Today's Articles on Publishing and Books
Jul. 17th, 2009 10:05 amI tweeted and Facebooked these this morning, but here there are on LJ.
First of all, Nomi pointed this article from the Boston Globe out to me this morning: Kate's Mystery Books to close.
This is a real shame. Kate's has been a stalwart of Cambridge for two decades, and a real center for Boston mystery fandom.
Secondly, ReadWriteWeb has begun a series of posts about the future of the publishing business.
Part one can be found here:
Bits Of Destruction Hit the Book Publishing Business: Part 1
Part two can be found here:
Bits Of Destruction Hit the Book Publishing Business: Part 2
Some sobering stuff in those posts, especially on a day where McGraw-Hill has announced some layoffs.
First of all, Nomi pointed this article from the Boston Globe out to me this morning: Kate's Mystery Books to close.
This is a real shame. Kate's has been a stalwart of Cambridge for two decades, and a real center for Boston mystery fandom.
Secondly, ReadWriteWeb has begun a series of posts about the future of the publishing business.
Part one can be found here:
Bits Of Destruction Hit the Book Publishing Business: Part 1
Part two can be found here:
Bits Of Destruction Hit the Book Publishing Business: Part 2
Some sobering stuff in those posts, especially on a day where McGraw-Hill has announced some layoffs.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-17 02:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-17 04:21 pm (UTC)I've heard that the big problem a lot of dead-tree publishers (including the New York Times Company) face is not being unprofitable per se, but (a) the fact that many are now owned by investors who expect the same rate of profit as other publically traded companies, instead of being satisfied with a smaller but more consistent return, and/or (b) some have taken on a heavy burden of debt and even though their income is above their cost-of-goods-sold, they have trouble making their payments.
And of course a new writer's interest in getting an advance now versus waiting for royalties to gradually trickle in is a classic time-value-of-money problem.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-17 08:26 pm (UTC)