For those of us who can remember the gothic boom of the Sixties and early Seventies it's always been difficult to imagine that one genre would ever again dominate paperback sales the way the gothics did.
But my friend Paula Guran was quoted today on Mediabistro about fantasy and romance and I have to say I think these figures best (per centage-wise) even the days of gothic dominance.
Posted by JasonB | 04:03 PM | Email this post | 0 Comments
Not Everybody's Sales Are Going Down
Juno Books editor Paula Guran (right) digs into the Nielsen Bookscan numbers to find some encouraging news about genre fiction sales:
"Fantasy mass market paperbacks sold 102,660 units last week," she reports. "A year ago, in the 49th week of 2007, fantasy mass market paperbacks sold 62,761 units... Romance, always the industry leader in [mass market paperback], sold 202,667 units for the week in 2007 and this year: 310,689."
Guran adds that the top seven fantasy paperbacks are Charlaine Harris novels, followed by urban fantasists Kim Harrison and Jim Butcher. In the romance category, Nora Roberts is at #1, but some of the other big sellers also have strong fantasy components; see Sherrilyn Kenyon, Heather Graham, and Katie Macalister.
But what about year-to-date sales, you ask? Overall, fantasy sales are down 18 percent compared to the first 49 weeks of 2007, but mass market paperback sales are up 14 percent—and overall romance sales are up 83 percent, with mass market paperbacks alone experiencing a 50 percent boost. And that's not even considering how many romance books might, in a different climate, have been categorized as fantasies...
OK, Ed, you and me. Roberta Gorman? Gormana Roberts? An Urban Fantasy Romance series.
ReplyDeleteRJR
Hi Ed,
ReplyDeleteI guess with everything going on in the real world, fantasy is becoming more attractive each day.
Terrie