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- Xref: sparky alt.books.technical:383 sci.math:17400
- Newsgroups: alt.books.technical,sci.math
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!nntp.Stanford.EDU!ilan
- From: ilan@leland.Stanford.EDU (ilan vardi)
- Subject: Re: High Prices of Math Books. I am pissed.
- Message-ID: <1992Dec24.224537.29615@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: ?@leland.Stanford.EDU
- Organization: DSG, Stanford University, CA 94305, USA
- References: <Bzs1Kr.I4v.1@cs.cmu.edu> <1992Dec24.194233.10811@linus.mitre.org>
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 92 22:45:37 GMT
- Lines: 30
-
- In article <1992Dec24.194233.10811@linus.mitre.org> bs@gauss.mitre.org (Robert D. Silverman) writes:
- >
- >Bitch about what?
- >
- >(1) These books are difficult to typeset and thus are a lot more expensive
- > to print than your average novel.
- >(2) They have a small market, so the high setup cost of producing the plates
- > to print them must be amortized over a small number of customers.
- >(3) It requires a lot more expertise to edit these books than your average
- > novel.
- >
- >Why are people always surprised that technical books with a small audience
- >are expensive?
- >--
-
- I agree with this for books of the highest quality, but many > $100
- books are not even typeset at high resolution, and publishers are now
- able to get technical typists for < $10 page (so a 300 page book
- will cost less than $3,000 to typeset). Moreover, many of the authors
- are University professors using notes that have already been carefully
- looked at by students and so forth, so these costs are not always very
- high.
-
- A good example was given in the last issue of the American Math
- Monthly a > $200 book on Codes and Algebraic geometry was reviewed and
- it was noted that there were a lot of typos and missing articles (the
- authors were Russian).
-
- I would say that books should be kept in the <$50 dollar range except
- for some exceptions like collected works, etc.
-