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Bestseller

A bestseller is a book or other media noted for its top selling status, with bestseller lists published by newspapers, magazines, and book store chains. Some lists are broken down into classifications and specialties (novel, nonfiction book, cookbook, etc.). An author may also be referred to as a bestseller if their work often appears in a list. Well-known bestseller lists in the U.S. are published by Publishers Weekly, USA Today, The New York Times, and IndieBound.[1] The New York Times tracks book sales from national and independent bookstores, as well as sales from major internet retailers such as Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.[2]

In everyday use, the term bestseller is not usually associated with a specified level of sales, and may be used very loosely in publishers' publicity. Books of superior academic value tend not to be bestsellers, although there are exceptions. Lists simply give the highest-selling titles in the category over the stated period. Some books have sold many more copies than current "bestsellers", but over a long period of time.

Blockbusters for films and chart-toppers in recorded music are similar terms, although, in film and music, these measures generally are related to industry sales figures for attendance, requests, broadcast plays, or units sold.

Particularly in the case of novels, a large budget and a chain of literary agents, editors, publishers, reviewers, retailers, librarians, and marketing efforts are involved in "making" bestsellers, that is, trying to increase sales.

Steinberg defined a bestseller as a book for which demand, within a short time of that book's initial publication, vastly exceeds what is then considered to be big sales.[3][4][5]

Early best sellers edit

The term "best seller" is first known to have been recorded in print in 1889 in the Kansas City, Missouri newspaper The Kansas Times & Star,[6] but the phenomenon of immediate popularity goes back to the early days of mass production of printed books. For earlier books, when the maximum number of copies that would be printed was relatively small, a count of editions is the best way to assess sales. Since effective copyright was slow to take hold, many editions were pirated well into the period of the Enlightenment, and without effective royalty systems in place, authors often saw little, if any, of the revenues for their popular works.[citation needed]

The earliest highly popular books were nearly all religious, but the Bible, as a large book, remained expensive until the nineteenth century. This tended to keep the numbers printed and sold low. Unlike today, it was important for a book to be short to be a bestseller, or it would be too expensive to reach a large audience. Very short works such as Ars moriendi, the Biblia pauperum, and versions of the Apocalypse were published as cheap block-books in large numbers of different editions in several languages in the fifteenth century. These were probably affordable items for most of the minority of literate members of the population. In 16th and 17th century England Pilgrim's Progress (1678) and abridged versions of Foxe's Book of Martyrs were the most broadly read books. Robinson Crusoe (1719) and The Adventures of Roderick Random (1748) were early eighteenth century short novels with very large publication numbers, as well as gaining international success.[citation needed][7]

Tristram Shandy, a novel by Laurence Sterne, became a "cult" object in England and throughout Europe, with important cultural consequences among those who could afford to purchase books during the era of its publication. The same could be said of the works of Voltaire, particularly his comedic and philosophically satirical novel, Candide, which, according to recent research, sold more than 20,000 copies in its first month alone in 1759. Likewise, fellow French Enlightenment author Rousseau, especially his Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloïse (1761) and of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's novel, Die Leiden des jungen Werthers (The Sorrows of Young Werther) (1774). As with some modern bestsellers, Werther spawned what today would be called a spin-off industry with items such as Werther eau de cologne and porcelain puppets depicting the main characters, being sold in large numbers.[8][9]

By the time of Byron and Sir Walter Scott, effective copyright laws existed, at least in England, and many authors depended heavily on their income from their large royalties. America remained a zone of piracy until the mid-nineteenth century, a fact of which Charles Dickens and Mark Twain bitterly complained. By the middle of the 19th century, a situation akin to modern publication had emerged, where most bestsellers were written for a popular taste and are now almost entirely forgotten, with odd exceptions such as East Lynne (remembered only for the line "Gone, gone, and never called me mother!"), the wildly popular Uncle Tom's Cabin, and Sherlock Holmes.

Description and types of bestseller edit

Bestsellers are usually separated into fiction and non-fiction categories. Different list compilers have created a number of other subcategories. The New York Times was reported to have started its "Children's Books" section in 2001 just to move the Harry Potter books out of the No. 1, 2, and 3 positions on their fiction chart, which the then three-book series had monopolized for over a year.[10]

Bestsellers also may be ranked separately for hardcover and paperback editions. Typically, a hardcover edition appears first, followed in months or years by the much less expensive paperback version. Hardcover bestseller status may hasten the paperback release of the same, or slow the release, if hardcover sales are brisk enough. Some lists even have a third category, trade paperback bestsellers.

In the United Kingdom, a hardcover book could be considered a "bestseller" with sales ranging from 4,000 to 25,000 copies per week, and in Canada, bestsellers are determined according to weekly rankings in the country's national print sales tracking service, BNC SalesData.[11] There are many "bestseller lists" that display anywhere from 10 to 150 titles.

