PublishersLunch
Barnes & Noble reported third quarter
earnings Tuesday and, consistent with their holiday sales update, business
increased at the retail stores. At $1.494 billion, store sales were up 2
overall; same-store sales rose 2.8 percent, and the company said "retail
core" comparable sales, excluding devices, accessories and warranties,
rose 4.2 percent compared to a year ago. (Those increases are all slightly
smaller than the growth reported for the nine-week holiday period on its own)
BN.com sales rose 32 percent to $420 million, on the rising Nook business but
with "a decline in online physical product sales"; college sales
slid, "due to a shift from selling new and used textbooks to lower priced
textbook rentals." Total sales for the quarter of $2.439 million were up 5
percent from a year ago.
CEO William Lynch says in the release that
"our traffic and sales in stores were the highest we've seen in five
years." He reports that "physical book sales at our stores increased
more than 4 percent over last year, and our merchandising changes in our
juvenile business and our toys & games department experienced double-digit
revenue growth." The Nook business continues to grow "and according
to some of the largest US publishers, we maintained or slightly gained share in
the eBook market during the third quarter."
The overall Nook business grew 38 percent
to $542 million, and Nook device sales rose 64 percent. Digital content sales
was up 85 percent on a comparable basis. (When reporting the Nook business on
its own, the company reports the full consumer price of agency ebooks rather
than just the commission, though in their official income statement they only
book the commissions.)
In the conference call with analysts,
executives underscored the success of the BN stores. Mitchell Klipper said
"the landlords love us now more than ever" and "are just not
letting us leave." He said most of their leases are being renewed and
"the rents are coming down" at 95 of every 100 stores. He expects
that trend "to continue for the next two or three years."Release
President and publisher of Picador and
editor-at-large at Macmillan Frances
Coady will be leaving the company as part of an editorial
restructuring of the paperback imprint, according to a company-wide memo sent
by ceo John Sargent late Thursday to staff (and confirmed to us Friday.)
"Over time," Sargent wrote, "the Picador list has largely
gravitated toward FSG, and more recently Holt. At the same time, we have seen
shifts in the distribution of Picador paperbacks. The structural/financial
model, constructed in another time, has become less meaningful. So we need to
change, and to reinvigorate Picador."
As a result, going forward Picador staff
will report to FSG publisher Jonathan Galassi and Holt publisher Steve Rubin in
what Sargent said would "clarify hardcover/paperback editorial
responsibility for key titles" and give the originating publishers
"greater control" and Picador a "stronger marketing focus."
Sargent added that he "cannot stress enough that SMP books can continue to
be featured in Picador when it makes sense. In fact I hope these changes will
make that more likely, not less."
Coady joined Picador in 2000 and began
acquiring hardcover titles for Holt (under the Frances Coady Books imprint),
Metropolitan, and FSG in 2007. She has published authors including Naomi Klein,
Richard Powers, Paul Auster, Siri Hustvedt, Andrea Levy, Joseph O'Connor, and
Alan Bennett.
Coady's last day at Macmillan is March 2,
after which she will work with Macmillan in an independent freelance editorial
capacity "while also being free to pursue new publishing projects here and
in the UK."
Following unclear reports from earlier last
week on whether or not there has been active solicitation for a book deal for
New York Knicks sensation Jeremy Lin, over the weekend there was a clarifying
statement from agent Richard Abate--who was working with Lin's management in
preliminary fashion, but is not doing so now.
Abate said: "Earlier this month,
Mr. Lin's representatives asked me to arrange meetings to explore the
possibility of a book deal. As the frenzy surrounding Mr. Lin has escalated,
his representatives wisely decided to postpone those meetings until they can
approach the development of a book project with the thoughtful consideration it
deserves."
Abate added that "Mr. Lin's representative are not
entertaining book offers at this time, so I'm not currently acting on their
behalf."
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