Amazon Attacks… George Orwell

BOY, this is weird.


The online bookseller, in an attempt to tackle its critics, has been quoting George Orwell WAY out of context. A New York Times story gets at the whole messy business.


In 1936 Orwell told a British paper: “The Penguin Books are splendid value for sixpence, so splendid that if the other publishers had any sense they would combine against them and suppress them.” The Times picks it up from here:



Orwell then went on to undermine Amazon’s argument for cheap e-books. “It is, of course, a great mistake to imagine that cheap books are good for the book trade,” he wrote, saying that the opposite was true.220px-George_Orwell_press_photo


“The cheaper books become,” he wrote, “the less money is spent on books.”


Instead of buying two expensive books, he said, the consumer will buy three cheap books and then use the rest of the money to go to the movies. “This is an advantage from the reader’s point of view and doesn’t hurt trade as a whole, but for the publisher, the compositor, the author and the bookseller, it is a disaster,” Orwell wrote.



I give St. George points for prescience here — even if it took a while for his prediction to come true.


Amazon, by the way, is now going up against Disney as well. (They’re the new Hachette.) Stay tuned.


 

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Published on August 12, 2014 15:08
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