home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!nntp.Stanford.EDU!leland.Stanford.EDU!ledwards
- From: ledwards@leland.Stanford.EDU (Laurence James Edwards)
- Subject: Re: High Prices of Math Books. I am pissed.
- Message-ID: <1993Jan10.123935.1405@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News)
- Organization: DSG, Stanford University, CA 94305, USA
- References: <BEVAN.93Jan6215256@panda.cs.man.ac.uk> <93008.053113DLVGC@CUNYVM.BITNET>
- Date: Sun, 10 Jan 93 12:39:35 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <93008.053113DLVGC@CUNYVM.BITNET>, Dimitri Vulis <DLVGC@CUNYVM.BITNET> writes:
- |> [...]
- |>
- |> 3. 'Most' publishers of math books pay the author either no royalty
- |> or a symbolic royalty. At the same time, they insist now that the
- |> authors turn over either a camera-ready MS or a diskette with TeX
- |> source. In the pas, typesetting a math book by hand was a major cost;
- |> now that the cost has shifted to the authors, the prices continue to
- |> rise.
- |>
- |> 4. A friend of mine, who runs a publishing business, claims that the
- |> cost of printing 1,000 hard-bound 200-page books on good paper would
- |> be about $4--6 a piece. The prohits the publishers rake in
- |> are enormous.
-
- Yes, a friend of mine had a book of his (computer science not math) published a
- couple years back, the publisher told him that production costs would be about
- 50 cents a piece for paperback and about $1.50 a piece for hardback. If I
- remember correctly the book was between 100-200 pages and I don't know how many
- were printed. He gave them a tape with camera ready PostScript source. They
- gave him 10k up front and some small royalties. Their only other direct cost
- was to pay an artist to do the the cover artwork. In any case the paperback
- version costs $35 at the book store. So these guys don't have to sell too many
- books to cover their initial cash outlay (of course they do have some
- unknown overhead in doing business).
-
- I don't know about everyone else but I was amazed that the difference in
- production costs for paperbacks and hardbacks was so small given the price
- differential seen in bookstores. Ahhh, the beauty of supply and demand!
- Capitalism, ya gotta love it.
-
- Larry Edwards
-