Excellent article about the book trade. Paragraph # 1 contains a couple of  
British usages
that exemplify the extreme difficulty that some of Her Majesty's subjects  
have with language,
but otherwise the essay is filled with useful information, and includes a  
number
of important questions.
 
It seems as if e-books are now outselling normal books. But , reading the  
piece it
soon became clear that the category "books" can be very misleading. The  
word 
is indiscriminate and includes everything from cheap paperback novels  to
scholarly tomes of hundreds of pages. It includes oversize picture  books
and miniature New Testaments, it includes cookbooks and auto repair  manuals
and so forth, through a long list of categories. 
 
Publishers may not want such categorization , for them the total number  of 
 books sold
is what matters most, and maybe by orders of magnitude, vs types of books.  
However, the
type of book is crucial. Some kinds of books are best ( by FAR, almost  
infinitely far )
in "hard" format. Atlases are an obvious example.  Atlases almost  always 
are oversize
and, even when they are not, the level of detail available in high  
resolution print exceeds
the best that computers can offer. And atlases, if they are professional,  
require display
of hundreds or even thousands of place names per "page."
 
History books are another. After all, random access is not a frill for an  
historian,
in a discipline that rests on a foundation of cross-referencing and  
comparing 
information about one era of time ( in chapter 3, say ) with information  
about
another era ( chapter 8 ) or even still another ( chapter 12 ). As well,  
the way
any historical works, you are constantly comparing  --or  "mining"--  
information
from one book and another and another simultaneously  ;  it is very rare 
when
sequential information searches are relevant to an historian's task, which  
is
synthesizing information. Chronicle  --one fact after  another--   is the 
task of
for example, a clerk of records, or maybe of a genealogist,  but that  is 
not "history."  
And art history is another example since an art historian ( can be a museum 
 curator
or art gallery proprietor or an art appraiser, etc ) also needs to make  
simultaneous
comparisons on a regular basis.
 
This manifestly does not say that e-texts / e-visuals are useless, the  
exact opposite
is the case.  The point is that for at least these fields there is no  
substitute for
hard copy books.  Have all the e-books you may want, but you  cannot
live without hard copy atlases or history books or art history  volumes.
And I would guess this is true for a good number of other  disciplines.
 
Then there is the nature of books sold. A really large segment of the book  
trade
consists of types of books that, personally, I find utterly  worthless.
 
Take romance novels .  How can anyone spend even 1 minute reading such  
crap ?
Yet the "Romance" category is a major seller in the book trade, and  has 
always been.
This is also true for mystery novels, about which I can understand  
something of
their appeal, and for some people the same may be true for Westerns,  or
sci-fi, but, still , mostly the books in question have little objective  
value.
 
Sure, Louis L'Amor was a terrific writer, one of the greats in the history  
of fiction, and
only an idiot would say that Mark Twain has little to say that is worth  
reading, or
X number of other fiction authors of note. But this is like the popular  
music business :
Either you are a top rated star or you are nobody, there is no middle  
ground.
 
The question that matters most for book publishing would seem to be  this :
How can you tell which types of books will retain  their value into the 
future ?
The corollary is :  Which types of books are best  read ( or looked at )
in hard copy format vs e-book format ?
 
"Real books," for me,  offer objective value in terms of valuable  
information presented or
outstanding literary merit ( think Dostoevsky or Shakespeare ).  The  rest
are fluff --or garbage--  with no objective value at all.
 
All of this said, one of my heroes, Henri Saint-Simon , was addicted to  
cheap novels
and was Dostoevsky himself. Maybe I am being too judgmental,  but maybe not.
What explains some people's fascination with trash fiction ?  There  would 
seem to
be some sort of lesson worth learning, if the answer could be found  out.
 
My humble opinion
Billy
 
 
==============================================
 
 
 
The Economist
 
The books business
Great digital expectations
Digitisation may have come late to book  publishing, but it is transforming 
the business in short order
Sep 10th 2011 
 
TO SEE how profoundly the book business is changing, watch the shelves. 
Next  month IKEA will introduce a new, deeper version of its ubiquitous “BILLY”
  bookcase.[ what the heck is that ? Why can't the British speak  good 
English ? ]  The flat-pack furniture giant is already promoting glass  doors 
for 
its bookshelves. The firm reckons customers will increasingly use them  for 
ornaments, tchotchkes [ huh ? ]  and the odd coffee-table  tome—anything, 
that is, except books that are actually read. 
In the first five months of this year sales of  consumer e-books in America 
overtook those from adult hardback books. Just a  year earlier hardbacks 
had been worth more than three times as much as e-books,  according to the 
Association of American Publishers. Amazon now sells more  copies of e-books 
than paper books. The drift to digits will speed up as  bookshops close. 
Borders, once a retail behemoth, is liquidating all of its  American stores.
 
