Books: Get Them While They're Hot
by Peter Osnos

Releasing a book in hardcover followed sometime later by a lower-priced version in paperback has been standard practice for probably close to a century. Some book historian will know. It makes sense to stage the availability of a book in various formats, and adding an e-book to the mix is now inevitable. Movies always have been released into theaters first to corral the ticket and popcorn sales, followed by DVDs and broadcast. In the past two years, the simultaneous debut of some independent films in multiple formats (via distributors such as IFC and Magnolia) has added to their audiences because there were so few theaters where they could be seen, but this is still unusual.
The point is that the concept of withholding the e-book for a while to drive hardcover sales (the same strategy was used for Ted Kennedy's memoir True Compass) is sensible, traditional in its way, and certainly no egregious abuse of consumer prerogatives. As the marketplace for digital books develops, this may well be a standard pattern for expected bestsellers: readers will have to wait to get the book in lower-priced versions, as they have for decades.
So, if the staging of books in various formats isn't new, and neither is the notion of instant books, what then is actually happening to justify the buzz about these developments?
It is the emergence of digital books as a significant factor in the future of book sales. Last week, Barnes & Noble announced it would have an e-reading device in stores for the holiday season, and Amazon again dropped the price of its standard Kindle. Forester Research predicts total sales for e-book devices will be three million units in 2009 and double that in 2010. Most remarkable of all, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said that for books available in hardcover and Kindle, the digital sales now make up to 48 percent of book sales. Last spring he said the percentage was 35.
Assuming those Kindle figures are not misleading (there are no actual numbers to analyze), then the whole measure of book sales is changing. A New York Times story about the sales of The Lost Symbol, Dan Brown's new blockbuster novel, never mentioned e-book sales in its estimate of how the book was doing under a headline that said "Book Sales Are Down Despite Push." Well, maybe not as much as you think. The book has sold close to three million hardcovers in its first three weeks. And The Lost Symbol was released simultaneously as an e-book, so the total sales are somewhat higher. All these assessments may well sound like insider palaver to most readers, so let me reduce all the trade talk to a simple fact: You are going to be able to buy books in new fangled ways with prices that will bounce around a bit. The five-hundred-year-old era of the printed book is definitely not over, in my view, or even especially endangered, aside from the impact of the brutal recession we've been through. But the digital age has now, really, unequivocally, arrived. And that, for the publishing community as well as readers, should be a plus.
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