Very well then...KRAD said:
The reason I roll my eyes is not because I'm in denial. The reason I roll my eyes is because I'm tired of people who don't work in the publishing industry refusing to believe that the people who do it professionally know what they're doing.
The reason why the books aren't being done isn't because they're not selling a certain number per se, it's that they aren't selling enough to justify the incredibly high cost of producing them. Pocket did everything they could to make Star Charts as nice a package as they could as cheaply as humanly possible. It was a wonderful book, one that is glossy and detailed and nifty and one that has proven very useful to pretty much every author I know.
Pocket lost money on it.
Simon & Schuster is a business. They need to make money on a product in order to justify doing it. The market is there for Star Trek fiction. The market isn't there in sufficient numbers for Trek nonfiction to keep doing it.
You don't want to believe that, fine, but the people in the Trek at Pocket have an aggregate 50+ years' experience in the publishing industry. I trust their judgment a lot sooner than I'd trust someone outside it.
Cary L. Brown said:
The "star charts" book was nicely done... but it's a niche-market item within a niche market within a niche market. You say that it's very useful to "pretty much every author I know." Well, if the purpose of this was to appeal to authors, the book was a success... and I'm sure every person in that particular target market owns at least one copy. Of course, that's a VERY small target market.
Again, you can complain about someone who's "not in publishing" and therefore can't possibly get the amazing, intricate, complex-beyond-words, far-beyond-the-comprehension-of-mere-mortal-man rules of publishing, needing to just STFU... but as of yet I have not heard you give an alternative explanation... except for my queries in that regard basically being met with what amounts to nothing more than saying "STFU."
KRAD said:
It is big enough to support a novel line, but novels are a lot cheaper to produce than anything that has glossy paper and a large chunk of editorial content that needs the level of fact-checking and verification of a reference work.
TerriO said:
Using that model, would anyone here seriously be willing to pay $3,000 for a revised Trek encyclopedia?
TerriO said:
^Using that model, would anyone here seriously be willing to pay $3,000 for a revised Trek encyclopedia?
The God Thing said:
TerriO said:
Using that model, would anyone here seriously be willing to pay $3,000 for a revised Trek encyclopedia?
I personally wouldn't spend a dime on it, but a 700+ page ST:TMP technical codex of original text by Jon Povill & Jesco von Puttkamer along with artwork by Richard Taylor & Andrew Probert to expand a wonderfully unique MediaSF universe we only got the barest glimpse of in 1979... Well, I'd be willing to blow out all of my credit cards to buy six copies at that price.
TGT
Cary L. Brown said:
TerriO said:
^Using that model, would anyone here seriously be willing to pay $3,000 for a revised Trek encyclopedia?
Ah... but that's not really necessarily an accurate assessment. You're right, nobody's going to pay that much for a hobbyist book.
But once again, I go back to the late 70s to late 80s. There was a HUGE flood of fan-produced work, some of which was utter garbage but some of which was better (IMHO) than anything published before, or after, in "official" channels. These books were available for reasonable prices (in adjusted dollars, pretty much on-part with what you'd have seen from the "official channels" books at any point).
Yet these books were not published as "huge loss-leaders." The guys who made them didn't get rich off of them by any means, but they also didn't lose their shirts either. The pricing was done at "cost of publishing."
The main issue was that these guys weren't "publishing professionals." The work was a hobby for them, and the sale of the works was done simply to recoupe the costs that they incurred.
My point? OK, fine, these were of ... ahem... questionable legality (ie, by and large no licencing fees were paid to Paramount!). But in terms of PUBLISHING COST, the only difference between the "official" and "fannish" publications I'm referring to here are (1) licencing fees, and (2) writer/artist pay.
Now, suppose that someone created a "Ships of the Starfleet" quality work, on their own time, for the Luna-class. With electronic publishing methodology and all the drawing software that's available today for pennies on the dollar compared to what USED to be the case, for someone (say, Sean or one of his buddies) to do that would be entirely reasonable. They could do it on-spec for basically what any other writer might receive.
