Poll
When choosing a book, how important is the company that published it?
I almost never notice who published the book.
I have a few publishers I especially like, but mostly I choose the book based on other criteria (story, author, etc.).
Not very important, but I usually make a note of it.
never ever!
Very important. I know if [my favorite publisher] published it, it will be a great read!
Have learned a LOT over this past year and I do take good notice of publishers. However I've become a HUGE indie author supporter over time. MUCH respect for indie authors, anti-pirating and promote the best I can for them!! So basically what matters most is do I like the authors work. If I do I'm going to promo like crazy the best I can!! Support both, care about the content and the author very much regardless of how it's published!!
It matters for eBooks because the quality range is so huge.
I notice the publisher if the book is badly edited. Otherwise it's not very important, though I actually check the publisher out just for curiosity.
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It doesn't factor into my purchasing decisions.
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only if it is a part of a series i'm collecting
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Wait, WHY would people care who the publisher of a book is? IT DOESN'T MATTER!!!!!!!!!!!!! (at least not to me)
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Somewhat important - knowing the publisher will give me a vague idea of what the book will be like. It's not generally make or break if I'm deciding what to read, but it can tip the balance one way or another.
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it can make a whole lot of difference if it is a translation
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I've never even noticed.
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never !
I always check the publisher, but I base my reading decisions on other criteria, such as recommendations.
It's only important when the book has been published by several different publishing houses. Some I love for their lay-outing, so that will influence my choice.
Holy cow. WHO CARES?
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This poll is too long and there are too much too read
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I avoid self-publishing houses, but otherwise the subject, author, and personal recommendations are most important.
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Never
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Publishers don't write books. I'm more interested in the author or what the promise of the book is.
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depends-certain publisher are known for a genre. But most of my authors jump publishers
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I will favor Baen, Random House, and other publishers who do not participate in Apple's Racketeering Model.
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Some publishers are more reliable, carry better made or attractive books and reputable writers. I also find that some publishers are work harder for the best translations, and in classics. I like Scribner, Penguin, and Oxford. However, I don't fully determine my book buying by publishing house, it is only a factor.
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I think it only matters if someone needs to know, or you are doing a work cited.
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I prefer certain publishers over others when it comes to classics
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Very important. I don't support mess.
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I usually don't mind the publisher, but i hate it when a certain publisher has a more attractive book cover than the one i bought first!!..other than that i care more about the book and author itself
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Who the fuck cares about the publisher
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While selecting a translated book it matters..Sometimes translators differ with publishers and so their translation.. better read the review to find these kind of discrepancies..
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I only check when the book is in the genre I would write, that way I would have a better notion of where to turn to when I look for publishing.
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only when they r on my bookshelf
Rarely matters--except nonfiction, in which case I'll occasionally check as a preliminary gauge of bias & credibility. Otherwise, doesn't matter.
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Not at all unless I'm looking to replace a specific edition.
What's important is the content, not the publisher. And the author of course, but sometimes I don't care.
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I definitely judge books partially by their covers, and some publishers match my preferred aesthetic more than others. Usually Picador for contemporary, Penquin for classics.
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I check the publisher, and some mean more to me than others - but I ALWAYS check the original publication date. Every book's a time capsule!
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add more answers next time
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Very important, but only because I work in the business. Before then, publishers didn't mean anything to me.
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It only matters to me when buying a physical book (exception: ebooks being free or not). When finishing out a series, I want them all to match. And for classics, I'm almost always drawn to Barnes&Noble. They're the cheapest at my favorite used bookstore.
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I check the publisher because I know which houses publish genres I have absolutely no interest in reading. Other than that, I'm open to any publisher that has produced competently edited books in the past in the wide variety of genres I *do* want to read.
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If i dont see anything this first time, i go back and look at the publisher of books ive liked in the past.
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yep
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I usually take notice when I first pick it up, because as I writer, I want to know not only what's on the market, but whom it's selling to. So yeah, it's mostly out of curiosity, but if it's something I really enjoyed or even something I'd write, I make a mental note of which publishing company decided to support it. :D
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Idk
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For print books, the publisher doesn't matter to me at all, but for e-books it does, because I only buy DRM-free,
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I have some favorite publishers, but I dont think it's THAT important. I have just two publisher that I really don't like and it was kind of hard for me when they published a book I REALLY wanted to read. I got over it, but I still dont like them any better.
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Touchdown
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I notice the publisher, but don't really care. What does it matter, anyway?
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Avoid publishers in general, choose the most obscure editions and especially avoid HarperCollins, Puffin, Random House, Bloomsbury etc. Self and indie publishers FTW. Definitely worth noting though.
It is important to me if it is a non-fiction historical work, especially if it is an ebook
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I'm only just now looking at them to be honest. Sometimes I'd take a glance but only now am I semi-looking for it.
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There is like 2 that I avoid
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The chronicles of audy
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For science fiction, I do. Other genres, not so much.
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og poll
I don't really care, but there are a few (mostly defunct) publishers I collect books by (Paperback Library, for example)
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Poll added by: Patrick
Comments Showing 51-100 of 131 (131 new)
message 51:
by
Hannah
(new)
May 10, 2011 01:54PM

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Good points, Gina!