Differences among lists edit

Bestseller lists may vary widely, depending on the method used for calculating sales. The Indie bestseller lists, for example, use only sales numbers, provided by independently owned (non-chain) bookstores, while The New York Times list includes both wholesale and retail sales from a variety of sources. A book that sells well in gift shops and grocery stores may hit a New York Times list without ever appearing on an Indie list. USA Today has only one list, not hardcover/paperback, so that relative sales of these categories cannot be ascertained from it.

Lists from Amazon.com, the dominant online book retailer, are based only on sales from their own Web site, and are updated on an hourly basis. Wholesale sales figures are not factored into Amazon's calculations. Numerous Web sites offer advice for authors about a temporary method to boost their book higher on Amazon's list using carefully timed buying campaigns that take advantage of the frequent adjustments to rankings. For example, faith healing author Zhi Gang Sha has used this method to create a number of #1 bestsellers.[12] The brief sales spike allows authors to tout that their book was an "Amazon.com top 100 seller" in marketing materials for books that actually have relatively low sales. Eventually book buyers may begin to recognize the relative differences among lists and settle upon which lists they will consult to determine their purchases.

The weight and price of a book may affect its positioning on lists. The Amazon.com list tends to favor hardcover, more expensive books, where the shipping charge is a smaller percentage of the overall purchase price or is sometimes free, and which tend to be more deeply discounted than paperbacks. Inexpensive mass market paperbacks tend to do better on The New York Times list than on Amazon's. Indie and Publishers Weekly separate mass market paperbacks onto their own list.

Category structure affects the positioning of a book in other ways. A book that might be buried on the Indie hardcover fiction list could be positioned very well on The New York Times hardcover advice list or the Publishers Weekly religion hardcover list.

Verifiability edit

Bestseller reports from companies such as Amazon.com, which appear to be based strictly on auditable sales to the public, may be at odds with bestseller lists compiled from more casual data, such as The New York Times lists' survey of retailers and publishers. The exact method for ranking The New York Times bestseller lists is a closely guarded secret.

This situation suggests a similar one in the area of popular music. In 1991, Billboard magazine switched its chart data from manual reports filed by stores, to automated cash register data collected by a service called SoundScan. The conversion saw a dramatic shake-up in chart content from one week to the next.

Today, many lists come from automated sources. Booksellers may use their POS (point-of-sale) systems to report automatically to Book Sense. Wholesalers such as the giant Ingram Content Group have bestseller calculations similar to Amazon's, but they are available only to subscribing retailers. Barnes & Noble and other large retail chains collect sales data from retail outlets and their Web sites to build their own bestseller lists.

Nielsen BookScan U.S. is perhaps the most aggressive attempt to produce a completely automatic and trusted set of bestseller lists. They claim to be gathering data directly from cash registers at more than 4,500 retail locations, including independent bookstores, large chains such as Barnes & Noble, Powell's Books, and Borders, and the general retailer Costco. Unlike the consumer-oriented lists, BookScan's data is extremely detailed and quite expensive. Subscriptions to BookScan cost up to $75,000 per year, but it can provide publishers and wholesalers with an accurate picture of book sales with regional and other statistical analyses.

The making of a bestseller edit

There is only one recipe for a best seller and it is a very simple one. You have to get the reader to turn over the page. If you look back on the best sellers you have read, you will find that they all have this quality. You simply have to turn over the page.

— Ian Fleming, 1963[13]

Ultimately, having a great number of buyers creates a bestseller; however, there is a distinct "making of" process that determines which books have the potential to achieve that status. Not all publishers rely on, nor strive for, bestsellers, as the survival of small presses indicates. Large publishing houses, on the other hand, are like major record labels and film studios, and require consistent high returns to maintain their large overhead. Thus, the stakes are high. It is estimated that 200,000 new books are published each year in the U.S., and less than 1% achieve bestseller status.[14] Along the way, major players act as gatekeepers and enablers, including literary agents, editors, publishing houses, booksellers, and the media (particularly, publishers of book reviews and bestseller lists). While literature awards have a beneficial effect at least on sales of hard covers,[15] their impact is not detectable beyond a benchmark of ca. 800,000 sold copies.[16] The high visibility of an established and best-selling author is paramount in the equation also. In addition to writing the book, an author has to acquire representation and negotiate this publishing chain.[17]

At least one scientific approach to creating bestsellers has been devised. In 2004, Didier Sornette, a professor of geophysics and a complex systems theorist at UCLA, using Amazon.com sales data, created a mathematical model for predicting bestseller potential based on very early sales results. This information could be used to identify a potential for bestseller status and recommend fine tuned advertising and publicity efforts accordingly.[18] In 1995, the authors of a book called The Discipline of Market Leaders colluded to manipulate their book onto the best seller charts. The authors allegedly purchased over 10,000 copies of their own book in small and strategically placed orders at bookstores whose sales are reported to Bookscan. Because of the ancillary benefits of making The New York Times Best Seller list (speaking engagements, more book deals, and consulting) the authors felt that buying their own work was an investment that would pay for itself. The book climbed to #8 on the list where it sat for 15 weeks, also peaking at #1 on the BusinessWeek best seller list. Since such lists hold the power of cumulative advantage chart success often begets more chart success. And although such efforts are not illegal, they are considered highly unethical by publishers.[19]

