When the Harvard Book Store in Cambridge, Massachusetts, held a
contest last fall to christen its new Espresso Book Machine, no one needed to
point out that the name eventually chosen—"Paige M. Gutenborg"—evoked an
appropriate combination of wistfulness and Jetsons-style futurism. Indeed, the
print-on-demand contraption—which can turn a digital file into a
perfect-bound, library-quality paperback in about four minutes—may well signal
an end to the literary distribution model that has endured since an impecunious
German goldsmith printed his famous Bible five and a half centuries ago.
The significance of such a
shift isn't lost on Jason Epstein and Dane Neller, cofounders of On Demand
Books, the New York City–based firm that rolled out the first Espresso
Book Machine (EBM) in 2006. Epstein, already celebrated as a game
changer for having effectively invented the trade paperback format in 1952,
calls digitization "the threshold not only of a new way of publishing books but
of a cultural revolution orders of magnitude greater than Gutenberg's." Since
beta testing the EBM nearly four years ago, his company has entered
partnerships with the Open Content Alliance, Lightning Source, and Google
Books, giving users access to over three million titles, both proprietary and
public domain. The "ATM for books," as Neller
describes their device, has so far been installed at about twenty-eight
locations throughout North America, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Africa,
including the University of Michigan, McGill University, and the University of
Melbourne. On Demand expects the EBM—which
sells for slightly over a hundred thousand dollars, depending on the choice of
printer—to have found its way into at least forty independent bookstores by
the second quarter of 2010.
Academics have been among the earliest adopters of
print-on-demand systems. According to Epstein, one EBM
at the University of Alberta now prints a hundred books a day, seven days a
week, including replacement library volumes, course readings, collections of
conference proceedings, and other materials custom-created on-site. For university presses, accustomed
as they are to forgoing worthy titles—or else compelled to stick them with
prohibitively high price tags—because of the cost of traditional publishing,
the benefits of the new technology are clear. The University of Texas Press,
for example, recently announced that a wide range of its out-of-print books are
now available in print-on-demand editions from Lightning Source. Additional
titles, including literary books, will be added to its new program over time.
Beyond academia, print on demand retains its association with
self-publishing—and some of the stigma. While R. R. Bowker, the publisher of Books in Print, has tracked
a 774 percent rise in the production of print-on-demand and other short-run
titles from 2002 to 2008 (the most recent figures as of this writing), the New York Times reports that
the overwhelming majority of such books sell no more than a handful of copies—and
often then only to the author's friends and family. Because self-published
titles almost never carry the same discounts and return guarantees as offerings
from major publishers, they're unlikely ever to grace the shelves of most
bookstores. And even when vanity presses do
offer returns programs—as does, for instance, Xlibris (whose parent company,
Author Solutions, signed a deal last December with On Demand)—the task of
persuading retailers to stock a particular title, along with the attendant financial
risk, falls squarely on the author.
Consequently, the average reader is far more likely to
encounter print-on-demand titles online than at the local bookstore. Perhaps
the best-established player in this field is Lulu, an eight-year-old publishing
platform—and recent entrant to the e-book market—that uses efficient
outsourcing to convert uploaded files into bound volumes within days. In place
of warehouses and wholesalers, the North Carolina-based company manages
what amounts to a vast print queue—an intentionally bare-bones approach that's
found favor with scores of no-budget zines and literary journals looking to
maintain a print presence without paying for production up front. And while
Lulu doesn't provide editorial intercession or even assign a contact person to
individual projects, both it and other print-on-demand firms have been
scrambling lately to round out their services. CreateSpace—an Amazon-owned
initiative that subsumes the soon-to-be-retired BookSurge brand—now offers a
suite of editing, design, and marketing packages, essentially positioning
Amazon as publisher, distributor, and retailer all in one.
What forward-thinking authors and publishers are after is a
means of leveraging the "long tail" principle, which holds that declining
distribution and inventory costs have made it possible to profit by selling
tiny quantities of many different products rather than—as was formerly the
rule—immense quantities of only a few products. By bridging the
still-pronounced divide between electronic and "tangible" publishing, advances
like the Espresso Book Machine could represent the realization of this model in
the familiar space of the bookstore. "Even with conservative assumptions about
demand, we will profit from this service," Heather Gain, marketing manager of
the Harvard Book Store, told Bookselling
This Week. "Also, we've already seen that Paige is quite an
attraction, and we anticipate increased foot traffic in the store. The machine
provides a great and convenient service, and we anticipate working with small
presses, other booksellers, and authors who are looking to satisfy their
customers' demands." (Last December, Steve Almond became the first notable
author to take up that offer when he published his latest book, This Won't Take But a Minute, Honey,
through the Harvard Book Store's EBM.)
But will bricks-and-mortar
bookstores have a sustainable role once anyone with an Internet connection can
order up a custom print run? "The future of traditional booksellers in the
radically decentralized worldwide marketplace is unclear," said Epstein in a
speech at the 2009 O'Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing Conference, "but
enterprising retailers with limited shelf space but with access to practically
limitless digital multilingual inventories and print-on-demand technology will
offer readers unprecedented access to titles anywhere on earth, including areas
in Africa, Asia, and Latin America too thinly settled or culturally isolated to
have developed a literary culture during the Gutenberg era."
In the developed world,
too, even as e-ink resolutions improve and an era seems to be at a close, we're loath to
give up the printed page. At the official unveiling of Paige M. Gutenborg, novelist
E. L. Doctorow suggested that the new technology "may indeed be an answer to
all the people who foresee the end of the physical book as words becoming ones
and zeros and appearing on screens. I hope the little man inside that machine
really knows what he's doing." Ironically, it could turn out that the spread of
digital publishing is precisely what ensures the survival of printed books for
a long time to come.
Adrian Versteegh is the editorial director of Anamesa. He lives in New
York City.
“What forward-thinking authors and publishers are after is a means of leveraging the 'long tail' principle, which holds that declining distribution and inventory costs have made it possible to profit by selling tiny quantities of many different products rather than immense quantities of only a few products.”
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