East Carolina University. This fall Prof.
Rebecca Shumway is teaching Ama at the College of Charleston in a HIST
361-02 course entitled West Africa in the Era of the Slave Trade. Her
<https://oieahc.wm.edu/conferences/2015annual/PrecirculatedPapers/Shumway.pd
f> syllabus is available on-line. 

 

Enter  <http://www.worldreader.org/> Worldreader

"Worldreader is on a mission to bring digital books to every child and her
family, so that they can improve their lives." In 2013 I entered a story in
ShortStoryDayAfrica <http://shortstorydayafrica.org/anthologies/> 's annual
competition. One of the conditions of entry was that the published stories
would be donated to Worldreader. Earlier this year I read that Worldreader
has launched its cellphone app
<http://www.worldreader.org/what-we-do/worldreader-mobile/> . I downloaded
the app to my phone and searched on my surname. My story, The Dibbuk, was
there. So too, to my astonishment, was Ama, free to read in its entirety. A
web search revealed the following.

 

Danielle Zacarias of Worldreader, August 18, 2014: ".today, am very excited
to announce our partnership with Open Road. Over 260 new books have been
added to our programs, to be read by children and their families in 22
developing countries. Some of our favorites include.Ama - the spell binding
story of Nandzi, captured and traded as a slave in the days of the
transatlantic slave trade."

 

Worldreader,  Aug 31, 2015: "Thanks to a new partnership with Opera Software
we've connected 5 million readers in Africa to a library of 25,000 free
digital book titles via their mobile phones. And we're just getting started!
Our goal is to reach 10 million readers by the end of 2015. Join this
reading revolution today."

 

I consulted my publisher in Ghana. She was not happy, particularly since she
was currently investing funds in a new print run. 




I pulled out my E-Reads contract and read:

 

No license of any subsidiary rights that may exist or come into existence
with respect to any right granted hereunder shall be made by E-Reads without
the prior approval of Content Provider.

 

Open Road had not sought my approval.

 

I briefed the legal department at the NYC-based Authors Guild
<https://www.authorsguild.org/> . This was their advice: 

 

Yes, then Open Road breached the agreement.  You should contact them and
demand they have your material removed. 

 

I didn't do that. All I did was to send them a polite message, asking them
to brief me on the relevant contractual situation.

 

Would you please let me have a copy of Open Road's agreement with World
Reader?  Have you licensed rights to any other parties?

 

They didn't reply.  Instead they informed me that they would cease to
publish Ama as from the end of September.  

 

Worldreader later wrote to me as follows:

 

Your book is published by Open Road Media, with which we have an agreement.
They had agreed to let us distribute your book (among others, to which they
have global digital rights) to our e-reading projects in Sub Saharan Africa
and on our mobile application (which, though available Worldwide, has geo
limitations which makes certain books  - like yours - only available within
Sub Saharan Africa.) . This was done as part of a donation of digital books
from Open Road to people who would otherwise not have access to these books.


If there has been an error here of some kind or if you would like to have
your book withdrawn from our program we will certainly remove it from our
library immediately. We can also further limit the geo availability of the
book to exclude certain countries within Sub Saharan Africa as well if this
would be useful. 

 

Worldreader acted honorably. They implicitly acknowledged my suggestion that
they should have exercised more care in vetting Open Road's rights by
removing the book from their app without delay. 

 

I share Worldreader's commitment to the use of cell phones for the
development of children's literacy. However, Ama is not a children's book.
Open Road had no right to donate it to Worldreader without requesting my
permission. 

 

An article in the Spring/Summer 2015 Authors Guild Bulletin, considers a
similar program, sponsored by President Barack Obama, which is being
launched for children of low-income families in the U.S. I quote
(highlighting added):

 

The Authors Guild supports literacy programs-especially programs like this,
aimed at encouraging kids to become lifelong readers.

 

Many publishing agreements do not allow for royalty-free donations for
charitable purposes, although some do. In any event, all of the publishers
we have spoken with are either asking authors' permission or allowing
authors to opt out.

 

Authors who wish their books to be kept out of the program are encouraged to
contact their publishers. Based on preliminary conversations with
publishers, we have every reason to believe they will be cooperative in
carrying out their authors' wishes.

