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Rob Arnold's avatar

I'm so grateful for this post, Sean. Thank you for being frank and transparent about the economics of book sales. It's important to note that the majority of sales for poetry books are totally untracked by BookScan, Amazon, Bookshop.org, SPD, or other services that track sales through official "storefronts" (either brick & mortar or online). When I worked for a small poetry press, I generally considered our authors to be the biggest customers because they were on the front lines, hand-selling at various readings around the country. It's often more profitable for the author as well since the author's discount from the publisher is far greater than whatever royalty rate was contracted for the book. On top of that, no direct sales from publisher to customer are tracked in these systems. Which means no AWP Book Fair sales are accounted for, nor are smaller conference sales, nor purchases through the publishers' websites. Nor are any of these latter sales eligible for royalty accrual, so the author doesn't see a dime of these sales. When we make our choices as poetry book consumers, we should consider which method best helps the author in the long term, which isn't always the most immediately profitable choice. Having accurate sales records can help a publisher take a risk on an author's next book. Yes, this happens more often in fiction and nonfiction, but I've heard agents and editors talk down on a poetry book that appears to have only sold 10-20 books through BookScan...

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X. P. Callahan's avatar

I am happy and proud to have each of your books in my personal library. Also, wonderful doodle here. Yours?

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