Baen Books: Difference between revisions

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==Baen Digital Object Identifiers (DOI)==
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==Baen Books authors==
==Baen Books authors==
Although Baen himself was politically [[conservatism|conservative]]<!-- (which has led to friction with and departures by at least one [[liberalism|liberal]] author, [[Mercedes Lackey]])... someone removed the earlier put-up or shut-up fact tag of July 2007... {{fact|date=November 2007|I find it an incredible naivety that such a silly reason would determine a business decision--all authors scout around for the best deals, and she likely had other series by bigger publishers and went with them as Flint did for the Rivers of War Series. If this can't be cite supported by something more authoritative than a blog or opinion piece, take it out.}}--->, Baen Books has published works covering a broad spectrum of political philosophies.
Although Baen himself was politically [[conservatism|conservative]]<!-- (which has led to friction with and departures by at least one [[liberalism|liberal]] author, [[Mercedes Lackey]])... someone removed the earlier put-up or shut-up fact tag of July 2007... {{fact|date=November 2007|I find it an incredible naivety that such a silly reason would determine a business decision--all authors scout around for the best deals, and she likely had other series by bigger publishers and went with them as Flint did for the Rivers of War Series. If this can't be cite supported by something more authoritative than a blog or opinion piece, take it out.}}--->, Baen Books has published works covering a broad spectrum of political philosophies.

Revision as of 20:19, 2 January 2008

Template:TOCnestright Baen Books is an American publishing company established in 1983 by SF publishing industry long-timer Jim Baen (1943–2006). It is a science fiction and fantasy publishing house that emphasizes space opera, hard science fiction, military science fiction, and fantasy. Soon after Baen died prematurely on 28 June 2006, he was succeeded as publisher by long-time executive editor Toni Weisskopf.

Founding of Baen Books

Baen Books was founded in 1983 out of a negotiated agreement between Jim Baen and Simon & Schuster. Simon & Schuster was undergoing massive reorganization and wanted to hire Jim Baen to head up and revitalize their science fiction line in their Pocket Books division. Jim Baen, with financial backing from some friends, counter-offered with a proposal to start up a new company named Baen Books and provide Simon & Schuster with an SF line to distribute instead.[1]

Growth and Philosophy

From his days in magazine publishing, Jim Baen had a reputation for being able to recognize a gem in the rough and the ability to take a new author and nurture and train him up able to write salable material, and establish himself, which were some of the qualities desired by Simon and Shuster on their team.

In the later nineties, the publisher embraced the newly emerging internet as a means of "spreading the word" about a book or author and created one of the first, if not the first, writer-to-fan discussion forums "Baen's Bar" capable of using a mix of technologies to support the overall promotion and interest in reading books for education and entertainment. "became very dedicated to expanding the shrinking reader base for printed works by using the electronic internet to recapture interest.

One project which came about from this focus was the compendium of great science fiction "The World Turned upside down", and the practice begun circa 2002, of republishing older good science fiction in collections and omnibus editions, such as the works of the sixties authors Christopher Anvil and others.

Electronic publishing strategy

Template:RedirectstohereTemplate:Baen's Bar Initially, the company invested resources in "Baen's Bar", its online community service that provides a forum for customers, authors and editors to interact, beginning as a BBS. In the early 2000's, a blogger wrote": "Like every other publisher, Baen set up a website. But several of his authors and fan friends convinced him to put a chat client on his site. Since he was interested, and since several of those authors (like Jerry Pournelle, former columnist for Byte Magazine, for instance) were very Internet savvy, he did. The chat client grew into an incredibly vibrant community called Baen's Bar."[2]

