New Omani Initiative to Publish a 100 Books a Year

May 19th, 2009 | Posted in Books, Oman

Reading Books in Oman

Blogger Ahmed Al Mueini published a news article stating that the Cultural Club announced a national program to support the publication of new books in the country in hope of publishing a 100 new books a year. The program will be funded by the Cultural Club and other private and public bodies. It will be headed by a committee made up of representatives from the Cultural Club, SQU, Scientific Research Council, the Authors Association, and others.

The initiative is a result of one of the recommendations made during the period national discussion meeting of the Cultural Club. Other recommendations include:

  • Requesting the Ministry of Information to update the Publication Law, which is according to the news report, a barrier for the proliferation of book publication in the country.
  • Requesting the authorities to establish and support  more public libraries.
  • Requesting the authorities to support publications houses by assigning more publication works to them (How else was the government publishing its books? Duh.)
  • Preparing a nation report on “book problems”.  The preparation of this report will be carried over three phases is aimed to conclude with solutions for short and long term goals.

The meeting concluded that Omani authors are faced with many obstacles such as the lack of financing, the strictness of the old Publications Law, the lack of decent publication houses, and distributions and marketing difficulties.

A more “interesting obstacle” stated by the Club is the lack of “appreciation, criticism and reward” for authors in Oman. 

The press release made mentions in what is almost a footnote, the ‘emergence’ of a problem in ‘readership’  - as reading is not a daily activity for people in the Arab world and has become sort of an “activity for the affluent”.

———–

I guess it is nice that Omani authors will have some support to write and publish their books. Not sure if this will have any impact on readership though, publishing books (which have no contraversial content) is a relatively easy process in Oman, it is relatively very cheap to independently publish small books and novels, but distributing them is very difficult.

Making money from your book is even much much more harder, especially due to the low price at which Arabic books sell.You can buy an Arabic novel for something as low as 700 baisa (About $2) with expensive novels going for Ro1.5 (Less than $4). 

Due to the very small demand for books, the dominating publishers in the local market are stationers who sell books as a secondary product to their “papers and pens”. A book author who manages to convince this sort of  ”publisher” to publish his work will provide the script and the publisher takes care of printing and distributing on a share of profit basis – which usually goes on at 50-50. Usually 500 prints are made in each release, this number could go up to a 1000 copies in certain circumstances. The most oft hese copies are sold at the annual book exhibition.

This means if an author manages to sell every single copy (1000) of his book that costs RO 1.5, he would make: RO 750. This number is subject to reduction relating to printing costs, design costs, registrations costs, and just everything else that has to be done through the process, from writing and typing, to driving up and down to get your book out.

You can add to this the lack of respect for copyright by people, including school teachers and university lecturers, which could mean that your book will be copied like hell without you being able to do anything about it. 

The business of writing in Arabic for a living is just not a viable business in Oman.

  • UD
    I heard a factoid once that there are more books published in Sweden every year translated into Swedish than have been translated and published in Arabic in the last 100 years, or something like that...
  • Hello Ahmed, thanks for commenting.

    I really don't have a resource from which I got that number, I just remember that it was a very small one! :P
  • Ahmed Al-Maaini
    Typo: synical=cynical
  • Ahmed Al-Maaini
    Dear Riyadh,

    Many thanks for posting about this initiative in English. I would also like to thank you for other very interesting posts in your blog.

    I have one comment on what you said:
    "When Muscat was selected as THE Arabic capital for culture, only 9 books were published during that event".

    Come on, Riyadh! Most of us might be synical about publishing and readership in Oman, but you are certainly mistaken about that number! I can list, from my poor memory only, at least 20 titles published by the Ministry of Heritage and Culture on that event. I am sure there are many more, despite the fact that some books were delayed until 2007, but on the scheme.

    Sorry, mate. I just thought I needed to correct that.
  • Thanks for commenting AP, I think that you are right, my justifications were a bit too extreme.
  • The exhibition is busy because (1) the majority of schools organize trips for their students, (2) Muscat can get boring and people have nowhere else to go, (3) people still have hope that they will find something interesting but they don't necessarily find stuff when they actually go there, (4) teenagers go in hope just to flirt with girls.

    I dont think you are being very fair here .. I for one, wait for the book exhibition because it brings with it big Arabic publishers who have the newest books Al Saqi, Al Jamal and Al Hikma to name a few. I end up buying number of books everytime. I always say, if you want to go there to get somethign you need to know what you are looking for.

    Regarding the price of Arabic novels, they are not very cheap these days. The average price of arabic novels is around 3 Rials and could go to 5 and 6 if it was popular. Omani novels might not be within that range.

    Yes, we have a problem with readership and it all goes back down to the education at home and school. People who are not exposed to reading at a young age, could never grow up to be readers. So I guess, this goal should be aligned with the MOE in order for it to come to reality.

  • Most books sold at the book exhibition are either religious books, children comics, or random collection of poetry, health, and cooking. And lets not forget the many outdated translations of computer guide books (example: How to Use Windows 98 - I SAW ONE MYSELF).

    When Muscat was selected as THE Arabic capital for culture, only 9 books were published during that event.

    The exhibition is busy because (1) the majority of schools organize trips for their students, (2) Muscat can get boring and people have nowhere else to go, (3) people still have hope that they will find something interesting but they don't necessarily find stuff when they actually go there, (4) teenagers go in hope just to flirt with girls.

    I think that publication regulations in Oman are similar to other Arabic states. We don't have anything that is really special or super strict.

    In the UK and the US there is no such thing as a pre-publication examination of any books by the authorities. Anybody can print out and publish any books. People are still responsible for what they write obviously, but in Oman the state has to review and approve the publication of any book. A printer will not even print your book if you do not have an authorization letter from the Ministry of Information.
  • I went to the book fair at Seeb - so busy, must be a lot of demand.
    How does Oman’s publishing regulations compare to other Arab countries?
    How is it different to say Britain in the legal situation of publishing any book and number of publications per head of population?
    Do authors need permission in Britain to publish ?
blog comments powered by Disqus

Blue_Chi's Blog © 2009 - Riyadh Al-Balushi | This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial License | RSS