Sorry, I missed this one. Been busy. Every day is Book Day around here. Trying to read some of them, get rid of others. Anybody have any Book Day experiences to relate?
There has been a bit of coverage lately in the bits of the web that I read of the really minimal sales of most books (in the US, because that’s where a an antitrust case revealed the details). It’s a fascinating picture, quite a
hit-driven economy, lots of money lost on loads of books.
On 2024-04-25, Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> wrote:
There has been a bit of coverage lately in the bits of the web that I read of the really minimal sales of most books (in the US, because that’s where
[a^H] an antitrust case revealed the details). It’s a fascinating picture,
quite a hit-driven economy, lots of money lost on loads of books.
The argument that bestsellers subsidize the availability of a larger
variety of books comes up regularly in debates about fixed book
price laws, which exist in a number of Continental European and
other countries. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_book_price#/media/File:Countries-with-a-Fixed-Book-Price-Agreement.svg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_book_price#/media/File:Countries-with-a-Fixed-Book-Price-Agreement.svg
Part of the argument in the Wikipedia article is that well-stocked bookshops are important for cultural life, and that’s something that’s less important
with good online sources for books. Certainly if I had been attempting to
source John Perry’s Tajik Persian Reference Grammar in the 1990s (assuming it
had been published then) living in Dublin, I strongly suspect I would never have been able to source it at all. Whereas currently (and in 2006ish) it’s just a matter of throwing enough money at the problem.
On 2024-04-25, Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> wrote:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_book_price#/media/File:Countries-with-a-Fixed-Book-Price-Agreement.svg
Part of the argument in the Wikipedia article is that well-stocked bookshops
are important for cultural life, and that’s something that’s less important
with good online sources for books. Certainly if I had been attempting to
There seem to be a sufficient number of studies with a wide range
of results--the German Wikipedia article cites a bunch more--that
you can pick and choose to support whatever argument you want to
make. :-)
source John Perry’s Tajik Persian Reference Grammar in the 1990s (assuming
it had been published then) living in Dublin, I strongly suspect I would never have been able to source it at all. Whereas currently (and in 2006ish) it’s just a matter of throwing enough money at the problem.
Back in the 1990s I walked into the university bookstore and tried
to order a book on... GSM cellular networks, I think. "Oh, that
one's published in France. I'm sorry, but we can't get that. Maybe
you could drive [50 km] to the border and try there?"
In the 1980s/1990s, when I was a customer, the German bookseller
system worked well for books published in Germany, but poorly for
US/UK books and failed entirely for French ones. When online
bookstores became a thing, I switched to ordering there and I don't
even remember if I have ever since bought a single book in a brick-and-mortar store. Requiescant in pace, I will not miss them.
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