In recent years, beginning in mid 1999, Baen has emphasized electronic publishing and Internet-focused promotions for its publications. The discussions on Baen's bar convinced him to do so.[3] Baen's electronic strategy is explained exhaustively in a series of "letters" or "essays" called The Prime Palavar by Baen Free Library (link) "First Librarian" Eric Flint, but in a nutshell, emphasizes distribution of unencrypted digital versions of its works free of Digital Rights Management copy protection schemes through webscriptions, misunderstood by many to be a part of Baen Books, but which only provides the services and is de facto an independent e-publisher. Webscriptions does not apply DRM for Baen, and Baen's Webscriptions, but Baen is the customer and so defines the relationship by contract. It is fair to say that Baen and Flint scoff at Digital encryption strategies and feel they do more harm than good to a publisher. Consequently, Baen also makes its entire catalog available in multiple formats for downloading and typically prices electronic versions of its books at or below that of paperback editions—and makes a profit doing it.[4] According to essays on Baen's science fiction e-magazine Jim Baen's Universe, also edited by Flint, the strategy is if anything, getting stronger and more fruitful with the passage of time.

Baen's Webscriptions

Other electronic marketing tactics Baen employs include distributing ARC serialized e-book versions of Electronic Advance Reader Copies (ARCs), or E-ARCs at reduced prices, scheduled beginning two or so months in advance of print publication. Baen called this Webscriptions, but contracted implementation to his web services consulting guru Arnold Bailey, who established Webwrights and it's internet lifeline, [http:www.webscriptions.net Webscriptions.net] which now also features other publishers such as SF genre rival Tor Books.

The Baen's Webscriptions installments include roughly a third of each book, with the last third coinciding with the print release. Baen in turn links to digital data using webwrights/webscriptions which Baen produces and provides. Whichever website sells the books goes through webwrights during the purchasing, who then pays Baens. The relationship is near incestuously close, but webwrights is credited as the e-published]] version copyright holder, Baen's webscriptions does accounting and pays the real copyright holders, the authors their cut on the e-books.

The electronic versions by Baen's are produced in five common formats from webwrights, including word processor friendly versions, all unencrypted in drastic contrast to the rest of the e-publishing industries strategy. Jim Baen disliked Adobe pdf format for reading purposes, but webwrights offers some titles in that format as well at the clients request. The "marketing gimmick" Jim Baen tried was making the E-ARCs are available in a five for a single price subscription option, which allows a subscriber an even more cost effective price for a lot of reading material.

After print publication, the "cleaned up and finalized" electronic copy is available both on line through webscriptions and through the parallel practice Baen instituted of using promotional CD-ROMs with permissive copyright licenses with many of its stable of authors works. Whether downloaded or by CD-ROM, the source material is available in all the formats Baen supports, which includes some for e-book readers.

Magazine experiments

The Grantville Gazettes

In addition, Baen's assayed the experimental publication of The Grantville Gazette, an e-magazine anthology series specifically related to the popular Ring of Fire alternate history plenum. In fact today, Baen's serves as a distributor of the e-zines and occasionally buys an issue and prints it—the real publisher (Switch over from production at Baen's Books to under Template:16writ occurred between volumes Template:GG04 and (was complete by) Template:GG06 is milieu creator Eric Flint copyrighted to "1632.org, Inc." which pays the anthologies authors.

The gazettes are individually purchasable from Webscriptions, though delayed somewhat from the Issues of this anthology series have also been produced in print editions subsequent to their electronic releases which are normally very delayed compared to a main title release by Baen Books, but Baens found their corporate resources were taxed trying to produce the e-zine, which never reached the goal of four per year—concurrently, Flint hired Goodlett, who also works for Baen as Assistant Editor for Jim Baen's Universe e-zine (see below).

Jim Baen's Universe

That semi-failure lead in turn to a separate establishment of two self-sustaining e-zine enterprises with a separate staff for each, both spearhead by Eric Flint: Jim Baen's Universe and the reconfigured (after Grantville Gazette V ended the initial spin-off production mode using the E-ARCs mode as an e-zine.) Gazettes magazine.

In contrast, the general audience speculative fiction anthology Baen's Universe is available only on-line. At approximately 120,000 words, this latter publication is unusually large when compared to most traditional print editions of science fiction magazines, and the average size of the newly reconfigured Gazettes is similarly generous.