From what is described above, intrinsic properties of books (like style or content) are often ignored or even deemed as irrelevant for their success by consumer psychologists, literary scholars, economists and sociologists alike. The success of novels is instead said to be made by extrinsic factors like literary critics, publishers, media, conformity and other social influences.[20] However, an elaborated model examining over a dozen external variables potentially influencing books sales could only explain less than 40% of differences in sales.[15] Research found intrinsic properties of novels which do influence their success. For example, a smaller disparity between the frequency of emotional words and rational words was predictive for successful novels.[21]

Unread bestsellers edit

Bestsellers have gained such great popularity that it has sometimes become fashionable to purchase them. Critics have pointed out that just because a book is purchased doesn't mean it will be read. The rising length of bestsellers may mean that more of them are simply becoming bookshelf decor. In 1985 members of the staff of The New Republic placed coupons redeemable for $5 cash inside 70 books that were selling well, and none of them were sent in.[22]

Major publishers edit

In April 2013 Penguin Random House was created to become the world's largest publisher. The two major shareholders are Bertelsmann (53%) and Penguin Group (47%) owned by Pearson PLC.[23]

Other major publishers include Thomson Reuters, Reed Elsevier, Wolters Kluwer, Hachette, McGraw Hill Education, John Wiley and Sons, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan Publishers, and Harlequin Enterprises.[24]

Cultural role edit

While the basic dictionary definition of bestseller is self-evident, "a popular, top-selling book", the practical cultural definition is somewhat more complex. As consumer bestseller lists generally do not detail specific criteria, such as numbers sold, sales period, sales region, and so forth, a book becomes a bestseller mainly because an "authoritative" source says it is. Calling a book a "top-selling" title is not so impressive as calling it "The New York Times bestseller". Although the former phrase is assumed to be derived from sales figures, the latter benefits from the high profile of the particular list. A book that is identified as a "bestseller" greatly improves its chance of selling to a much wider audience. In this way, bestseller has taken on its own popular meaning, rather independent of empirical data, by becoming a compromised product category and, in effect, attempting to create a marketing image. For example, a "summer bestseller" is usually determined long before the summer is over, and signals a book's suitability for millions of lounging pool-side readers.

The use of the marketing phrase, underground bestseller further illustrates the independent-from-sales, self-defining aspect of the term. For example, publisher HarperCollins suggested the bestseller potential of Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood: A Novel by announcing "...four years after her award-winning, underground bestseller, Little Altars Everywhere..." in the promotion. The book went on to achieve bestseller status in the 1990s. In reviews of the 2002 film of the same name, the novel's bestseller status was cited routinely, as in "compelling adaptation of Rebecca Wells' bestseller".[25]

The famous Diogenes Publisher at Zürich (Swiss) started to talk about its own Worstsellers in 2006, and therewith brought a new mode-word into the German speaking European countries.

