Amazon.com Widgets

Monday, June 23, 2008

Power Line notes that Roger Kimball, Publisher of conservative Encounter Books has decided it's just not worth sending review copies anymore:

...Once upon a time, and not that long ago, it meant something if your book was reviewed in The New York Times Book Review. A Times review imparted a vital existential certification as well as a commercial boost. Is that still the case? Less and less, I believe. The Times in general has lost influence as the paper has receded into parochial, left-liberal boosterism and politically correct reportage. And where its news and comment have become increasingly politicized, its cultural coverage has become increasingly superficial and increasingly captive of establishment, i.e., left-liberal, pieties and “lifestyle” radicalism.

Sure, a positive review in the Times still helps sell books. But it’s quite clear that books from Encounter won’t be getting those reviews, so it is pointless for us to send copies of our books to the Times—worse than pointless, because by so doing we help to perpetuate the charade that the Book Review is anything like even-handed in its treatment of conservative books. There is also this fact: the real impetus in selling books has decisively shifted away from legacy outlets like The New York Times towards the pluralistic universe of talk radio and the “blogosphere.” That is why Encounter can see its books on the Times’s bestseller list without ever making it into the paper’s review columns...

Update: Comment thread at PJM is interesting. Also, video with Kimball, Victor Davis Hanson and Andrew McCarthy.

2 Comments

Perhaps the Times can't bring itself to take seriously a publisher whose top titles include:

= A popular Holocaust denial book
= A book that blames the teaching of evolution on a Communist conspiracy
= A book that blames the 9-11 attacks on gays
= A book that argues the biggest economic mistake the U.S. ever made was abolishing slavery

What are the titles of those books? A look down Encounter's list or Roger Kimball's writing at PJM doesn't exactly give the impression "Holocaust Denial." I see a lot of good stuff on there.

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