If... IF... a work of that nature were produced, I still honestly believe that it would sell well enough to justify paying the guys who did the work at scale, at the very least.
Why? Because there's still a large market of Star Trek fans. The fan base does not diminish significantly due to the lack of "current" shows on the air. If that were the case... Star Trek would have been dead back in 1969, wouldn't it? Trek fans are, or at least historically HAVE been, a bit more dedicated to their hobby than the average TV show audience is for some other show. The 70s and 80s demonstrated that well enough.
And I really believe that new material... really NEW material, and also QUALITY material... will have the same appeal to the people who are likely to buy such books today as it would have when there were two shows, AND simultaneous movies, all out at once.
Again... the point is that the stuff has to be new, interesting, and well-executed.
Keith makes a logical, but I think flawed, argument about why the Star Wars books sell well. The flaw... attributes the sales of those to the fact that the movies prequels have been out recently. But... the Star Wars book renaissance PRECEDED the "prequel" movies. Dark Empire, the Thrawn Triology, etc, etc... because they were (1) new and different, and (2) well-executed.. this is what explains why they did well. It's arguable that without those, the "prequel" movies would never have gotten green-lighted in the first place!
The "casual moviegoer" is not likely to buy the "incredible cross-sections" books, any more than they are likely to buy "Star Trek Star Charts." These are things that appeal almost entirely to the "hard-core" fans. People (like those of us here) who try to figure out how "warp drive" might actually WORK...![]()
It is not a spurious argument. Or do you honestly believe that books of maps qualify as having a great deal of "mainstream appeal?" Sci-fi fans are a niche market. Dedicated Trek fans are a niche market WITHIN that niche market. People who actually give a flying **** about the freakin' FLIGHT PATH of NX-01 are far fewer still. Most people really honestly don't care. (By the same argument, most people also don't care about the mechanical construction of a Starship's hull... I get that point, so no need to belabor that either.)Christopher said:
Cary L. Brown said:
The "star charts" book was nicely done... but it's a niche-market item within a niche market within a niche market. You say that it's very useful to "pretty much every author I know." Well, if the purpose of this was to appeal to authors, the book was a success... and I'm sure every person in that particular target market owns at least one copy. Of course, that's a VERY small target market.
That's a spurious argument. Just because Keith happened to mention that it's useful to authors doesn't mean he was saying it was targeted exclusively at them. You're selectively ignoring the parts of his argument that don't support yours.
Although I have used Star Charts as an author, I bought it because I was a fan. And if you look up any old Star Charts discussion thread on this board or in Trek Tech, you'll find comments from plenty of non-authors who bought the book.
Actually, in his last post he did give an explanation. I don't agree with it, but he did move the conversation beyond "stfu" and into an actual constructive discussion. That is a GOOD THING, Chris.Ohh, bull. KRAD's given you plenty of alternative explanations; you're just not listening.Again, you can complain about someone who's "not in publishing" and therefore can't possibly get the amazing, intricate, complex-beyond-words, far-beyond-the-comprehension-of-mere-mortal-man rules of publishing, needing to just STFU... but as of yet I have not heard you give an alternative explanation... except for my queries in that regard basically being met with what amounts to nothing more than saying "STFU."
Man, where to begin?And you're making up straw-man BS like this to reject any statement that doesn't conform to your preconceptions rather than actually being honest and fair enough to LISTEN to differing interpretations and consider that maybe, just maybe, you don't know more about the field than the people who actually work in it.
KRAD said:
There's another factor at work here, and that's the fact that so many reference works already exist. Each revision of the Encyclopedia sold less than the previous version, because revisions of most reference works tend to sell less than the originals, as not everyone who buys the first is willing to shell out for another (especially at the Encyclopedia's price point). However, as there's more information, the book is more expensive to produce. That would be the case of most revisions of existing material, which means new material -- and there isn't a lot out there that hasn't already been done, even if it's been done in a manner that is, now, outdated some.