Connection with the movie industry edit

Bestsellers play a significant role in the mainstream movie industry. There is a long-standing Hollywood practice of turning bestsellers into feature films. Many, if not the majority, of modern movie "classics" began as bestsellers. On the Publishers Weekly fiction bestsellers of the year charts, we find: #1: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2003); #3. Jaws (1974); #2. The Exorcist (1971); #1. Love Story (1970); #2. The Godfather (1969); among many others. Several of each year's fiction bestsellers ultimately are made into high-profile movies. Being a bestseller novel in the U.S. during the last forty years has guaranteed consideration for a big budget, wide-release movie.[26][27][original research?]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kim Wilkins; Bennett, Lisa (2021). "What are Bestsellers?". Writing Bestsellers: Love, Money, and Creative Practice. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-72563-7. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
  2. ^ Diamond, Edwin (1995). Behind the Times: Inside the New New York Times. University of Chicago Press. p. 364. ISBN 9780226144726.
  3. ^ Steinberg, S. H. Five Hundred Years of Printing. 1955.
  4. ^ P. N. Furbank. "The Twentieth-Century Bestseller". In Boris Ford (ed.). The Pelican Guide to English Literature. Volume 7: "The Modern Age". Penguin Books. 1961. Page 429.
  5. ^ Alternative definitions are offered by Mott, Hart and Escarpit: See Greenspan and Rose, Book History, Pennsylvania State University, Press, 2000, ISBN 0 271 02050 4, vol 3, books.google.com/books?id=PEZkkbohbtoC&pg=PA288&output=html_text+p+288.
  6. ^ "best, a. and adv." The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd ed. 1989. OED Online December 12, 2007.
  7. ^ For details of editions, see individual articles (in most cases)
  8. ^ Hoffmeister, Gerhart. "Die Leiden des jungen Werthers (The Sorrows of Young Werther)". The Literary Encyclopedia. 17 June 2004. The Literary Dictionary Company. Retrieved 17 March 2006
  9. ^ (in German). Goethe-Museum Düsseldorf. Archived from the original on 2010-10-24. Retrieved 2012-09-10.
  10. ^ Bolonik, Kera. "A list of their own". Salon.com:August 16, 2000. Retrieved December 7, 2005.
  11. ^ "Bestsellers: Hardcover Fiction, September 3, 2016". The Globe & Mail. 13 October 2023.
  12. ^ Zhi Gang Sha#Works
  13. ^ Temple, Emily (2019-05-28). "Ian Fleming Explains How to Write a Thriller". Lithub. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
  14. ^ Maryles, Daisy. Bestsellers by the Numbers". Publishers Weekly; 9-Jan-2006. Retrieved 22-Apr-2006.
  15. ^ a b Schmidt-Stölting; et al. (Mar 2011). "Success Drivers of Fiction Books: An Empirical Analysis of Hardcover and Paperback Editions in Germany". Journal of Media Economics. 24: 24–47. doi:10.1080/08997764.2011.549428. S2CID 154217833.
  16. ^ Form, Sven (2017-12-20). "Measuring the Aesthetic Success of Books: Can User-driven Databases Fill the Gap?". Creativity. Theories – Research – Applications. 4 (2): 322–332. doi:10.1515/ctra-2017-0016. ISSN 2354-0036.
  17. ^ Hill, Brian and Power, Dee. The Making of a Bestseller: Success Stories from Authors and the Editors, Agents, and Booksellers Behind Them. Kaplan Business; March 1, 2005. ISBN 0-7931-9308-7.
  18. ^ "Researchers use physics to analyze dynamics of bestsellers". PhysOrg.com: December 5, 2004. Retrieved December 7, 2005.
    "UCLA Physicist Applies Physics to Best-Selling Books" 2007-07-01 at the Wayback Machine. UCLA News: December 1, 2004. Retrieved December 7, 2005.
  19. ^ . Stern, Willy. August 1995. Archived from the original on 2008-02-12. Retrieved 2008-02-28.
  20. ^ Form, Sven (2018). "Reaching Wuthering Heights with Brave New Words: The Influence of Originality of Words on the Success of Outstanding Best-Sellers". The Journal of Creative Behavior. 53 (4): 508–518. doi:10.1002/jocb.230. ISSN 2162-6057.
  21. ^ Scherer, Michael (1994). "The Influences of the Relationship between Primary and Secondary Process Content on Aesthetic Success in Novels". Empirical Studies of the Arts. 12 (2): 159–172. doi:10.2190/D156-0C3R-F5KG-RBQE. S2CID 145398857.
  22. ^ Goldstein, Bill (15 July 2002). "THINK TANK; Let Us Now Praise Books Well Sold, Well Loved but Seldom Read". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  23. ^ "Meet Penguin Random House, the World's Largest Book Publisher That Will Counter Amazon". 5 April 2013.
  24. ^ "The Global 50: The World's Largest Book Publishers, 2012".
  25. ^ About Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood 2006-05-27 at the Wayback Machine, HarperCollins. The review quote is from Movies Unlimited 2007-12-27 at the Wayback Machine. Numerous such mentions may be located by a Web search for "film version Rebecca Wells bestseller" or similar. All retrieved 17 March 2006.
  26. ^ Chaudhuri , Saabira (12 November 2006). "From Best Seller To Blockbuster". Forbes. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
  27. ^ Publishers Weekly Bestseller Lists 1990-1995 2007-12-14 at the Wayback Machine. Correlation with movies may be achieved by searching at Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Both retrieved 17 March 2006.

Further reading edit

  • Bloom, Clive (2002). Bestsellers: Popular Fiction Since 1900
  • Boss, Shira (2007). "The Greatest Mystery: Making a Best Seller", The New York Times, May 13, 2007.
  • Feather, John and Woodbridge, Hazel (2007). "Bestsellers in the British Book Industry 1998–2005" Publishing Research Quarterly Vol. 23, No.3, pp. 210–223. doi:10.1007/s12109-007-9013-3
  • Miller, Laura J. (2000). "The Best-Seller List as Marketing Tool and Historical Fiction" Book History Vol. 3, pp. 286–304.
  • Sorensen, Alan T. (2004). Bestseller Lists and Product Variety: The Case of Book Sales.
  • Sutherland, John (2007). Bestsellers: a very short introduction, Very short introduction.
  • Sutherland, John (2002). Reading the decades: fifty years of the nation's bestselling books.
  • Sutherland, John (1981). Bestsellers: popular fiction of the 1970s.
  • Vanderbilt, Arthur T. (1999). The making of a bestseller: from author to reader.