This is a good point. Certain publishers know what genre fans want. (Same goes when you want to avoid certain kinds of books, e.g. religious/inspirational/self-help)

I like American book editions for some reason......"
Excellent points! Nothing is more annoying than a reference book or classic with faulty binding.

It's a deal-breaker if it is published by one of the vanity houses, yes. My reading time and budget are limited. I depend on experienced editors to wade through mountains of raw material so I won't have to.

Excellent points! This is also true for nonfiction, literary (especially poetry), and instructional books. Certain publishers have specialized in their fields for years and take pride in producing accurate, scholarly, quality works.


It matters because a decent publisher filters the 'crap' and a majority of the really hideous reads out of your personal, private "slush pile". So while you may not go looking for a specific publisher, seeing the name of a house you know and respect for having authors and material you are likely to enjoy makes it easier to make a selection.


I, too, have a few classics published by Barns & Nobles. I especially found their footnotes helpful when reading O' Henry's Selected Stories. O' Henry was a walking dictionary and some of the words were archaic. They also included helpful geographical notes, and Shakespearean notes. (He referenced Shakespeare a lot.)

I do go by reviews and if a story sounds good I'll brave a publisher I don't much like and buy the book anyway. And I can hope the writer moves to a better house as they get more established. But it's really not at all fair to hold that against the author.

I don't base reading decisions on publisher. From the point of view of whether to read a book or not, I couldn't care less who published it. However, I am somewhat selective about editions: I like my books to look and feel good, I like them to be of at least reasonable quality where things like print, typesetting and binding are concerned, and if I'm buying books in a series, I try to get all books in the same edition. If come across a crap edition from a certain publisher, I will try to avoid books from that publisher if they are of similar age and type. Likewise, if I have a book that I really like in terms of physical quality, I am more likely to select editions from that publisher when buying other books.
For my professional reading I care when I can, which isn't always. However, I try to avoid certain publishers whose policy I don't like. For example I try not to buy books from one publisher that consistently over-price their books by 50%-100% compared with comparable books from other publishers.




Yeah, totally. I wrote the "Wait, WHY would people care who the publisher of a book is? IT DOESN'T MATTER!!!!!!!!!!!!! (at least not to me)" answer.

I also think publisher is more important with the small presses... to me, there is a larger variance of quality from them than from larger presses. As a sci-fan fan, I've come across a variety of small presses out there, and they have different standards... some I feel like they will publish anything (even though I know the rejection rate is still high). Others I feel are very selective, and I know that even though the publisher is small and the author may be unknown, I feel like I'll get the same quality as from a top publisher.


However, I have found some good stuff self-published, so its still good to research and than assume its crap... Especially authors that have a history of past 'real' publications. I'm seen authors with 10 published novels, that self-publish something because it rejected too much or maybe they are trying to get a higher profit margin, but often it seems to be of equal quality of their other work. For accomplished writers, very little can separate their published work from their rejected work

Also, it's interesting what you said about profit margin. One of my favorite actors, Jack Klugman, could have been published by an established publisher but chose self-publishing to get more profits. The profits went to a cause that his friend Tony Randall believed in. Very nice way to publish that book!
Byron 'Giggsy' wrote: "good point Raquelle.
However, I have found some good stuff self-published, so its still good to research and than assume its crap... Especially authors that have a history of past 'real' publica..."



I do the same thing. If I can't get through the first chapter because it just does not make sense or there are just a bunch of punctation errors, I look at the publisher to make sure I steer clear of that company.

Do yourself a favour - read all this blog and his friends Dean Wesley Smith et al
http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/

So y you on Goodreads then! Hmm? Books are far far more detailed and interesting than the movie and some movies entirely miss the plot of the book. But how would you know? Books are stupid you say.....





If anyone here have read a translated version of "The Left Hand of God", it was BADLY printed. I only got half of the book, as the pages 200+ was exactly the same as the ones in the start (0-200)


I find these predatory and unethical practices offensive and incredibly damaging to the fan fiction community as well as the publishing industry. So I check the publisher on all the books I buy and recommend to avoid supporting this practice.




