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View Full Version : To Pausing - And To Its Benefits?


Richard
09-06-2009, 05:48
Some points to consider which might aptly be applied to other areas of our lives as well. ;)

Richard's $.02 :munchin

A Labor Day Sigh Over Summer Books
Danny Heitman, CSM, 4 Sep 2009

With the arrival of Labor Day, a curtain falls on a summer reading season known not only for books for the beach, but also a few shadows on the book trade itself.

In an apparent response to declining fortunes, the traditional book industry published fewer titles in 2008 than in 2007, and given the economic slump, the trend could continue.

But could readers and writers benefit from having fewer books in the publishing pipeline? That notion might seem heretical to all those bibliophiles – and I count myself among them – who usually embrace the principle that the world can never have enough books.

A casual glance at the numbers reveals that the real problem in book publishing might not be scarcity but glut. Even with an estimated 3.2 percent drop in the release of new titles last year over 2007, publishers still churned out 275,232 new titles and editions in 2008, according to Bowker, a company that tracks industry trends. And new technologies, such as books on demand, are adding thousands more.

I sometimes feel as if every one of those titles has landed on my book-cluttered nightstand, each one waiting – often for months and often in vain – to be read.

As an author, I've benefited from a literary marketplace so varied and accommodating that even I could find a publisher for my work. However, as I know from firsthand experience, the plenitude of newly published books creates a lot of white noise that tends to drown out authors who are trying to be heard.

I felt fortunate to have my book reviewed in a modest number of newspapers and magazines, though gaining a profile was an uphill climb. Many fellow authors have told me of their disappointment at not being reviewed at all.

None of this surprised me, since I've seen the challenge from the other side of the coin as an occasional reviewer. I'm routinely bombarded by requests to review more books than I can possibly handle. As many newspapers and magazines cut space and staff devoted to books coverage, the challenge for authors grows harder.

Books are creatures of commerce, and the market will eventually find equilibrium when it comes to literary output. If the traditional book trade tips toward less production, authors and their audiences might actually find a few silver linings.

A librarian tells me that culling bookshelves is one of the best ways to increase circulation, since a thinned-out forest lets browsers finally see the trees. That less-is-more model might also have promise for the book trade as a whole.

The question of book production also brings to mind the story of V.S. Pritchett, who was reviewing books at the start of World War II when a paper shortage dramatically reduced the number of new titles being published. Denied new material, Pritchett reread the classics, and the experience helped deepen him into a great author and critic.

Might all readers benefit from such a small pause in the flood of books that arrives each day, clamoring for attention? My bedroom nightstand, covered with summer reading still untouched in this fading season, tells me this may be so.

LarryW
09-06-2009, 06:33
A casual glance at the numbers reveals that the real problem in book publishing might not be scarcity but glut.

TMI. Applies to all published and broadcast information. It's like trying to decide what to buy at a 7-11...Coke, Diet-Coke, Cherry Coke, Water (with/without lemon, lime, onions!)...Gads!

I can see it but my ability to process has gone to hell. Maybe it's time to sit on my butt and just space out! No wonder our kids are going nutz!

You're right...I need a rest. Maybe a beer. (Now, do I want NA, Bud, Bud-Lite, Coors, Blue-Ribbon, amber, lime added, domestic, imported, micro-brewed...revolver or semi-automatic?)

nmap
09-06-2009, 10:33
Pausing does have its benefits.

I think it is getting steadily more difficult to take those pauses, though.

The article mentions the flow of books; but without considering the transition from paper to electronic distribution. Anyone who wishes to do so can author a book. They can then upload the document and sell it through on-demand channels at no cost to the author. However, this is nothing compared to the next step, which permits the author to make a PDF copy availiable for pennies and sell it directly.

Notice the pattern. There was a production heirarchy that selected what to publish and what to promote. But the internet has flattened that heirarchy, eliminating the filter that reduced our choices to a more manageable level.

This same pattern plays out often - more choice, cheaper choices, but more difficulty in choosing. I can't see that trend coming to an end just yet.