External links edit

  • The Bestsellers Database, 20th-century American bestsellers compiled by students at the University of Virginia, the University of Illinois, Catholic University (DC), and Brandeis University
  • The New York Times Best Seller list (current)
  • Historic New York Times Lists

bestseller, this, article, about, concept, book, bestseller, other, uses, disambiguation, bestseller, book, other, media, noted, selling, status, with, bestseller, lists, published, newspapers, magazines, book, store, chains, some, lists, broken, down, into, c. This article is about the concept of a book as a bestseller For other uses see Bestseller disambiguation A bestseller is a book or other media noted for its top selling status with bestseller lists published by newspapers magazines and book store chains Some lists are broken down into classifications and specialties novel nonfiction book cookbook etc An author may also be referred to as a bestseller if their work often appears in a list Well known bestseller lists in the U S are published by Publishers Weekly USA Today The New York Times and IndieBound 1 The New York Times tracks book sales from national and independent bookstores as well as sales from major internet retailers such as Amazon com and Barnes amp Noble 2 In everyday use the term bestseller is not usually associated with a specified level of sales and may be used very loosely in publishers publicity Books of superior academic value tend not to be bestsellers although there are exceptions Lists simply give the highest selling titles in the category over the stated period Some books have sold many more copies than current bestsellers but over a long period of time Blockbusters for films and chart toppers in recorded music are similar terms although in film and music these measures generally are related to industry sales figures for attendance requests broadcast plays or units sold Particularly in the case of novels a large budget and a chain of literary agents editors publishers reviewers retailers librarians and marketing efforts are involved in making bestsellers that is trying to increase sales Steinberg defined a bestseller as a book for which demand within a short time of that book s initial publication vastly exceeds what is then considered to be big sales 3 4 5 Contents 1 Early best sellers 2 Description and types of bestseller 2 1 Differences among lists 2 2 Verifiability 2 3 The making of a bestseller 2 4 Unread bestsellers 3 Major publishers 4 Cultural role 5 Connection with the movie industry 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly best sellers editThe term best seller is first known to have been recorded in print in 1889 in the Kansas City Missouri newspaper The Kansas Times amp Star 6 but the phenomenon of immediate popularity goes back to the early days of mass production of printed books For earlier books when the maximum number of copies that would be printed was relatively small a count of editions is the best way to assess sales Since effective copyright was slow to take hold many editions were pirated well into the period of the Enlightenment and without effective royalty systems in place authors often saw little if any of the revenues for their popular works citation needed The earliest highly popular books were nearly all religious but the Bible as a large book remained expensive until the nineteenth century This tended to keep the numbers printed and sold low Unlike today it was important for a book to be short to be a bestseller or it would be too expensive to reach a large audience Very short works such as Ars moriendi the Biblia pauperum and versions of the Apocalypse were published as cheap block books in large numbers of different editions in several languages in the fifteenth century These were probably affordable items for most of the minority of literate members of the population In 16th and 17th century England Pilgrim s Progress 1678 and abridged versions of Foxe s Book of Martyrs were the most broadly read books Robinson Crusoe 1719 and The Adventures of Roderick Random 1748 were early eighteenth century short novels with very large publication numbers as well as gaining international success citation needed 7 Tristram Shandy a novel by Laurence Sterne became a cult object in England and throughout Europe with important cultural consequences among those who could afford to purchase books during the era of its publication The same could be said of the works of Voltaire particularly his comedic and philosophically satirical novel Candide which according to recent research sold more than 20 000 copies in its first month alone in 1759 Likewise fellow French Enlightenment author Rousseau especially his Julie ou la nouvelle Heloise 1761 and of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe s novel Die Leiden des jungen Werthers The Sorrows of Young Werther 1774 As with some modern bestsellers Werther spawned what today would be called a spin off industry with items such as Werther eau de cologne and porcelain puppets depicting the main characters being sold in large numbers 8 9 By the time of Byron and Sir Walter Scott effective copyright laws existed at least in England and many authors depended heavily on their income from their large royalties America remained a zone of piracy until the mid nineteenth century a fact of which Charles Dickens and Mark Twain bitterly complained By the middle of the 19th century a situation akin to modern publication had emerged where most bestsellers were written for a popular taste and are now almost entirely forgotten with odd exceptions such as East Lynne remembered only for the line Gone gone and never called me mother the wildly popular Uncle Tom s Cabin and Sherlock Holmes Description and types of bestseller editBestsellers are usually separated into