![]() In the United States, paperback publishing was tried on a major scale at least twice during the nineteenth century: first, in the eighteen-forties, with an enterprise called the American Library of Useful Knowledge, and after the Civil War, when, unfettered by international copyright agreements, American publishers brought out cheap editions of popular European novels. The first edition of James Joyce’s “Ulysses,” published in Paris in 1922, is a paperback. They date back to the sixteenth century, and paperbacking has been the ordinary mode of book production in France, for instance, for centuries. Paper book covers are almost as old as print. It helped that Penguin had the whole British Commonwealth, a big chunk of the globe in 1935, as its market. The books sold well right from the start. And so, in the summer of 1935, he launched Penguin Books, with ten titles, including “The Murder on the Links,” by Agatha Christie. He couldn’t find anything worthwhile to buy to read on the train back to London. According to company legend, as Kenneth Davis explains in his indispensable history of the paperback book, “Two-Bit Culture,” Lane had his eureka moment while standing in a railway station in Devon, where he had been spending the weekend with the mystery writer Agatha Christie and her husband. Credit is usually given to an Englishman, Allen Lane, who was the founder of Penguin Books. Neither the theory nor the practice of mass-market-paperback publishing was original with de Graff. Paperbacks, even paperbacks that were just reprints of classic texts, turn out to have a key part in the story of modern writing. She builds on a lot of recent scholarship on the way that twentieth-century literature has been shaped by the businesses that make and sell books-work by pioneers in the field, like Janice Radway and Lawrence Rainey, and, more recently, scholars like Evan Brier, Gregory Barnhisel, and Loren Glass. Whether it also transformed the country is the tantalizing question that Paula Rabinowitz asks in her lively book “American Pulp: How Paperbacks Brought Modernism to Main Street” (Princeton). It was the first American mass-market-paperback line, and it transformed the industry. On June 19, 1939, a man named Robert de Graff launched Pocket Books. Print runs were modest and so, generally, were profits. Sometimes a book would be reprinted and sold again. They manufactured a certain number of titles every year, advertised them, sold as many copies as possible, and then did it all over the next year. ![]() Publishers sold a lot of their product by mail order and through book clubs, distribution systems that provide pretty much the opposite of what most people consider a fun shopping experience-browsing and impulse buying.īook publishers back then didn’t always have much interest in books as such. Bookstores were clustered in big cities, and many were really gift shops with a few select volumes for sale. Back when people had to leave the house if they wanted to buy something, the biggest problem in the book business was bookstores.
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