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image “With large publishers flooding ever smaller # of book review pages w big-name authors this fall, will small pubs be completely closed out?”

So tweets Ron Charles, an editor with the Washington Post book section.

Excellent question. It’s the very kind of challenge I’m up against with The Solomon Scandals despite the nice send-off I got from the Washington City Paper (“same dark zeal Hammett held for Frisco or Chandler had for Los Angeles”).

With a tiny publisher, even an award-winning one like Twilight Times Books, a first novel might as well not exist in the minds of book editors at most big-city newspapers.

Opportunity for crowd-sourcing

But look, this is actually an opportunity for a refined version of Amazon’s crowd sourcing (in the form of reader-written reviews, aka comments on for sake on Amazon). Book review editors could still cover The Big Books while letting readers discover small-press titles. Readers could debates the merits of books from tiny publishers—which the editors could bless in some cases when they agreed.

Will such a scenario actually unfold, though? Papers such as the Post can be a little too control-minded and worry excessively about the barbaric hordes, thus putting themselves at a disadvantage in an interactive era.

On the related topic of local fiction…

Speaking with obvious bias, I’d also suggest that big city dailies in many cases are negligent in reviewing and otherwise writing about local fiction. Talk about ways to drum up readers for both book sections and the novelists themselves!

image In an e-book and POD age, local fiction will be easier to produce, and crowd-sourced reviewing could cut through the clutter. Arrangements at local libraries and local bookstores could help connect writers with appropriate local editors. Furthermore, with “space” so cheap, the Post could even publish excerpts from local books and maybe even some in full. Dickens-style serialization, anyone? Ad-supported books within newspapers? Didn’t many and perhaps even most of Dickens’ novels appear first as installments (image from PBS)?

Some positive news about the Post Book World: With book reviews showing up in the Outlook and Style sections, the paper’s book side is supposedly drawing more reader attention than when Book World was a separate section in the print edition. Even before the change, reviews did appear in Style. But now they are receiving better play there.

The current solution isn’t my favorite, but was far, far better than totally killing off Book World.

 
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