Comments

1
Does this mean John Updike will publish "The Zombies of Eastwick" through lulu.com?
2
Paul, I don't understand why the fall of some or all of Big Publishing is a bad thing. Similar to the situation with the auto industry, demand isn't necessarily down due to disinterest in the products, but because people don't have money to fling around everywhere. Unlike the auto industry, however, if publishing companies die, we won't have a 30% unemployment rate.

So if all or some of the big companies die off, and demand is still there, just reduced for the time being, then either new publishing companies will rise to giant status, or local publishers will start cropping up everywhere. With Borders dying, and Barnes and Noble perhaps not doing that great either, maybe these new or local publishers can resume selling books at normal book prices, instead of $40 dollar heavyweight tomes. And if prices ultimately drop substantially, sales will begin picking up again.

Right?
3
Remember, they're not independent any more, so check what their corporate master Bertelsmann's up to as well.
4
Hey, whatever happened to Brace and Jovanovich, anyways?
5
Will publishers be next in line for a Federal bailout?
6
I used to buy a lot of paperbacks in the 80's - the price was usually a penny a page.

It's 3 or 4 times that much now - you can't tell me we've had 400% inflation in the pas 20 years?

I also find todays drek even worse and more padded than 80's drek. This is the same thing that happened to music and I think the end result will be a democratization of the medium.

A good thing for consumers - bad for big corperate giants with old school distribution networks.
7
As a published author (Bantam, Dell, Zebra & Dorchester), I can tell you that things began to go down hill when publishers became elitetist, agents sold the powers that be the idea that "auctions" were the way to gather up so-called worthy manuscripts, extremely high advances were paid to one book wonders or instant celebrities cashing in on their 15 minutes of fame, series under made-up author names were poured into the mass market bins, and the desires of the public for what they wanted to read were totally ignored.

Sorry that was so long winded; but it is a real tragedy when people at the top fail to realize that what their job is, is to provide entertainment at a decent price: but, then again, this is an industry where a book actually gets on the New York Times Best Sellers List before it's released to the general public. How does that happen???? Might explain that 400% inflation. And the seven figure salaries at the top level. How crazy is that?

Please wait...

and remember to be decent to everyone
all of the time.

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