Read It and Weep
More evidence about how hard it is to get a book published. *sigh*
From Seth Abramson’s blog:
From Seth Abramson’s blog:
What I did was visit the websites of fully one hundred independent presses, drawing their names from the best-seller lists for the past year at the Poetry Foundation and Small Press Distribution websites. Incredibly (and fortuitously, given my limited mathematical skills), adding up the data from every single press listed in a year's worth of SPD best-seller lists, as well as the current Poetry Foundation best-seller list, got me to exactly 100 independent poetry presses.
Comments
An idea I had, might be something some would be interested in exploring: http://verylikeawhale.wordpress.com/2008/07/04/a-look-for-a-publisher-or-b-self-publish-or-c-go-the-third-way/
It's a rapidly morphing world, poetry publishing - let's morph it some more! All best, Nic
Here's my take: There are 300-million-plus people in the U.S. I dare say that there are at least five million poetry readers. Yet emerging writers are having a tough time publishing first and second books. The readership is just not there.
Out of the small number of poetry books published annually, only a few sell more than 2,000 copies. I'm not sure why anyone (including myself) chooses to pursue book publication because the whole process is so darn frustrating.
Maybe it's all relative to where you live, but the numbers are stacked against the poets, the content providers, the keepers of the craft. It's always been that way and yet it's still discouraging.
The ratio of publishers to population is probably about the same here, but in some ways marketing might be easier because everyone knows everyone and has the mailing list from the Poets Collective - so I get invited to all the book launches in my city, both new and well-established poets.