![]() According to their website, the stores that do report their sales do so by choice. However, The New York Times can’t mandate every bookstore to report their sales. That, by itself, is a statement I agree with. ![]() ![]() Instead, she (and her team) contacted stores confirmed to report their sales to The New York Times and filled the orders through them. When it came time to submit those orders, she did not go directly to the distributor. She took issue with that not being the case with what she referred to as “Book World,” and even stated, “The book industry is broken.”Īt conventions, she took pre-orders for her book. The way she explained it: if you go to a concert and buy CDs at the concert venue, those CD sales count toward the musician(s) total record sales. With her background in the music industry, Sarem is used to how that industry works. And REGARDLESS of all that, is right: you don’t need any of this to ask (incredibly valid) questions. I’ve been in this community for five years. in publishing, and a job in the publishing industry. And you don’t need a contract with a big publisher to ask questions. She told us he has no published books, and the only writing he’s done is published on Wattpad. ![]() Sarem made a point of attacking the credentials of Phil Stamper, the one who started everything on Twitter. ![]()
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