Cary L. Brown said:
But once again, I go back to the late 70s to late 80s. There was a HUGE flood of fan-produced work, some of which was utter garbage but some of which was better (IMHO) than anything published before, or after, in "official" channels. These books were available for reasonable prices (in adjusted dollars, pretty much on-part with what you'd have seen from the "official channels" books at any point).
Yet these books were not published as "huge loss-leaders." The guys who made them didn't get rich off of them by any means, but they also didn't lose their shirts either. The pricing was done at "cost of publishing."
The main issue was that these guys weren't "publishing professionals." The work was a hobby for them, and the sale of the works was done simply to recoupe the costs that they incurred.
Now, suppose that someone created a "Ships of the Starfleet" quality work, on their own time, for the Luna-class. With electronic publishing methodology and all the drawing software that's available today for pennies on the dollar compared to what USED to be the case, for someone (say, Sean or one of his buddies) to do that would be entirely reasonable. They could do it on-spec for basically what any other writer might receive.
If... IF... a work of that nature were produced, I still honestly believe that it would sell well enough to justify paying the guys who did the work at scale, at the very least.
The "casual moviegoer" is not likely to buy the "incredible cross-sections" books, any more than they are likely to buy "Star Trek Star Charts." These are things that appeal almost entirely to the "hard-core" fans. People (like those of us here) who try to figure out how "warp drive" might actually WORK...![]()
I wonder if you realize just how arrogant it is to say, essentially, that someone who is not a "publishing professional" has no right to comment on publishing topics? I'm sooo sorry to have intruded on your private little clubhouse without first having learned the secret handshake.
Yep, the end-users should just shut the **** up and hand over our money, and just accept whatever the "experts" want to give us... right?
But maybe you do think this way... if so, there's no point in discussing anything further with you.
I'm curious how that is relevant. How old were YOU at the time? Just FYI, I was born on the first day of 1966, so you can do the math. But the relevance of this comment is... well, not at all "obvious." If you had a point to make with that (and the only one I can imagine is "you're a kid and I'm an adult" (which is obviously a false argument)).TerriO said:And you were how old at the time?
You're converting my argument from what I said (the 70s and 80s) into something which I didn't say (1978). The "renaissance" of fan publishing I refer to was in the 80s, for instance, when there were new films coming out every couple of years.Cary, this isn't 1978. The market isn't the same, nor should it ever be considered such. Trek had been off the air for years then, and TMP had just been released. We are not suffering from a near-decade long dearth of Trek on screens.
True, although I was never personally much into the "filking" and other 70s-fannish stuff. The main stuff in the 70s was Mike McMaster's work and the Franz Josef stuff... which was essentially unrelated to Bjo's efforts and organization. A better resource would be to look into the old "New Eye Studio" and the sort of stuff they were selling throughout this period.We aren't seeing efforts like what Bjo Trimble did in the 1970s.
This is a true statement as well, but I think it presupposes that people really prefer reading off of a screen rather than from a book. To date, technology hasn't reached the "electronic publishing with all the advantages of printed works" level. It may someday... but not yet.And, also unlike the 1970s, the Internet is in virtually every home these days. Certainly more than likely buyers of any book such as you're describing.
By that argument, why would anyone ever buy a printed book? The publishing industry should, by this argument, have ceased to exist entirely by now.Why should people buy the cow, when they can get the milk for free?
Because the stuff you see on the net is not as readable, or as convenient, or as accessible, as a published hard-copy book.The main issue was that these guys weren't "publishing professionals." The work was a hobby for them, and the sale of the works was done simply to recoupe the costs that they incurred.
My point? OK, fine, these were of ... ahem... questionable legality (ie, by and large no licencing fees were paid to Paramount!). But in terms of PUBLISHING COST, the only difference between the "official" and "fannish" publications I'm referring to here are (1) licencing fees, and (2) writer/artist pay.
