Friday, July 20, 2007

The last few days have seen a series of almighty rows about HP7 and I've mentioned the book a couple of times (and so have Clive Keble and others in the comments) here and here. I've had any number of journalists ring up and ask me to opine, all of which I declined on the grounds of ignorance of the detail of the row and also because Macmillan Distribution is Bloomsbury's client and has a hard enough job ensuring the security and efficient delivery of the millions of copies of HP7 without me muddying the waters. (And here I simply have to say a big thank you to all at MDL who have contributed to the toughest logistical exercise in book distribution history and who, in spite of the pressures, have managed to maintain their customary high levels of service for all the other things they do. You know who you are. Fingers crossed that nothing goes wrong today and that you can take a well-earned mini-rest and enjoy the sense of a job well done).

Book Jacket

However, tonight is the night and I cannot resist expressing some views. Harry Potter is the most amazing literary phenomenon of all time. I don't have the numbers (nor does anyone I suspect) but I reckon that more people have bought (or will have bought) Harry Potter books than any other title. The Bible may have printed more (it's been going a sight longer) but the majority of copies are given away rather than purchased. I cannot think of anything else that comes close. Even Mao's Little Red Book must have been overtaken.

Its impact on our and other industries has been phenomenal. Of course, Bloomsbury as the original English-language publisher has benefitted but think of all the foreign-language publishers, all the sales agencies, all the rep commissions, the printers, papermakers, freight forwarders, mail delivery organisations, Hollywood, retailers large and small, journalist desperate for copy, literary agents who owe J.K. Rowling and the editorial team at Bloomsbury a huge debt of gratitude.

There will always be carpers and knockers but we should rejoice that a whole generation of children around the world have been introduced to books and reading. It is the job of the rest of us now to turn those children into long-term readers and book buyers.

On a much more local level, Sky News have decided to host a Potter party at the Pan Bookshop in Fulham Road, London. All our regular and not so regular customers are welcome and the shenanigans begins at 10 p.m. Enjoy.

 

#    |  Comments [4]  | 
7/20/2007 6:32:06 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
My hope post HP7 is that the publishing industry will consign hype and spin to the dustbin where it belongs.

The publishing world this week played straight into the hands of the supermarkets who have no real interest in bookselling, but just want to predatory price bestsellers, with the primary aim of killing off the specialist bookshops - be they the once all-powerful Waterstone's or minnows like Keeble.

At this time we should reflect that HP6 discounting virtually killed-off Ottakar's : there are certain to be casualties from the HP7 discount wars.

Hopefully tonight's midnight launch will see the specialist bookshops having a near sell-out (Thankfully, long ago I decided that HP7 and my business were not a good mix - nothing clever there, I just got lucky).
7/20/2007 8:37:43 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
HP7 launches at 7 or 8am Saturday here in Western Australia, with the exact time depending who you ask. I know I'll be picking up a copy in the morning, but not because I'm desperate to read it. I just know the internet will be full of spoilers within hours of the launch, and I'm already avoiding all news sites today because they've started discussing the ending as taken from some camera-phone-copied version.
7/20/2007 11:05:40 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
It's 7am and I just offered to take my kids to the local bookstore for the fun and games. That means getting up at 6:30am, and for your average author that's a huge ask. Still, they're worth it.
7/23/2007 6:14:00 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I picked up a copy in Tesco for Euro10.90. I'd do it again. I'd be stupid to pay twice as much or more elsewhere.

Potter is a different book from most of the books I buy. For one thing Tesco has few of the books I want to buy and is unlikely to ever have them. It didn't stop me spending much more on books in good bookshops, nor will it stop me spending more online. Sure for the odd mainstream purchase the supermarket will take my money but I imagine for the bulk of book buyers the range will never be deep or broad enough. Thats where quality booksellers and online stores come in.

I don't think publishing has played into anyone's hands except readers to very positive effect.

Eoin