Everything Used is New Again We have often discussed the increased liquidity among used book sales as one of many major systemic challenges the book business faces, and now the NYT has concluded that, “Analysts and industry executives said the momentum among consumers and newly minted used-book sellers was just now approaching the point of biting into new-book sales.” Just now. The article cites the usual grab-bag of non-specific statistics, as well as following the erroneous conventional wisdom that, “Industry executives and analysts widely acknowledge Amazon as the engine of the market.” Alas, facile thinking like this will get us […]
Lunch for Friday, July 9
No Gephardt for Kerry; No Proprietary Classics for Amazon It’s not quite up there with the NY Post earlier this week, but the Ann Arbor News has substantially corrected their story cited here yesterday about classics lines being produced by the Ann Arbor Media Group. As company official Jim Edwards confirms, “There is no agreement between Ann Arbor Media Group and Costco or Amazon.” The Ann Arbor News states: “A July 6 Business story incorrectly stated that a partnership between Ann Arbor Media Group and Amazon.com planned to produce 200 titles by 2006. That goal is for the Ann Arbor […]
Lunch for Thursday, July 8
Classic Competition Heats Up As Amazon Commission 200-Title Line, Plus Separate Annotated Editions (and the Same Packager is Producing Classics for Costco, Too) Much of today’s news is a testament to the things you can learn on the Internet, sometimes in the most unusual places. Buried in an article in the Ann Arbor News, we discover this big development: Amazon has contracted with packager/publisher Ann Arbor Media (owned by the same family that controls printer Edwards Brothers) to produce a series of 200 classics, a separate series of study guides, and more. The classics program will span public domain literature […]
Lunch for Wednesday, July 7
Also New and Improved Here’s another cool upgrade at PublishersMarketplace. Now you can search our contact database by location, so you can focus your searches by city, state, or even zip code. Contact page My Life: Week 2 After two weeks of collecting data, Nielsen Bookscan is reporting year-to-date sales for Bill Clinton’s MY LIFE of just over 764,500 copies through last Saturday. Clee Will Leave Post Longtime editor of The Bookseller in the UK Nicholas Clee announced that he will leave his job in late September, “to pursue other opportunities in the book world.” Clee, who has been with […]
Lunch for Tuesday, July 6
New and/or Improved We have a few PublishersMarketplace updates for you: * Our genius webmaster has added a cool pop-up “bestseller history” feature to our very popular new bestseller section. So now the same way you can view a complete “tracker” sales history, you can also bring up and analyze a book’s complete bestseller list results, tapping our database back to last fall. So, for example, you can see that even as Gregory Maguire’s WICKED hits its highest ranking on the USA Today since its debut there last October at No. 34, the book ended its modest run on the […]
Lunch for Friday, July 2
Catching a Famous Goat The WSJ tracks down the “My Pet Goat” story that President Bush is shown reading to a group of schoolchildren on 9/11 in Michael Moore’s “Fahrenheit 9/11.” They report: “Because the story is part of a classroom anthology, finding a copy — except for one listed under MY PET GOAT on eBay yesterday — has been near impossible. The story is contained in a book called READING MASTERY: Rainbow Edition, Level 2, Storybook 1, a school reading aid offered by SRA/McGraw-Hill, an educational publisher owned by McGraw-Hill.” This Amazon link says that it contains PET GOAT […]