fiction and non fiction categories Different list compilers have created a number of other subcategories The New York Times was reported to have started its Children s Books section in 2001 just to move the Harry Potter books out of the No 1 2 and 3 positions on their fiction chart which the then three book series had monopolized for over a year 10 Bestsellers also may be ranked separately for hardcover and paperback editions Typically a hardcover edition appears first followed in months or years by the much less expensive paperback version Hardcover bestseller status may hasten the paperback release of the same or slow the release if hardcover sales are brisk enough Some lists even have a third category trade paperback bestsellers In the United Kingdom a hardcover book could be considered a bestseller with sales ranging from 4 000 to 25 000 copies per week and in Canada bestsellers are determined according to weekly rankings in the country s national print sales tracking service BNC SalesData 11 There are many bestseller lists that display anywhere from 10 to 150 titles Differences among lists edit Bestseller lists may vary widely depending on the method used for calculating sales The Indie bestseller lists for example use only sales numbers provided by independently owned non chain bookstores while The New York Times list includes both wholesale and retail sales from a variety of sources A book that sells well in gift shops and grocery stores may hit a New York Times list without ever appearing on an Indie list USA Today has only one list not hardcover paperback so that relative sales of these categories cannot be ascertained from it Lists from Amazon com the dominant online book retailer are based only on sales from their own Web site and are updated on an hourly basis Wholesale sales figures are not factored into Amazon s calculations Numerous Web sites offer advice for authors about a temporary method to boost their book higher on Amazon s list using carefully timed buying campaigns that take advantage of the frequent adjustments to rankings For example faith healing author Zhi Gang Sha has used this method to create a number of 1 bestsellers 12 The brief sales spike allows authors to tout that their book was an Amazon com top 100 seller in marketing materials for books that actually have relatively low sales Eventually book buyers may begin to recognize the relative differences among lists and settle upon which lists they will consult to determine their purchases The weight and price of a book may affect its positioning on lists The Amazon com list tends to favor hardcover more expensive books where the shipping charge is a smaller percentage of the overall purchase price or is sometimes free and which tend to be more deeply discounted than paperbacks Inexpensive mass market paperbacks tend to do better on The New York Times list than on Amazon s Indie and Publishers Weekly separate mass market paperbacks onto their own list Category structure affects the positioning of a book in other ways A book that might be buried on the Indie hardcover fiction list could be positioned very well on The New York Times hardcover advice list or the Publishers Weekly religion hardcover list Verifiability edit Bestseller reports from companies such as Amazon com which appear to be based strictly on auditable sales to the public may be at odds with bestseller lists compiled from more casual data such as The New York Times lists survey of retailers and publishers The exact method for ranking The New York Times bestseller lists is a closely guarded secret This situation suggests a similar one in the area of popular music In 1991 Billboard magazine switched its chart data from manual reports filed by stores to automated cash register data collected by a service called SoundScan The conversion saw a dramatic shake up in chart content from one week to the next Today many lists come from automated sources Booksellers may use their POS point of sale systems to report automatically to Book Sense Wholesalers such as the giant Ingram Content Group have bestseller calculations similar to Amazon s but they are available only to subscribing retailers Barnes amp Noble and other large retail chains collect sales data from retail outlets and their Web sites to build their own bestseller lists Nielsen BookScan U S is perhaps the most aggressive attempt to produce a completely automatic and trusted set of bestseller lists They claim to be gathering data directly from cash registers at more than 4 500 retail locations including independent bookstores large chains such as Barnes amp Noble Powell s Books and Borders and the general retailer Costco Unlike the consumer oriented lists BookScan s data is extremely detailed and quite expensive Subscriptions to BookScan cost up to 75 000 per year but it can provide publishers and wholesalers with an accurate picture of book sales with regional and other statistical analyses The making of a bestseller edit There is only one recipe for a best seller and it is a very simple one You have to get the reader to turn over the page If you look back on the best sellers you have read you will find that they all have this quality You simply have to turn over the page Ian Fleming 1963 13 Ultimately having a great number of buyers creates a bestseller however there is a distinct making of process that determines which books have the potential to achieve that status Not all publishers rely on nor strive for bestsellers as the survival of small presses indicates Large publishing houses on the other hand are like major record labels and film studios and require consistent high returns to maintain their large overhead Thus the stakes are high It is estimated that 200 000 new books are published each year in the U S and less than 1 achieve bestseller status 14 Along