In 1999, Baen launched its "Webscriptions" service, which provides customers with the opportunity to purchase access to a "bundled" discount package of electronic releases from Baen's catalog, varying in composition from month to month.

For a fee, a customer subscribes to a set of approximately five novels and/or anthologies. Each package is commonly a mix of new releases and older titles.

Upcoming titles (in both Webscriptions and as individual purchases) are released to the customer in increments in advance of the scheduled publication month. The usual method is to make the work available for reading as increments in HTML-only encoding. Two months prior, the subscriber may read 30-50% of the work; one month before publication, 50-75% becomes accessible. The complete text becomes available in multiple digital formats in the day and month of the released print publication.

All titles in a particular month's Webscription remain available in that "bundle" henceforth (as do all of the packages offered since the onset of the Webscription service in December 1999), and may be purchased retroactively.

The subscription aspect of the term "Webscription" refers not only to the serial manner of treating with new releases, but also to the way in which the purchaser is obliged to accept all of the selections in a particular monthly package, in much the same way as he/she would accept all of an editor's choices when buying a copy of a monthly science fiction magazine. This actively encourages purchasers to read outside their usual preferences by making available to them works by authors (and materials in subgenres of speculative fiction) that might not have come into their hands otherwise.

Because Baen subsequently maintains the great majority of their electronically released publications on its Web site for purchase, the publishing house has been able to make midlist titles available to readers long after they would typically have gone out of print under traditional publishing practices.

Baen has made liberal use of free content in its marketing efforts. For example, free sample chapters of its books are typically available on the Baen Web site. The "Baen Free Library" allows free access to dozens of titles from the company's backlist, often the first book published in a series by a Baen author. Baen also provides free electronic copies of its books to readers who are blind, paralyzed, dyslexic, or are amputees.

Baen's emphasis on electronic publishing has generated press coverage for the company. Wired magazine has described Baen's Webscriptions service as "innovative".[5] Charles N. Brown, publisher of Locus Magazine, has praised Baen's approach in an interview in The New York Times, saying "Baen has shown that putting up electronic versions of books doesn't cost you sales. It gains you a larger audience for all of your books. As a result, they've done quite well."[6]

Baen Digital Object Identifiers (DOI)

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Baen Books authors

Although Baen himself was politically conservative, Baen Books has published works covering a broad spectrum of political philosophies.

Baen authors include: {{Top}} may refer to:

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The market for SF in America

In 2004, more than 2,500 titles in the genres of science fiction, fantasy and horror were published in the U.S. by 248 publishers. According to the "2004 Book Summary" [7], Baen Books was the ninth most active publisher in terms of most books published in the genres indicated, and the fifth most active publisher of the dedicated SF imprints, publishing a total of 67 titles (of which 40 were original titles). It is difficult to judge the issue of quality but, based on the number of times a title published by Baen Books appeared in the bestseller lists produced by the major bookselling chains, it is ranked the seventh most popular SF publisher. In 2005 Baen improved to eighth position in the total books published with 72 books published (of which 40 were original titles).[8] It was the sixth most active publisher of the dedicated SF imprints, and the fifth most popular SF publisher based on the number of bestseller list appearances.

Baen Books series

Notes and References

  1. ^ "JIM BAEN October 22, 1943 - June 28, 2006", Baen's obituary by David Drake, david-drake.com.
  2. ^ "Baen's Bar, A Successful Community". Retrieved 2007-11-30.
  3. ^ "Baen's Bar, A Successful Community". Retrieved 2007-11-30.
  4. ^ "Baen's Bar, A Successful Community". Retrieved 2007-11-30.
  5. ^ M.J. Rose, "Come and get 'em", Wired, March 13, 2001.
  6. ^ Pamela LiCalzi O'Connell (2001-03-13). "Publisher's Web Books Spur Hardcover Sales". The New York Times (registration required). {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  7. ^ Locus, February 2005. Vol. 54, No. 2, 50/54.
  8. ^ Locus, February 2006, Vol. 56, No. 2, 50/53.

External links