Who Controls Publishing?
To eRead or not to eRead that is the question the cartoon on the cover of yesterday's Sunday's NYT Book Review asks. And the winner is … the underdog hardback! To me the cover seemed fraught with anxiety and dripping with vain hope. It was also something of a stand in for the larger issue of who controls publishing: the informal consortium, not to say cabal of Manhattanits (the major NY publishers, the NYT, The New Yorker, and the NYRB), or the distribution system. In the long run, disputes like the one between Hachette and Amazon are good for small press authors like me. We are absolutely dependent on the net and social media for sales. And the truth is, so are the big publishers—that's what the fuss is about. The Times and the New Yorker reach only a small fraction of the US market, and the worldwide market for English language books is much, much larger. A well-positioned internet company can market and deliver an ebook to any place in the world in a matter of minutes. And online reviews, while often unnuanced and quirky, tell potential readers what they want to know: will I enjoy this book. It's a messy marketplace and everyone is scrapping for a share of the dollar, but the net is my friend.
Published on June 02, 2014 04:41
No comments have been added yet.
Mike Lieberman's take on reading and writing
As the title indicates, this is my place to post my take on reading and writing. How to read, how to review, how write (oh, if I only knew), how to find a publisher (and how not to find a publisher)an
As the title indicates, this is my place to post my take on reading and writing. How to read, how to review, how write (oh, if I only knew), how to find a publisher (and how not to find a publisher)and everything else in this small corner of the universe are considered. I welcome your comments—that part of how I learn. Writing clarifies my thoughts, but feedback is invaluable.
And also what I just plain like in fiction and poetry without being able to tell you why. ...more
And also what I just plain like in fiction and poetry without being able to tell you why. ...more
- Michael Lieberman's profile
- 6 followers