the way major players act as gatekeepers and enablers including literary agents editors publishing houses booksellers and the media particularly publishers of book reviews and bestseller lists While literature awards have a beneficial effect at least on sales of hard covers 15 their impact is not detectable beyond a benchmark of ca 800 000 sold copies 16 The high visibility of an established and best selling author is paramount in the equation also In addition to writing the book an author has to acquire representation and negotiate this publishing chain 17 At least one scientific approach to creating bestsellers has been devised In 2004 Didier Sornette a professor of geophysics and a complex systems theorist at UCLA using Amazon com sales data created a mathematical model for predicting bestseller potential based on very early sales results This information could be used to identify a potential for bestseller status and recommend fine tuned advertising and publicity efforts accordingly 18 In 1995 the authors of a book called The Discipline of Market Leaders colluded to manipulate their book onto the best seller charts The authors allegedly purchased over 10 000 copies of their own book in small and strategically placed orders at bookstores whose sales are reported to Bookscan Because of the ancillary benefits of making The New York Times Best Seller list speaking engagements more book deals and consulting the authors felt that buying their own work was an investment that would pay for itself The book climbed to 8 on the list where it sat for 15 weeks also peaking at 1 on the BusinessWeek best seller list Since such lists hold the power of cumulative advantage chart success often begets more chart success And although such efforts are not illegal they are considered highly unethical by publishers 19 From what is described above intrinsic properties of books like style or content are often ignored or even deemed as irrelevant for their success by consumer psychologists literary scholars economists and sociologists alike The success of novels is instead said to be made by extrinsic factors like literary critics publishers media conformity and other social influences 20 However an elaborated model examining over a dozen external variables potentially influencing books sales could only explain less than 40 of differences in sales 15 Research found intrinsic properties of novels which do influence their success For example a smaller disparity between the frequency of emotional words and rational words was predictive for successful novels 21 Unread bestsellers edit Bestsellers have gained such great popularity that it has sometimes become fashionable to purchase them Critics have pointed out that just because a book is purchased doesn t mean it will be read The rising length of bestsellers may mean that more of them are simply becoming bookshelf decor In 1985 members of the staff of The New Republic placed coupons redeemable for 5 cash inside 70 books that were selling well and none of them were sent in 22 Major publishers editIn April 2013 Penguin Random House was created to become the world s largest publisher The two major shareholders are Bertelsmann 53 and Penguin Group 47 owned by Pearson PLC 23 Other major publishers include Thomson Reuters Reed Elsevier Wolters Kluwer Hachette McGraw Hill Education John Wiley and Sons Houghton Mifflin Harcourt HarperCollins Simon amp Schuster Macmillan Publishers and Harlequin Enterprises 24 Cultural role editWhile the basic dictionary definition of bestseller is self evident a popular top selling book the practical cultural definition is somewhat more complex As consumer bestseller lists generally do not detail specific criteria such as numbers sold sales period sales region and so forth a book becomes a bestseller mainly because an authoritative source says it is Calling a book a top selling title is not so impressive as calling it The New York Times bestseller Although the former phrase is assumed to be derived from sales figures the latter benefits from the high profile of the particular list A book that is identified as a bestseller greatly improves its chance of selling to a much wider audience In this way bestseller has taken on its own popular meaning rather independent of empirical data by becoming a compromised product category and in effect attempting to create a marketing image For example a summer bestseller is usually determined long before the summer is over and signals a book s suitability for millions of lounging pool side readers The use of the marketing phrase underground bestseller further illustrates the independent from sales self defining aspect of the term For example publisher HarperCollins suggested the bestseller potential of Divine Secrets of the Ya Ya Sisterhood A Novel by announcing four years after her award winning underground bestseller Little Altars Everywhere in the promotion The book went on to achieve bestseller status in the 1990s In reviews of the 2002 film of the same name the novel s bestseller status was cited routinely as in compelling adaptation of Rebecca Wells bestseller 25 The famous Diogenes Publisher at Zurich Swiss started to talk about its own Worstsellers in 2006 and therewith brought a new mode word into the German speaking European countries Connection with the movie industry editBestsellers play a significant role in the mainstream movie industry There is a long standing Hollywood practice of turning bestsellers into feature films Many if not the majority of modern movie classics began as bestsellers On the Publishers Weekly fiction bestsellers of the year charts we find 1 Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix 2003 3 Jaws 1974 2 The Exorcist 1971 1 Love Story 1970 2 The Godfather 1969 among many others Several of each year s fiction bestsellers