Literary publishing in the twenty-first century

Book - 2016

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070.5/Literary
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Subjects
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Milkweed Editions 2016.
Language
English
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 295 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781571313546
  • Introduction
  • Reading the Tea Leaves: Notations on the Changing Look of the Literary
  • The Ends of the Book: Reading, Economies & Publics
  • The Amazon Effect
  • The Self-Hating Book Critic
  • The View from a University Press
  • Poetry in Translation: Hemispheric Perspectives
  • VIDA: An Interview with Erin Belieu
  • 19 Things: More Thoughts on the Future of Fiction
  • Hold the Damn Door Open: Idealism Is No Currency
  • Diversity Is Not Enough: Race, Power, Publishing
  • Comics Publishing
  • The Art of Agenting: An Interview with Chris Parris-Lamb
  • The Open Refrigerator
  • A Culture of Competition: Some Notes on Writing Contests & Literary Publishing
  • Coming to Milkweed Editions
  • The Overnight Success of Lookout Books
  • The Southern Review at Eighty
  • What Is the Business of Literature?
  • The Future Value of a Literary Publisher
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

An impressive roster of contributors makes this anthology on the future of publishing a must-read for anyone in the industry. Familiar issues-the dominance of Amazon, the lack of diversity, the role of university presses-are explored in essays that are accessible to lay readers, while offering valuable new insights for insiders. There is no shortage of pessimism-for example, Sven Birkerts's essay concludes that in "the future, literature will likely not command enough marketplace attention to make it commercially viable," and may, instead, become just "an artisanal product that functions either as a vital inner resource or else as a status marker for its reduced population of consumers." But that's not the only lens through which the coming decades can be viewed. Matthew Stadler of Publication Studio explains how his print-on-demand press enables people to be "readers rather than always shoppers." And Jane Friedman, a University of Virginia academic and former Writer's Digest publisher, makes a convincing case for the continued value added by publishers who serve as beacons, "offer a strong signal amidst all the noise, and organize ideas, content, and stories within an identifiable and useful context." (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.