Now, suppose that someone created a "Ships of the Starfleet" quality work, on their own time, for the Luna-class. With electronic publishing methodology and all the drawing software that's available today for pennies on the dollar compared to what USED to be the case, for someone (say, Sean or one of his buddies) to do that would be entirely reasonable. They could do it on-spec for basically what any other writer might receive.
And how would this differ from the various ship-focussed websites that are already available on the Internet?
And NOT believing something doesn't make it NOT so, either.If... IF... a work of that nature were produced, I still honestly believe that it would sell well enough to justify paying the guys who did the work at scale, at the very least.
Believing in something like this doesn't make it so, unfortunately.
OKAY... let's try this again.Again, this is NOT the 70s and 80s. I fail to see how the situation is analogous.Why? Because there's still a large market of Star Trek fans. The fan base does not diminish significantly due to the lack of "current" shows on the air. If that were the case... Star Trek would have been dead back in 1969, wouldn't it? Trek fans are, or at least historically HAVE been, a bit more dedicated to their hobby than the average TV show audience is for some other show. The 70s and 80s demonstrated that well enough.
And... again, NOT believing something doesn't automatically make it NOT so.And I really believe that new material... really NEW material, and also QUALITY material... will have the same appeal to the people who are likely to buy such books today as it would have when there were two shows, AND simultaneous movies, all out at once.
Again... the point is that the stuff has to be new, interesting, and well-executed.
Again. Believing in something doesn't automatically make it so.
The books I mentioned came out while I was living in California... making it in the 1988-1992 timeframe. The first "special edition" film came out when I was living in Evansville IN... making it approximately 1997.Keith makes a logical, but I think flawed, argument about why the Star Wars books sell well. The flaw... attributes the sales of those to the fact that the movies prequels have been out recently. But... the Star Wars book renaissance PRECEDED the "prequel" movies. Dark Empire, the Thrawn Triology, etc, etc... because they were (1) new and different, and (2) well-executed.. this is what explains why they did well. It's arguable that without those, the "prequel" movies would never have gotten green-lighted in the first place!
*shakes head*
And the "special edition" releases had nothing at all to do with it? Sorry, but I don't believe that for a microsecond.
Maybe you've had this conversation with someone else, but WE haven't had it. I don't believe that you and I have ever communicated before this particular thread. Am I mistaken?The "casual moviegoer" is not likely to buy the "incredible cross-sections" books, any more than they are likely to buy "Star Trek Star Charts." These are things that appeal almost entirely to the "hard-core" fans. People (like those of us here) who try to figure out how "warp drive" might actually WORK...![]()
Cary, we've had this conversation before.
Probably as many as there are hard-core Corvette fans (to justify the big glossy Corvette books that Barnes and Noble has on their shelves), or probably as many as there are arabian horse fanatics (to justify the large tabletop books focusing on those) or... well, so on and so on. Certainly at LEAST as many as there are "hard-core" Star Wars fans who'd buy the "incredible cross-section" books... those are hardly "mainstream" books either (which is why I was using those as my principle comparison... the parallels are closest in that case).How many "hard-core" fans do you really think there are? Because I have a feeling you're seriously overestimating.
Cary L. Brown said:
It is not a spurious argument. Or do you honestly believe that books of maps qualify as having a great deal of "mainstream appeal?" Sci-fi fans are a niche market. Dedicated Trek fans are a niche market WITHIN that niche market.
Again, you can complain about someone who's "not in publishing" and therefore can't possibly get the amazing, intricate, complex-beyond-words, far-beyond-the-comprehension-of-mere-mortal-man rules of publishing, needing to just STFU...
but as of yet I have not heard you give an alternative explanation...
Actually, in his last post he did give an explanation. I don't agree with it, but he did move the conversation beyond "stfu" and into an actual constructive discussion. That is a GOOD THING, Chris.
And you're making up straw-man BS like this to reject any statement that doesn't conform to your preconceptions rather than actually being honest and fair enough to LISTEN to differing interpretations and consider that maybe, just maybe, you don't know more about the field than the people who actually work in it.