ultimately are made into high profile movies Being a bestseller novel in the U S during the last forty years has guaranteed consideration for a big budget wide release movie 26 27 original research See also editList of best selling books List of best selling video games List of best selling music artists List of best selling singles List of best selling albums List of highest grossing films List of best selling manga List of highest grossing animated filmsReferences edit Kim Wilkins Bennett Lisa 2021 What are Bestsellers Writing Bestsellers Love Money and Creative Practice Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 72563 7 Retrieved December 16 2023 Diamond Edwin 1995 Behind the Times Inside the New New York Times University of Chicago Press p 364 ISBN 9780226144726 Steinberg S H Five Hundred Years of Printing 1955 P N Furbank The Twentieth Century Bestseller In Boris Ford ed The Pelican Guide to English Literature Volume 7 The Modern Age Penguin Books 1961 Page 429 Alternative definitions are offered by Mott Hart and Escarpit See Greenspan and Rose Book History Pennsylvania State University Press 2000 ISBN 0 271 02050 4 vol 3 books wbr google wbr com wbr books id PEZkkbohbtoC amp pg PA288 amp output html wbr text p 288 best a and adv The Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed 1989 OED Online December 12 2007 For details of editions see individual articles in most cases Hoffmeister Gerhart Die Leiden des jungen Werthers The Sorrows of Young Werther The Literary Encyclopedia 17 June 2004 The Literary Dictionary Company Retrieved 17 March 2006 Deutsche Sammlung in German Goethe Museum Dusseldorf Archived from the original on 2010 10 24 Retrieved 2012 09 10 Bolonik Kera A list of their own Salon com August 16 2000 Retrieved December 7 2005 Bestsellers Hardcover Fiction September 3 2016 The Globe amp Mail 13 October 2023 Zhi Gang Sha Works Temple Emily 2019 05 28 Ian Fleming Explains How to Write a Thriller Lithub Retrieved 2022 12 07 Maryles Daisy Bestsellers by the Numbers Publishers Weekly 9 Jan 2006 Retrieved 22 Apr 2006 a b Schmidt Stolting et al Mar 2011 Success Drivers of Fiction Books An Empirical Analysis of Hardcover and Paperback Editions in Germany Journal of Media Economics 24 24 47 doi 10 1080 08997764 2011 549428 S2CID 154217833 Form Sven 2017 12 20 Measuring the Aesthetic Success of Books Can User driven Databases Fill the Gap Creativity Theories Research Applications 4 2 322 332 doi 10 1515 ctra 2017 0016 ISSN 2354 0036 Hill Brian and Power Dee The Making of a Bestseller Success Stories from Authors and the Editors Agents and Booksellers Behind Them Kaplan Business March 1 2005 ISBN 0 7931 9308 7 Researchers use physics to analyze dynamics of bestsellers PhysOrg com December 5 2004 Retrieved December 7 2005 UCLA Physicist Applies Physics to Best Selling Books Archived 2007 07 01 at the Wayback Machine UCLA News December 1 2004 Retrieved December 7 2005 DID DIRTY TRICKS CREATE A BEST SELLER Stern Willy August 1995 Archived from the original on 2008 02 12 Retrieved 2008 02 28 Form Sven 2018 Reaching Wuthering Heights with Brave New Words The Influence of Originality of Words on the Success of Outstanding Best Sellers The Journal of Creative Behavior 53 4 508 518 doi 10 1002 jocb 230 ISSN 2162 6057 Scherer Michael 1994 The Influences of the Relationship between Primary and Secondary Process Content on Aesthetic Success in Novels Empirical Studies of the Arts 12 2 159 172 doi 10 2190 D156 0C3R F5KG RBQE S2CID 145398857 Goldstein Bill 15 July 2002 THINK TANK Let Us Now Praise Books Well Sold Well Loved but Seldom Read The New York Times Retrieved 10 February 2015 Meet Penguin Random House the World s Largest Book Publisher That Will Counter Amazon 5 April 2013 The Global 50 The World s Largest Book Publishers 2012 About Divine Secrets of the Ya Ya Sisterhood Archived 2006 05 27 at the Wayback Machine HarperCollins The review quote is from Movies Unlimited Archived 2007 12 27 at the Wayback Machine Numerous such mentions may be located by a Web search for film version Rebecca Wells bestseller or similar All retrieved 17 March 2006 Chaudhuri Saabira 12 November 2006 From Best Seller To Blockbuster Forbes Retrieved 11 February 2015 Publishers Weekly Bestseller Lists 1990 1995 Archived 2007 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Correlation with movies may be achieved by searching at Internet Movie Database IMDb Both retrieved 17 March 2006 Further reading editBloom Clive 2002 Bestsellers Popular Fiction Since 1900 Boss Shira 2007 The Greatest Mystery Making a Best Seller The New York Times May 13 2007 Feather John and Woodbridge Hazel 2007 Bestsellers in the British Book Industry 1998 2005 Publishing Research Quarterly Vol 23 No 3 pp 210 223 doi 10 1007 s12109 007 9013 3 Miller Laura J 2000 The Best Seller List as Marketing Tool and Historical Fiction Book History Vol 3 pp 286 304 Sorensen Alan T 2004 Bestseller Lists and Product Variety The Case of Book Sales Sutherland John 2007 Bestsellers a very short introduction Very short introduction Sutherland John 2002 Reading the decades fifty years of the nation s bestselling books Sutherland John 1981 Bestsellers popular fiction of the 1970s Vanderbilt Arthur T 1999 The making of a bestseller from author to reader External links editThe Bestsellers Database 20th century American bestsellers compiled by students at the University of Virginia the University of Illinois Catholic University DC and Brandeis University The New York Times Best Seller list current Historic New York Times Lists Publishers Weekly Bestseller List current Publishers Weekly Bestseller Lists from 1900 to 1998 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bestseller amp oldid 1217149442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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