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Stop the Presses?
November 25, 2008

When we heard  that Houghton Mifflin Harcourt had put a ban on acquisitions, it was hard not to feel that, finally, the sky was about to fall. As disturbed as we’ve been for weeks about disappearing credit, tottering banks and a dead retail sector, this was the first(semiofficial) announcement that BookLand itself might be on the verge of something very bad.


It didn’t take long for the panic to spread.


If a publishing house isn’t buying books, decried many, then what is its purpose? If a publishing house isn’t buying books, how much longer will it need editors? Even those of us heartened by the new appreciation that backlist will be accorded—Houghton and Harcourt are backlist-heavy houses, full of books by Nobel Prize winners and Philip Roth—were hard pressed to dine out on that news. “It’s the beginning of the end of publishing as we know it,” many callers and e-mailers said.

Of course, the publisher’s spokespeople are downplaying the decision. It’s not permanent, and “it’s not an indicator of the end of literature,” HMH’s Josef Blumenfeld told PW. And HMH staffers aren’t talking; I was on a panel about “The Changing Face of Literary Publishing” with Houghton Harcourt publisher Becky Saletan just a few days before the ban became public, and the topic didn’t come up. (One insider said, though, that Saletan had become teary in an editorial meeting earlier in the week—but wouldn’t say why.) My guess is that her reticence, then and since, is less calculated than confused: no one seems to know how long such a ban will last, whether there will be layoffs and whether other publishers will follow suit.


This being publishing, however, there are a lot of opinions, chief among them the idea that HMH has merely codified what most other publishers are doing under the radar: hunkering down, cutting lists, keeping costs down. One publisher went so far as to say he expects similar news from other houses, and that this is as much a way to slap the hands of agents who still demand big auctions and outrageous advances—something publishers have been complaining about for years—as a response to the times. Put another way: HMH (and perhaps others) have finally found a way to do what they’ve been wanting to do all along.

As readers of this column know, I’ve long been a proponent of publishing fewer books, and I do think that if the ban is temporary—just a few months—it might serve us all well: publishers can focus on the books they have in the pipeline, maybe even spread them out over a few more seasons than they anticipated, and publish, well, smarter. On the other hand, a ban like this is most worrisome to me for what it says about publishing’s bet on the market 18–24 months from now: Will the market just be smaller—or nonexistent? And does this move make it worse?


On that same panel last week, agent Eric Simonoff described himself as an “optimist” about the book business and opined that most people in publishing are the same. Much was said about the way agents and publishers and readers fall inexplicably in love with books. “It’s like magic,” someone said. 


So then, our next task is to find a way to pull a healthy rabbit out of an empty hat.  

 


Posted by Sara Nelson on November 25, 2008 | Comments (15)


November 25, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Jeff Rivera commented:

Every shock in the industry forces change and creative solutions to what are viewed as problems. My heart goes out to the people who's jobs are effected by these changes but I cannot help but be excited by what will result after the storm clouds have passed -- Jeff Rivera (Author)




November 25, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Paul Riddell commented:

In the long run, this decision is going to be good, both for Houghton and for other publishers who decide to hunker down. Unfortunately for the NaNoWriMo wannabes who look at this as a further barrier to their Absolutely Fabulous/Farscape slashfic finding a publisher, it's only going to produce more paranoiac screaming about how "THEY" are keeping beginning writers down. Let 'em scream, or better yet, let them come up with proposals that are better than "I can guarantee that this is going to sell!" - Paul Riddell, former writer




November 25, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Kat Brokaw commented:

Why "former," Paul? And, yes I agree that the news was a bit shocking. But I can't see the need for good books going away. I just hope that this will result in an effort to reduce some of the chaff. And if you write a good book and a good proposal and act in a professional manner, history says you will sell. The key words there are "good" and "professional."




November 26, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
JEREMY TOWNSEND commented:

I think that this allows smaller houses to step in and new authors to emerge from the ashes. Here at PublishingWorks, we're seeing an INCREASE in submissions and we are certainly not turning good manuscripts down. Perhaps this is an opportunity for the little people to step up as the big guys seem to be tumbling down.