Man, where to begin?
"Making up straw man BS?" So anything that you, personally, reject qualifies as a "straw man?"
I didn't realize you were the absolute arbiter of what opinions are valid and what opinions aren't.
Can you demonstrate how what I've said qualifies as a "straw man?" Define the term, then show how my argument fits into that definition.
You call my statements "Straw man BS." You can, without being an arrogant prig,
Not to mention that it's insulting and rude.
I haven't been insulting to you.
But you have no problem being so to me... because I'm not a "God of Publishing," evidently, huh?
Apparently, Chris, you are having some reading-comprehension issues,
as if you re-read my posts, you'll see that I'm ACTIVELY SOLICITING for any other viewpoints.
And I am perfectly willing to be convinced... but only by a convincing argument, not by a "you go to hell.. you go to hell and you die!" argument (done with a "Mr. Garrison" voice).
I wonder if you realize just how arrogant it is to say, essentially, that someone who is not a "publishing professional" has no right to comment on publishing topics?
I'm sooo sorry to have intruded on your private little clubhouse without first having learned the secret handshake.![]()
Yep, the end-users should just shut the **** up and hand over our money, and just accept whatever the "experts" want to give us... right?
I don't think so. But maybe you do think this way...
Cary L. Brown said:
SO, you're either saying that "trek fandom as it existed back then" is dead... that today's fans are so disinterested that they're not really "fans" at all, just casual viewers (who, then, would not be expected to buy ANYTHING... novels, tech manuals, whatever), or you're saying that the internet is so utterly powerful that the dedicated fans do not want published works... which is contradicted by the sales of other non-trek works. Or is there some other interpretation of this which I'm missing?
Several, in fact.Or is there some other interpretation of this which I'm missing?
Cary L. Brown said:
I'm curious how that is relevant. How old were YOU at the time? Just FYI, I was born on the first day of 1966, so you can do the math. But the relevance of this comment is... well, not at all "obvious." If you had a point to make with that (and the only one I can imagine is "you're a kid and I'm an adult" (which is obviously a false argument)).TerriO said:And you were how old at the time?
You're converting my argument from what I said (the 70s and 80s) into something which I didn't say (1978). The "renaissance" of fan publishing I refer to was in the 80s, for instance, when there were new films coming out every couple of years.Cary, this isn't 1978. The market isn't the same, nor should it ever be considered such. Trek had been off the air for years then, and TMP had just been released. We are not suffering from a near-decade long dearth of Trek on screens.
True, although I was never personally much into the "filking" and other 70s-fannish stuff. The main stuff in the 70s was Mike McMaster's work and the Franz Josef stuff... which was essentially unrelated to Bjo's efforts and organization. A better resource would be to look into the old "New Eye Studio" and the sort of stuff they were selling throughout this period.We aren't seeing efforts like what Bjo Trimble did in the 1970s.
This is a true statement as well, but I think it presupposes that people really prefer reading off of a screen rather than from a book. To date, technology hasn't reached the "electronic publishing with all the advantages of printed works" level. It may someday... but not yet.And, also unlike the 1970s, the Internet is in virtually every home these days. Certainly more than likely buyers of any book such as you're describing.
There are very good reasons that we haven't, despite predictions to the contrary, moved to a "totally paperless society." Yes, electronic books sell, but paper books still sell better by orders of magnitude. Do audio books sell better than e-books? I suspect so... but you would know better than I would.
With a technical book in particular... and I mean technical with blueprints and schematics... printed paper works are still far superior to anything you can see on-screen. That may change someday, but it's not on the horizon yet.
And no matter how convenient laptops may be, they're nowhere near as convenient as having an actual book to read. Maybe someday... but not today.
By that argument, why would anyone ever buy a printed book? The publishing industry should, by this argument, have ceased to exist entirely by now.Why should people buy the cow, when they can get the milk for free?
