Sujet : Re: World Book Day (22 April)
De : kehoea (at) *nospam* parhasard.net (Aidan Kehoe)
Groupes : sci.langDate : 25. Apr 2024, 18:30:45
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <87v845l58a.fsf@parhasard.net>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : Gnus/5.101 (Gnus v5.10.10) XEmacs/21.5-b35 (Linux-aarch64)
Ar an cúigiú lá is fiche de mí Aibreán, scríobh Christian Weisgerber:
> On 2024-04-25, Aidan Kehoe <
kehoea@parhasard.net> wrote:
>
> > There has been a bit of coverage lately in the bits of the web that I read
> > of the really minimal sales of most books (in the US, because that’s where
> > [a^H] an antitrust case revealed the details). It’s a fascinating picture,
> > quite a hit-driven economy, lots of money lost on loads of books.
>
> The argument that bestsellers subsidize the availability of a larger
> variety of books comes up regularly in debates about fixed book
> price laws, which exist in a number of Continental European and
> other countries.
>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_book_price#/media/File:Countries-with-a-Fixed-Book-Price-Agreement.svg
Part of the argument in the Wikipedia article is that well-stocked bookshops
are important for cultural life, and that’s something that’s less important
with good online sources for books. Certainly if I had been attempting to
source John Perry’s Tajik Persian Reference Grammar in the 1990s (assuming it
had been published then) living in Dublin, I strongly suspect I would never
have been able to source it at all. Whereas currently (and in 2006ish) it’s
just a matter of throwing enough money at the problem.
-- ‘As I sat looking up at the Guinness ad, I could never figure out /How your man stayed up on the surfboard after fourteen pints of stout’(C. Moore)