Canelo / Arts Council England
Canelo / Arts Council England |
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Literature in the 21st Century report
Canelo / Arts Council England |
30 Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction How big is the ebook market? Between 2012 and 2014 ebooks leapt from a 20% to a 33% market share. This growth should be borne in mind when considering the sluggishness of print sales. In 2015 this dipped to a 29% market share 18 followed by a further fall to 25% in 2016 19 . Nonetheless, by any stretch, from a standing start ebooks have grown fast – good news for anyone who worried no-one wanted to read books in the digital age. Yet it would be a mistake to think the ebook market simply mirrors print. In fact it is a very different market in two important ways, neither of which particularly benefits literary fiction, even if it is a boon to the book market as a whole. We ran a crawl of the top 100 books on Amazon in print and ebook versions on the 10 February 2016 and then again on 23 October 2017. Both crawls showed that leading ebooks are firstly much cheaper than print books, and secondly that ebooks are more skewed towards genre and commercial fiction. These conclusions are firmly supported by all available Nielsen BookScan data. The average selling price for a top 100 print book was £5.66 in February 2016 and £6.15 in October 2017; the difference could suggest an increase in pricing or could be seasonal thanks to more expensive Christmas-gift titles starting to dominate the charts. For a top 100 ebook it was under half that figure at £2.55 in 2016 and £2.43 in 2017. The average price of a top 10 book was £6.25 and £2.85 in 2016, and £8.19 and £3.19 respectively (the ebook figures for 2017 are here skewed by the high-priced big name launches of Dan Brown and Philip Pullman’s latest books). The books claiming top spots were priced at £7.49/£0.99 in 2016 and £9/£0.98 in 2017. For ebooks, prices of below £1.99 or even £0.99 are routine; in mainstream print they are almost unheard of. Of the Kindle top 100 that day, 38 were priced at £1 or less in 2016 while 55 were at £1 or less in 2017. All of this has to be seen in the context of the fall in prices discussed earlier. Not only are the price of print books coming down, but the overall price of a book across formats will have come down even further, thanks to the low price of ebooks. The total market for books is hence, as we have seen, caught in a powerful deflationary cycle. The kind of books sold in ebook also differ from print. Nielsen BookScan estimate that for commercial fiction, nearly half of all books sold are now as ebooks. For literary fiction and non-fiction however, the percentage is much lower. Take the top 100. Of the Kindle charts the only literary books that were in the top 100 in February 2016 were Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections, Emma Donoghue’s Room (which 18 http://www.thebookseller.com/news/e-book-market-share-down-slightly-2015 19 https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/mar/14/ebook-sales-continue-to-fall-nielsen-survey-uk-book-sales |
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