Folks,
This looks like a technology and business model Africans and people of African ancestry everywhere can
seize/appropriate to promote literacy, a sorely needed reading culture, and every other initiative
designed to uplift our peoples -- guerrilla-style publishing if you like.
vukoni
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For Budding Authors, a Rapid-Fire Publisher
By ERIC A. TAUB
"HOT off the presses" has taken on a newly literal meaning with the installation of the first instant
book-printing machine in an American bookstore.
Take a floppy disk or CD-ROM to Bookends in Ridgewood, N.J., or e-mail the store a file, and pow! - in as
little as 17 minutes a perfect-bound paperback version of your novel, family memoir, or favorite Bulgarian
desserts can be printed.
Every book comes complete with a customized cover chosen from among several thousand designs. For an
additional fee, it can also be trademarked and registered with a machine-readable ISBN number, essential for
any author hoping to get the work stocked by a major chain and on its way to becoming a best seller.
Of course, the chances of best-seller status are as likely as sudden world peace. Which is why Victor
Celorio, president of InstaBook in Gainesville, Fla., created his print-on-demand machine in the first
place.
"Best-selling books are so outside the norm that they're an anomaly," said Mr. Celorio, who comes from a
long line of inventors. (He says his uncle created an automated tortilla-making machine.) "Real bookselling
means selling a book here and a book there over a long period."
Walter Boyer, who owns Bookends with his wife, Pat, decided to offer print-on-demand services after he was
regularly asked by novice writers how they could publish their books.
With the large capital outlay involved in traditional publishing, which involves printing and storing
thousands of copies, mainstream publishers are more reluctant to take on titles that they doubt will generate
quick, substantial sales.
One alternative that has surfaced in recent years is the use of Internet-based print-on-demand companies
like AuthorHouse, iUniverse and Xlibris. These online services cost more than Bookends, although they may offer
more assistance in getting a book sold. Copies are printed when ordered, and royalties are split between the
company and the author.
Customers pay AuthorHouse (www.authorhouse.com) a minimum of $698 to prepare a black-and-white paperback
book for printing and to obtain an ISBN number to make the work available at retail outlets. IUniverse
(www.iuniverse .com) charges $459 for its basic package, which includes, among other items, five paperback
copies, an ISBN number and availability through online and retail merchants. The $500 Xlibris package (www
.xlibris.com) includes an ISBN number and bar code, registration with Amazon
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and other online merchants, a Web page and one author copy.
But the Bookends store in Ridgewood charges $150 for printing 10 copies of any work up to 200 pages. Larger
books are priced higher, and and subsequent 10-book orders are discounted. All royalties are kept by the
author. The store also offers editing and marketing services through associates at an additional cost.
Several forms of digital encryption protect an author's work from being stolen and reprinted without
permission. Files can only be read through the Instabook machine. And once the book is printed, the file is
automatically erased.
Customers can also choose to print any of 10,000 public-domain titles stored on InstaBook's servers. Using a
high-speed Internet connection, the store downloads the file and prints the title within minutes.
Mr. Boyer believes that the print-on-demand machine helps distinguish independent booksellers from the large
discount chains. "Our goal is to have lots of booksellers across the country hooked into a print-on-demand
network," he said. "Anything that makes us different from the chain bookstores is useful."
In addition to working with Bookends, Mr. Celorio has placed four machines in Toronto bookstores and one
each in Mexico and Italy. He envisages a day when an author instructs a bookstore in Los Angeles to send a
digital book file to another shop in Lagos, to be printed in seconds for a single customer thousands of miles
away.
While nothing that striking has happened at Bookends, the store, which operates a separate Web site for its
printing service (www .booksbybookends.com), has received inquiries from authors as far away as Florida and
California. One of Mr. Boyer's first assignments was to print copies of a Hungarian book for distribution to
Hungarian bookstores throughout the United States.
"This is another important part of our mix," Mr. Boyer said. "The more books we print, the more salespeople
we have out there."
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