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Not a Simple Price War -- It's a Fight Over What You Get to Read
October 29, 2009
By William Petrocelli of Book Passage in San Francisco
and Corte Madera, California
What looks like a simple price
war between Amazon, Target, and Wal-Mart over a handful of bestsellers is symptomatic
of a much deeper problem in the book business. The larger fight is really over
what you get to read.
The price war began October 15
when Walmart.com dropped its prices drastically on several bestsellers. Amazon.com
and Target.com quickly followed suit, and within a couple of days the prices
were down to $8.99 and heading lower. At this point, these behemoths were clearly
selling those books below cost and engaging in an illegal form of predatory
pricing.
The authors affected by this price slashing were not amused. James Patterson
said, "Imagine if somebody was selling DVDs of this week's new movies for
$5. You wouldn't be able to make movies." John Grisham's agent added, "I
think we underestimate the effect to which extremely discounted bestsellers
take the consumer's attention away from emerging writers." (New York Times, October 17, 2009). The American Booksellers Association saw things the
same way, saying in a letter to Christine Varney, head of the Anti-Trust Division
of the U.S. Department of Justice, that these companies are using books as loss
leaders to sell other kinds of merchandise. "The entire book industry is
in danger of becoming collateral damage in this war." (Bookweb.org, October 22, 2009)
Predatory pricing is a means of
driving other booksellers out of business. When this happens, the choice of
books is one of the first things to suffer. Some readers think that if their
favorite store closes they can always buy the book they want somewhere else.
But that's a dangerous delusion -- the books they want may not be there at all.
In fact, these types of disruptions in how books are sold or distributed have
a profound effect on what publishers decide to publish in the first place.
Think of the book business as a
giant funnel, in which millions of authors are trying to reach tens of millions
of readers. The image is a telling one, because the literary life of America
has to go through two very narrow choke points: publishing and bookselling.
Both of these choke points have become more and more constricted in recent years
as a result of economic concentration and market manipulation.
Publishing is now consolidated
in the hands of a few large conglomerates that control most of what is published
in America. There are, to be sure, many booklovers in the publishing divisions
of these giant corporations, but they are outnumbered and out-maneuvered by
the bean counters. Sadly, many of these publishing divisions could probably
be shutdown entirely without having any significant affect on the bottom line
of the parent corporations. It is not an atmosphere that favors innovation or
literary discoveries. In many cases the attitude seems to be to hold on and
hope that declining sales and stagnant readership doesn't cost you your job.
Concentration at the retail level
is now becoming even worse. The chain stores had been doing their best to squeeze
out the independent stores over the last 20 years or so, and now they in turn
are being squeezed by the mass merchandisers. According to retailing expert
Stacey Mitchell, big-box mass merchandisers, like Wal-Mart, Target, and Costco,
have taken over 30 percent of the book market. These mass merchandisers are
now selling as many books as Barnes & Noble and Borders combined. (Death
of the Category Killers, June 28, 2009)
It's hard to exaggerate the consequences
of this mass-merchandiser dominance. These outlets carry, at most, a few hundred
titles at any given time. This means that a handful of books -- far less than
one percent of all the books published -- are probably accounting now for more
than 30 percent of all sales in America. Price wars in this segment of the market
only make matters worse, driving more customers to these merchandisers in search
of quick bargains on a handful of big-name books. Publishers are under more
and more pressure to subsidize these new, ruinous prices, and they will probably
end up pushing more and more of their resources in that direction. But it's
a devil's deal. The time may not be far off when publishers decide they can
make more money by shrinking their breadth of titles and concentrating even
more on just a few bestsellers.
How does a new author break into
this landscape? It's never been easy. The key has always been diversity at the
retail level. There's a big difference, say, between 500 buyers all buying for
their own stores and one chain-buyer purchasing for 500 outlets. Buyers for
independent stores tend to cancel out each other's mistakes; no single error
in judgment can sink a prospective literary career. But when the system is dominated
by a small handful of powerful buyers, their decision can make or break a book.
Often, there is no appeal from such a decision. One of the dirty little secrets
of the book business is that publishers often check in advance with the buyers
for the chain stores and mass merchandisers before agreeing to publish a book.
If the answer they get is no, the book may never see the light of day.
One of the ironies of the current
price war is that it includes The Lacuna,
the latest novel by Barbara Kingsolver. But Kingsolver wasn't always a bestselling
author. When her first novel, The Bean
Trees, was published in a modest print-run in 1988, independent booksellers
recognized it as a literary treasure and sold thousands of copies. After that
the chain stores climbed on the bandwagon, but without that first push from
independent booksellers Kingsolver's career might never have taken off.
Anyone who loves books should worry
that the doors seem to be closing on the Barbara Kingsolvers of tomorrow. (See this week's related BTW story.)
William Petrocelli is an author, a bookseller, and a former attorney.
He spent a few years as a Deputy Attorney General for the State of California
and then as a poverty lawyer in Oakland, California, before going into private
practice.
For the past 30 years or so, he has been the co-owner with his wife, Elaine,
of Book Passage in San Francisco and
Corte Madera, California.
Petrocelli is the author of Low Profile: How to Avoid the Privacy Invaders
(McGraw-Hill) and co-author of Sexual Harassment on the Job: What It Is
and How to Stop It (Nolo Press). He is also the author of the forthcoming
novel The Thirteen.
"Not a Simple Price War -- It's a Fight Over What You Get to Read"
was published on the Huffington
Post on October 28.
Reprinted with permission of the author.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Advocacy, Industry Voices - All,
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