leave the libraries alone
In the world I know about, the world of books and publishing and bookselling, it used to be the case that a publisher would read a book and like it and publish it. They'd back their judgement on the quality of the book and their feeling about whether the author had more books in him or in her, and sometimes the book would sell lots of copies and sometimes it wouldn't, but that didn't much matter because they knew it took three or four books before an author really found his or her voice and got the attention of the public. And there were several successful publishers who knew that some of their authors would never sell a lot of copies, but they kept publishing them because they liked their work. It was a human occupation run by human beings. It was about books, and people were in publishing or bookselling because they believed that books were the expression of the human spirit, vessels of delight or of consolation or enlightenment.
via falseeconomy.org.uk
And if you click on the link, you can read more of Philip Pullman's lucid and heart-felt analysis of cuts to libraries and "the greedy ghost of market madness" which "has got into the controlling heights of publishing."
Filed under: Concerning Tagged: greedy market and human spirit








Published on January 27, 2011 22:05
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