Does Being 'Banned' Help Book Sales?
A literary Streisand Effect
Publishers used to love it when they could put the words "Banned in Boston" on a book's cover—the phrase was bound to increase sales. So it's reasonable to suspect that getting listed as "banned" during Banned Books Week is going to help an author find readers. The analysts at Next Big Sound have crunched some numbers and, by one measure at least, their figures are consistent with the theory.
Here's an excerpt from their write-up:
Each year, hundreds of books are challenged in the US, meaning that a group or individual petitions to have the book removed from curriculum or libraries, often on the basis of explicit content and profanity. The American Library Association tallies all documented complaints and publishes a list of the top ten most challenged books annually.
Over the years, such classics as To Kill a Mockingbird and Joseph Heller's Catch-22 have been banned or challenged. And this year the top ten includes major titles, several of which have been successfully adapted to the silver screen, from the Hunger Games series, to The Perks Of Being A Wallflower.
It seems the spotlight does indeed have a positive impact for these books, at least if you look at book recommendation network Goodreads.
Comparing Goodreads Adds during BBW to the week prior, only one of the single-volume books did not see a lift in activity….Several books listed as most challenged are actually series. In these cases we can identify a lift in Goodreads activity, though not necessarily for every volume in the collection.
It surely helps that the books in question were removed (or just challenged) in libraries and school reading lists, not at Amazon.
[Hat tip: Bryan Alexander.]
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BBW?
I thought that was something to do with John's favorite websites.
Blocking Below the Waist
Any publicity is good publicity when it comes to a book, pretty much, so it makes sense that bans, which give free publicity, would help sales most of the time. Shit, a smart person might put "controversial" shit in their book just in the hopes that some dumbfuck special interest group decides to hate on it and give free publicity.
I mean, did you know that the author of A Million Little Fibers is...A TOWEL?!?
NO, YOU'RE A TOWEL!
Well, you're a beaner towel!
wanna get high?
Fuck you! It's not illegal, bitch!
I learned I shouldn't get high to come up with ideas. I should come up with ideas, and then get high to reward myself!
Speaking of Amazon, Krugman now hates Amazon.
Confirming that they are among the best companies in the US today.
(rushes out to buy Amazon stock)
Amazon is going to pay me hundreds of dollars in about a week. I think they're great (okay, they're royalties from my book, but still, I'm getting 70%!)
Krugman hates you.
You are empowering a monopsony and destroying culture and democracy.
You're going to tell me what I can read? I'll show you. (goes out, buys crappy Fifty Shades of Gray, gives it to his girlfriend)
This has already been proved in other media. In the immortal words of Uncle Luke (to the tune of Springsteen's song), "I was BANNED in the USA!"
That was probably his biggest hit.
but but but Face Down, Ass Up?
You are right that "banned in the USA" was the first record released with the Parental Advisory sticker
however, "Nasty as they Wanna Be" was still their best selling record, & 'Me So Horny' their biggest hit.
Buy some of those banned books and take them to Cuba with the Nation, only $5,450.00 to $5,850.00 for a whole week of cultural exchange!
http://www.thenation.com/cuba?.....paign=Cuba - disengaged_102114&utm_content=A
How much does it cost to spend a week in a North Koren prison camp?
I'll check with Dennis and get back to you.
Probably not as much as spending a week in a Cuban prison camp.
I note that Huckleberry Finn hasn't been on the list since 2007.
Has the NAACP gotten tired or have all the schools and libraries been purged?
Schools have started to use the edition that changes all the "-er" to "-a".
So, kosher.
I think you mean kosha.
I think these "censorship" things actually mean "the teachers/school librarians like this book but the parents don't, so let's call the parents censors."
If a librarian or teacher bans a book, it's no *censorship,* it's *sensitivity,* so I hypothesize that they're now banning Huck Finn without parental pressure, so no prob.
"Banned" includes some parent saying "I think that this is more of a 7th grade book than a 5th grade book." This list is always so absurd.
By their measures, the Bible is "banned."
OT: Shameless
The ex-counterterror chief also added, "The Snowden leaks are also why you have hemorrhoids and why your daughter is dating the guy with all the tattoos and piercings but no job."
OT: Guy on a Buffalo
No idea how to do the sweet links, so...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJ4T9CQA0UM
You're welcome.
You may not be able to do sweet links, but at least you avoided sugarfree links.
Crisis averted!
For now!
Here is how you do the embedded link. Like I just did!
But does it work with mobile links?
When I learned how to do embedded links, I lost 30 pounds!
If I write a book I would certainly hope for it to be banned. Come to think of it, anything I would write probably would get banned. Hmmmm.
Fifty Shades of Confederate Gray.
"No, you fool, I said Mini? balls, not mini-balls!"
Better than Fifty Shades of Earl Grey.
Oh, I sure hope nobody bans my novel, The Beautiful, Large-Breasted Librarian who Found True Love at the S&M Hotel While Beating Up Censorious PTA Presidents.
Title is too long. The long title went out of style long ago. How about making that the subtitle and adding a shorter, more easily referenced title the main title?
Sophomore Sluts
How to hunt deer with guns
I bet You're Too Much of a Girly Pansy to Ban this Book
If these books were actually banned, you wouldn't be able to buy them in the United States.
Americans are so stupid and words apparently don't mean anything anymore.
Sigh.