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New You Can Use
Literary Novels Going Straight to Paperback
(continued)
Mr. Entrekin recently revived a dormant imprint, Black Cat, to highlight
his trade paperback originals. Last month, it released "White Ghost
Girls," a debut novel by Alice Greenway, in a paperback edition
that included flaps on the paper cover and the ragged-edge pages that
bespeak "quality fiction." Other publishers, like HarperCollins,
Simon & Schuster and Random House, have also been ramping up their
efforts.
"It has been more of an evolution than a big jump," said Jane
von Mehren, publisher of trade paperbacks at Random House. "Getting
somebody to spend $22 on a book by an author who they've never heard
of is hard, but getting them to spend $13.95 on a paperback is much easier."
The paperback original is not an entirely new concept, of course. European
publishing companies have been doing it for years; in the United States,
Beat writers were often published only in paperback in the 1960's. Jay
McInerney's "Bright Lights, Big City," the seminal novel of
the 1980's, was first released as a paperback in 1984 by Vintage Contemporaries,
a Random House imprint. More recently, in 1999, Jhumpa Lahiri's volume
of short stories, "Interpreter of Maladies" was released only
in paperback by Houghton Mifflin's Mariner Books. It went on to win the
Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
Still, the paperback-original format has been used relatively infrequent
by publishers — in part because it is often fought by authors
and their agents, who are sometimes unwilling to give up the prestige
and
higher royalties from hardcover publication, as well as the chance
for a second run in stores with a paperback.
Publishers have plowed ahead, however. Harper Perennial, the literary
paperback imprint of HarperCollins, is planning to publish 22 paperback
originals this year, up from 10 last year.
"We see it as a great opportunity to publish some young debut writers," said
Carrie Kania, the publisher of Harper Perennial. She cited as an example
Nick Laird, the husband of the British novelist Zadie Smith; his first
novel, "Utterly Monkey" was published as a paperback original
here in January.
"Part of our strategy was that we believe Nick Laird is going to
be a great writer, and we want to build him up," Ms. Kania said. "That
is hard to do when there is a lot of hardcover competition."
The economics of the decision to publish in hardcover or paperback are
not simple. Publishers generally receive a wholesale price for new books
that is about half of the retail cover price, or $13 for a hardcover
book with a $26 jacket price. Thirty percent of the publisher's share,
or 15 percent of the cover price, goes to the author as royalties, and
another 40 percent of the publisher's take goes for the production, distribution,
marketing and publicity costs of the book.
That leaves about $3 to $4 a book for the publisher, before accounting
for the cost of corporate overhead or the books that will be returned — on
which the publisher earns nothing.
For paperbacks, authors generally earn only 7.5 percent of the cover
price as a royalty. But the lower price also means publishers earn far
less, about $1 to $2 a book, before returns. The advantage of paperback
is that if a book proves to be even a modest seller, booksellers are
less likely to return all of their copies, figuring they can stock a
small number permanently on their shelves — something they rarely
do with hardcover books.
"Book for book, you're obviously going to make more money on a
hardcover," said Martin Asher, the editor in chief of Vintage/Anchor
Books, part of Random House's Knopf Publishing Group. "But you can
usually sell two or more paperbacks for every hardcover, and when you
bring in the question of building an audience for a new writer," the
scale tips further in the paperback original's favor.
That was the calculation that led Vintage to schedule "Pretty Little
Dirty," the debut novel from Amanda Boyden, a New Orleans writer,
as a paperback original this year. Billed as "wonderfully dark,
humorously heartfelt and deliriously drug-fueled," the novel, released
last week, "just struck me as the kind of book that would work in
paperback," Mr. Asher said.
The author agreed. In an interview, Ms. Boyden said she had a more lucrative
offer from another publisher to print the novel in hardcover. But, she
said, "my husband and I were starving graduate students for so long
that a good chunk of our bookshelves are taken up by Vintage paperbacks." She
continued: "So it was my decision to go with Vintage. And with what
I think is the potential audience for this book, it made more sense to
come out in paperback right away."
One longtime argument against paperback originals has been that book
critics are less likely to review them. Several publishers say that has
changed, citing what they described as a watershed event: the Feb. 6,
2005, review of "Death of An Ordinary Man," by Glen Duncan,
a paperback original book published by Mr. Entrekin's Black Cat imprint,
which was featured on the front page of The New York Times Book Review.
"Historically, getting the books reviewed was a big concern for
us," said Ms. Kania of Harper Perennial. "But increasingly,
paperback originals are being treated as new books."
Sam Tanenhaus, editor of The Times Book Review, says he believes reviewing
paperback originals allows the publication to highlight books from smaller
publishing houses. He notes that book galleys — the prepublication
copies that publishers send to reviewers to allow them to get a head
start on reading — always come to the Book Review as paperbacks,
and that therefore the editors pay little attention to the format in
which the book will be sold.
Mr. Tanenhaus notes that it is not only debut authors whose works are
reviewed as paperback originals. An August 2004 review of "Cloud
Atlas" drew attention to that book, the British author David Mitchell's
third novel, which was published here as a paperback original by Random
House.
Ms. von Mehren, the publisher, said that following the article in the
Book Review, Mr. Mitchell's novel sold "10 to 20 times better than
he ever had here. It really reignited his career." Next month, Random
House will publish Mr. Mitchell's next novel, "Black Swan Green." In
hardcover.
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