Having started rather late, books are swiftly following music and 
newspapers  into the digital world. Publishers believe their journey will be 
different, and  that they will not suffer the fate of those industries by going 
into 
slow  decline. Publishers’ experience will, indeed, be different—but not 
necessarily  better. 
In some ways the transition from paper to digital distribution is a boon.  
E-books currently have high profit margins, and are free from many of the  
drawbacks of print. Peter Osnos, the founder of PublicAffairs Books, says the 
 biggest challenge small publishers face is managing their inventories. 
Print too  many books, and lots of them will be returned by stores. Print too 
few and  publishers will forgo sales while they order reprints (at higher 
prices). None  of these problems exists when distributing books digitally. 
Bodice ripping 
Romance novels and crime blockbusters have proved particularly popular on  
e-readers, perhaps because it is difficult to tell from across the aisle of 
a  bus whether someone is reading a bodice-ripper or Dostoevsky on their 
Kindle.  Donna Hayes, chief executive of Harlequin (which owns Mills & Boon), 
says  digitisation has given new life to old books. Serialised romance novels 
 generally have a shelf life of just four weeks. Now many are easily 
available:  Harlequin has digitised more than 13,000 of its books. The firm has 
begun to  publish some romances as e-books only, gauging customers’ appetite 
for them  before taking some into print. 
Yet these advantages are outweighed by several looming hazards. The first 
is  piracy. Digital-book files are tiny—much smaller than a film, and not 
even as  big as a music album. Book readers may be an unusually honest lot, but 
they are  not above getting stuff for nothing. E-books routinely pop up on 
file-sharing  websites like the Pirate Bay, both in their own right and as 
part of vast  anthologies with names like “2,500 Retail Quality E-books”. 
The example of  countries such as Spain suggests that media piracy can become 
entrenched even  among the middle-aged. In Russia, e-book piracy is already 
rampant. 
Piracy is a particular threat because of a second,  bigger problem: the 
apparently arbitrary nature of e-book pricing. When Amazon  began selling 
e-books, it charged $9.99 for many of them, often selling at a  loss to fire 
Kindle sales. Gradually it became clear that Amazon was undermining  the 
perceived value of all books, digital and paper alike. So, last year, the  
biggest 
publishers used the release of Apple’s iPad to push Amazon into “agency”  
pricing. Publishers now set their own prices and give about 30% of the sale 
to  Amazon.
 
That has meant higher prices for many new e-books. As some prices rise,  
though, a tide of free and cheap product is flooding the market. 
Self-published  novelists, keen for attention and without agents or publishers 
to share 
the  proceeds with, often sell their works extremely cheaply. Meanwhile 
publishers  have moved to offer introductory discounts on some books. As a 
result, Amazon’s  list of 100 best-selling books has become a pricing 
free-for-all. This week 21  books were selling for just 99 cents. Others were 
priced at 
$4.98, $7.59 and  $8.82. The most expensive single book, at $16.99, was Dick 
Cheney’s memoir.  There is none of the clarity of iTunes in its early 
years, when the price of  music tracks was fixed at 99 cents. 
Publishers point out that books have always sold for a wide variety of  
different prices. Hardback books cost more than high-quality paperbacks, which  
cost more than small, mass-market paperbacks—and everything is more 
expensive  than a dog-eared library book. But those books are physically 
different 
from  each other. E-books all look the same. And the popularity of those 
99-cent  thrillers suggests readers are more price-sensitive, and less 
quality-sensitive,  than publishers care to admit. 
Another problem is Amazon’s market dominance. The firm accounts for less 
than  a quarter of physical book sales (see box). But Amazon sells 60-70% of 
e-books  in America and perhaps 90% in Britain, according to estimates by 
Enders  Analysis, a British outfit. In America, Barnes & Noble’s Nook is the 
main  competitor. Surprisingly, given the success of the iPad, Apple’s 
iBookstore has  lagged. James McQuivey of Forrester Research found in a survey 
that 
only half of  iPad owners read e-books—and two-thirds of them own or plan 
to buy an e-reader  especially for the purpose. Amazon appears set to launch 
a tablet computer to  take on the iPad. And Amazon is becoming a publisher 
in its own right. It has a  romance imprint, and has signed big writers like 
Timothy Ferriss, author of “The  4-Hour Workweek”. This tightens its grip 
over the e-book market. 
A book in the window 
Perhaps the biggest problem, though, is the gradual disappearance of the 
shop  window. Brian Murray, chief executive of HarperCollins, points out that 
a film  may be released with more than $100m of marketing behind it. Music 
singles often  receive radio promotion. Publishers, on the other hand, rely 
heavily on  bookstores to bring new releases to customers’ attention and to 
steer them to  books that they might not have considered buying. As stores 
close, the industry  loses much more than a retail outlet. Publishers are 
increasingly trying to push  books through online social networks. But Mr 
Murray 
says he hasn’t seen anything  that replicates the experience of browsing a 
bookstore. 
Efforts are under way. This week a British outfit called aNobii released a  
trial version of a website that it hopes will become a Wikipedia-style 
community  of book lovers, with an option to buy. The idea has potential. 
Amazon’
s  recommendation engine, although helpful, is rather impersonal—perhaps 
the  retailer’s second-biggest weakness, after the resentment publishers feel 
for  it. 
The book business has long been suffused with gloom; Mr Osnos says that  
booksellers have faced five or six supposedly fatal challenges during his  
career. But this time the challenges are really daunting. Publishers have to  
confront many of the problems that have afflicted other media industries that 
 have gone digital, as well as a few entirely new ones. The next few years 
will  be a thriller.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
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