November 26, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Fern Reiss commented:

Maybe we can see this as a much-needed wake-up call. It's not that publishing is becoming extinct, it's that publishing is changing. And those publishing houses and authors that are able to understand and adapt to the changes are those most likely to survive. If I were a big publishing house, I'd move some of those acquisition folks onto Facebook--and begin teaching them Web 3.0... /Fern The International Association of Writers www.AssociationofWriters.com




November 26, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
MELISSA LANDE commented:

I used to edit a magazine about paperback "bestsellers" in the mid-seventies. We talked then endlessly about "bestseller syndrome" with the ratio 20/80 -- 20% of the books made 80% of the sales. It seemed wasteful then -- and now even more so from the perspective of waste, paper, energy, environment. The traditional print-a-long-list and grab-a lot-of-shelf space has needed correction for a long time. But publishing isn't over. We may not be able to control the stock market, but great writers have been able to communicate, even in the oral tradition, from the beginning of time. With digital media and the dazzling proliferation of wise young writers, smart publishers/marketers will get their material out there to their target audiences in ways we've yet to discover on this new leg of the publishing journey.




November 26, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Lauren Baratz-Logsted commented:

Great piece. I just did one yesterday called "Is the Sky Falling?" I concluded that it was not.




November 26, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
paul takushi commented:

This news reminded me of the book, "So Many Books: Reading and Publishing in an Age of Abundance" by Gabriel Zaid, 2003. I agree that job loss is never met with happiness or relief, but the limiting of chaff titles is probably a good thing for the publishing industry. Yet, I fear for the fate of midlist authors (where was Jodi Picoult four yeas ago?) and the emerging talent from schools throughout the nation. How will they get their break? If they aren't nurtured, what will happen to the future of lit? - (college bookstore tradebook buyer)




November 26, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
A writer commented:

I think the publishing industry needs to review its methods of printing. With epubs and POD printing and other avenues, printing so many copies ahead seems like an antiquated method. It's a risk that in this type of economy obviously can't be taken. JMO




November 26, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Paul Riddell commented:

Why "




November 27, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
James Buchanan commented:

I have not seen this particular bit of scary news, but I have been speaking with friends that own or have knowledge of where book sales are going and things do not bode well, especially for the independent book store folks. The interesting thing about it, though, is that the numbers for the bookstore that I consider to be sort of a leading edge indicator (it is also an independent) were great for the year up until about mid September. That's when the bottom fell out and he is now down about 20 percent for the past few months. While this is not a good omen, the rapidity by which it came may suggest that a rebound for book sellers (books are economical entertainment and gifts) could be equally as quick. I have blogged about this at: redroom.com/blog/james-buchanan/the-economy-and-books Or at my website: orchardwriting.com.




November 29, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Francis Hamit commented:

This was no surprise. The response of authors like myself will simply be to go the self-publishing route. If no new books are being produced by big publishers, then the few venues left for book reviews outside the blogospere will have to start reviewing our books or close down. Brick and mortar stores will have to stock our titles or have nothing new to sell, which will simply aggravate their current customer problems. Survival of the publishing houses will depend, not on agents or marketing departments, but quality editorial operations that pay attention to what readers want to buy. My self-published book, which no one in the industry would read, now has six "




November 29, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
Francis Hamit commented:

"Five Star" Reviews. It is selling fairly well, the economy considered. Independents and small chains do stock it. Producing a quality product is not the sole province of the big publishers. Sincerely, Francis Hamit, author The Shenandoah Spy Brass Cannon Books




December 2, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
FyD commented:

It doesn't surprise me that HMH is cutting back in the trade division too. They have been ignoring and forgetting about their customers in the school market all year. They don't fill backorders and let schools that have purchase orders filled out for them just sit. The don't fulfill their commitments of doing training in districts after a sale and tell their reps to call districts and lie and tell them there is a "




December 2, 2008
In response to: Stop the Presses?
FyD commented:

It doesn't surprise me that HMH is cutting back in the trade division too. They have been ignoring and forgetting about their customers in the school market all year. They don't fill backorders and let schools that have purchase orders filled out for them just sit. The don't fulfill their commitments of doing training in districts after a sale and tell their reps to call districts and lie and tell them there is a "





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