 

It seems that Open Road is an exception, in my case at least. They responded
to my temerity in questioning their breach of my rights by inflicting on me,
the novel and potential future readers, the cruel and unwarranted punishment
of rendering the book "out of print."

 

Some time ago, when I complained to E-Reads about Open Road's failure to
make a P.O.D edition of the novel available and to report and pay royalties
on time, they told me that Open Road's publisher is a "leading advocate of
African authors [who has] published or rescued many a book in the field."

 

Searching the Open Road website on "Africa" I found 61 authors, including
Edgar Wallace, Edgar Rice Burroughs and H Rider Haggard; also, it is true, E
R Braithwaite, Alice Walker and Ishmael Reed; and white South African author
Troy Blacklaws. But not one black African writer.

 

I pondered the reason for Open Road's crass action and decided to offer them
one last opportunity for sober reflection. I mobilized scholars, writers and
friends to send them short email messages, urging them to review their
action.  I quote just one of these messages, with the permission of the
writer, Martin Klein, Professor Emeritus of History at the University of
Toronto.

 

I am sorry to hear that your publishing house plans to suspend publication
of Manu Herbstein's Ama. This is not only a fine and very readable novel,
but it is also the best single introduction to how the slave trade operated
within in Africa. It takes a young girl through different stages, starting
with her enslavement in northern Ghana and ending in Brazil, and for each,
depicts the way the society in question was part of the slave trade and how
Ama was treated. I used it with great success in a number of courses dealing
with slavery in Africa and have recommended it to other scholars just as the
fine Ghanaian historian, Emmanuel Akyeampong first recommended it to me. It
gives student[s] a vivid picture of the different actors in the trade, both
slave and free. I urge you to maintain this fine novel in print.

To me, he added:

I am baffled that Ama has not had greater success. It is unfortunately not
in the hands of a publisher will[ing] and able to promote it.

On September 21, Open Road responded:

 

Open Road has made the decision not to continue publication of AMA and that
decision is now final.  As such, we respectfully request that you cease and
desist from continuing your email campaign to keep the book in print through
Open Road.  As you know, there are other avenues for you to publish your
book, including self-publishing avenues. We suggest you focus your efforts
on these options.

 

End of chapter. Enter Inkshares.

 

 <https://www.inkshares.com/> Inkshares

 

Inkshares is an innovative book publisher that has readers, not agents or
editors, decide what they publish. They publish any work that successfully
hits a pre-order threshold on their platform. Any author can submit a
proposal for a book. Once the project goes live, readers are invited to
support the project by pre-ordering copies of the book. Readers are charged
only when pre-orders for their chosen book reach the specified target. Once
that pre-order target is attained, Inkshares starts publishing.  If the
pre-order goal isn't met, no transaction takes place.

Inkshares issues Credits, which can be used like money on the Inkshares
platform to back or purchase any book. When you sign on at Inkshares you
receive a credit of $5. For your first review of a project (say, Ama) you
receive another $5 credit. For the first new reader you introduce for a
project, you receive a $10 credit, provided that your introduction leads to
a purchase. If any project you back receives 2000 orders you get yet another
$10 credit, with a repeat at 5000 orders.

On October 23, Inkshares announced that new rules will come into effect at
noon PST on October30. Until that deadline, it will you cost you just $10 to
place a pre-order for Ama. The pre-order target is 1000 copies. You will be
charged only if and when that target is reached. Shipping is free,
worldwide.

 

For orders placed after the October 30 deadline, the pre-order target will
be reduced to 750 copies. The pre-order price will rise to $20 per paperback
and $30 per trade hardcover. An e-book will be included at no extra cost.
There will still be no charge for domestic shipping but for all other
destinations there will be a charge of $15 per order.

 

So, please rush to place your order before the deadline. This is a real
bargain, just $10 per book, even less when you take Inkshares Credits into
account.  If you live outside North America, even more so. This is the link:

 

https://www.inkshares.com/projects/ama-a-story-of-the-atlantic-slave-trade-9
786 

 

Once there, please click on PRE-ORDER under READER or, for three copies,
under SUPER-READER.

 

While there, please watch the Vimeo movie, read the first chapter of Ama and
extracts from reviews and browse the other Inkshare books.

 

Many thanks

Manu Herbstein

Accra, Ghana