Here’s how a quartet of much-discussed recent books fared at the cash registers.
Pre-pub buzz is every author’s dream and every publishing house’s desire. But does it always translate into sales? Here’s how a quartet of much-discussed recent books fared at the cash registers.
| The Book | The Hype | The Treatment | Flying off the Shelves or Gathering Dust? |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Israel Lobby AND U.S. Foreign Policy By John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt |
An earlier London Review of Books essay sparked angry charges of anti-Semitism from Alan Dershowitz and others; the book reignited that criticism. | "Their methodological arrogance, their failure to meet any serious standard of empirical inquiry, their slavish reliance on second- and third-hand works, is astonishing." JEFFREY GOLDBERG, THE NEW REPUBLIC | Over 36,000 copies sold, with sales still brisk months after publication. |
| Avoid Boring People: Lessons from a Life in Science By James Watson |
Last October Watson was quoted saying that blacks are less intelligent than other races; he soon resigned as chancellor of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. | "His plain-speaking style may be interpreted as either courageous or needlessly blunt (or both)." CHUCK LEDDY, THE BOSTON GLOBE | Over 6,000 sold, about what publisher Alfred A. Knopf expected; no significant sales dip or increase following his comments. |
| The Castle in the Forest By NORMAN MAILER |
Imagines Adolf Hitler’s early life as narrated by a devil. Mailer’s first novel since 1997 would be his last: he died on November 10, 2007. | "Blackly hilarious, beautifully written." PHILIP WEISS, THE NEW YORK OBSERVER | Hit #5 on the New York Times list (his highest since his debut, The Naked and the Dead); over 46,000 copies sold; 69% sales spike the week after his death. |
| The Terror Dream: Fear and Fantasy in Post-9/11 America By SUSAN FALUDI |
The second-wave feminist asserts that after 9/11 the media helped usher in a fear-based, anti-woman culture. | "Tendentious, self-important, sloppily reasoned … gives feminism a bad name." MICHIKO KAKUTANI, THE NEW YORK TIMES | Almost 5,000 copies sold, but sales leveled off soon after publication |
Vanitas
Mailer Gets the BirdSmarts
Risky BusinessSpotlight
Michael BloombergSpotlight
Keith GessenSpotlight
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