Why hasn't that happened? Two words...readability and convenience. Until "electronic publishing" is as easy to read, and as convenient, as a hardcopy, I cannot imagine hardprint works "going away." And having something which is not dependent upon technology (power, communication links, whatever) is a KEY element of that "convenience" point.
Because the stuff you see on the net is not as readable, or as convenient, or as accessible, as a published hard-copy book.The main issue was that these guys weren't "publishing professionals." The work was a hobby for them, and the sale of the works was done simply to recoupe the costs that they incurred.
My point? OK, fine, these were of ... ahem... questionable legality (ie, by and large no licencing fees were paid to Paramount!). But in terms of PUBLISHING COST, the only difference between the "official" and "fannish" publications I'm referring to here are (1) licencing fees, and (2) writer/artist pay.
Now, suppose that someone created a "Ships of the Starfleet" quality work, on their own time, for the Luna-class. With electronic publishing methodology and all the drawing software that's available today for pennies on the dollar compared to what USED to be the case, for someone (say, Sean or one of his buddies) to do that would be entirely reasonable. They could do it on-spec for basically what any other writer might receive.
And how would this differ from the various ship-focussed websites that are already available on the Internet?
I think this "internet bogey" argument is a bit specious. Again... if this were a legitimate argument, why have other, non-trek publishing ventures not been hamstrung in the way you're describing by the presence of the 'net?
SO, you're either saying that "trek fandom as it existed back then" is dead... that today's fans are so disinterested that they're not really "fans" at all, just casual viewers (who, then, would not be expected to buy ANYTHING... novels, tech manuals, whatever), or you're saying that the internet is so utterly powerful that the dedicated fans do not want published works... which is contradicted by the sales of other non-trek works. Or is there some other interpretation of this which I'm missing?
And I really believe that new material... really NEW material, and also QUALITY material... will have the same appeal to the people who are likely to buy such books today as it would have when there were two shows, AND simultaneous movies, all out at once.
Again... the point is that the stuff has to be new, interesting, and well-executed.
The books I mentioned came out while I was living in California... making it in the 1988-1992 timeframe. The first "special edition" film came out when I was living in Evansville IN... making it approximately 1997.Keith makes a logical, but I think flawed, argument about why the Star Wars books sell well. The flaw... attributes the sales of those to the fact that the movies prequels have been out recently. But... the Star Wars book renaissance PRECEDED the "prequel" movies. Dark Empire, the Thrawn Triology, etc, etc... because they were (1) new and different, and (2) well-executed.. this is what explains why they did well. It's arguable that without those, the "prequel" movies would never have gotten green-lighted in the first place!
*shakes head*
And the "special edition" releases had nothing at all to do with it? Sorry, but I don't believe that for a microsecond.
Maybe you've had this conversation with someone else, but WE haven't had it. I don't believe that you and I have ever communicated before this particular thread. Am I mistaken?Cary, we've had this conversation before.
Probably as many as there are hard-core Corvette fans (to justify the big glossy Corvette books that Barnes and Noble has on their shelves), or probably as many as there are arabian horse fanatics (to justify the large tabletop books focusing on those) or... well, so on and so on. Certainly at LEAST as many as there are "hard-core" Star Wars fans who'd buy the "incredible cross-section" books... those are hardly "mainstream" books either (which is why I was using those as my principle comparison... the parallels are closest in that case).How many "hard-core" fans do you really think there are? Because I have a feeling you're seriously overestimating.
Look... you guys think that there's no market for this sort of thing. You are dedicated to the proposition that you'll never sell one. This is clearly the sort of thing that becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
I find it particularly intriguing just HOW STRONGLY NEGATIVE the "publisher" response has been to this suggestion. Not "maybe," not even just "no" but "HELL NO." Not even a willingness to consider, if even as a mere intellectual exercise, the POSSIBILITY of doing something like this. Just "HELL NO."
So, it's not gonna happen. Whatever... no point in trying to discuss thing with people who are unwilling to even consider suggestions without going into fits of defensive apoplexy.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.