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Depressed economy not all bad news for publishers

The economic turmoil in global financial markets is making a lot of folks depressed (ha!), but it apparently hasn’t stopped one mega-publisher from handing out generous bonuses to staff. The same week that Houghton Mifflin announced it was temporarily suspending new manuscript acquisitions, Hachette Book Group revealed its holiday munificence. As Motoko Rich writes in The New York Times:

As first reported by Publishers Lunch, an industry newsletter, Hachette is giving bonuses equal to one week’s salary to every employee in the company, in addition to the regular bonuses for which staff members are eligible.

Hachette, which recently opened a Canadian office, can afford to throw a little money around. Its Little, Brown and Grand Central Publishing units publish superstar authors James Patterson, David Baldacci, and Stephenie Meyer, whose Twilight series has begun to outsell even J.K. Rowling.

Houghton Mifflin, on the other hand, publishes writers like Philip Roth and Günter Grass. It can claim literary superiority, but clearly doesn’t have the same clout at the cash register. In times of economic hardship, teen vampires are a better draw than Pulitzer Prize-winners.

  • http://www.duthiebooks.com ria bleumer

    cutting expenses, doing lunch less frequently. Wow.
    Releasing books an entire month (if not more) early with 30 day terms and without
    consulting the bookseller because perhaps the bottomline was not met, leaves us bringing
    lunch to work, hiring less extra help over christmas, while putting in many more hours
    in attempt to sell more books than we ever have. No bonuses, not that there ever
    were many, no perks… just a lot of good will and persistance.

    Where is this all going? I have a suggestion: come and help out for a day or two at
    your favourite local bookstore, especially during the week before christmas.. as a
    volunteer (you might get a gift certificate)… this will directly contribute to a stronger
    liason between publishers and booksellers and world peace

    of your books and wondering where this is all going… we all need to cut back… However,
    in the past we would have our christmas season first, then pay the bill… not the other
    way around.

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