My Book

Remaindered

September 24, 2007 - 8:41am

I got word last week that Eerdmans is going to remainder my book. I didn't know what that meant, though I was pretty sure it wasn't a good thing. One of the people from Eerdmans had to explain it to me.

If a publisher has a quantity of books in its warehouse, and the books are either not selling or selling so slowly that they don't justify storage and all the costs (including taxes) that go along with that, they "remainder" the book. Yes, remainder is a verb as well as a noun. That means they get rid of it. It's better to unload it than to keep it in the warehouse. Obviously this also means any question of a second printing has been settled.

Perhaps you're feeling a little sorry for me right now. "Oh, Real Live Preacher's book didn't sell very well, and it's getting dumped by the publisher. Poor guy."

Don't feel bad. I sure don't. Yeah, it would have been fun if the book had sold a lot of copies and went into a second printing. But the hard reality is this: I am an unknown author of a book of funky, religious essays. Books of essays are the worst selling books in the world right now. And mine is full of f-bombs, meaning you don't want to give it to Aunt Petunia for Christmas. And, while Eerdmans treated me as well as they treat any of their authors, my only publicity was their catalog and this blog. And of course, if you're here, you can read read every essay I've ever written including about 42 of the 50 essays in the book.

This book is not exactly a marketer's dream, is it? It's really kind of a miracle that they took a chance and published this thing at all.

Now here is where the story gets kind of funny and surprisingly fortunate for me. Eerdmans sent me a letter some months ago, notifying me of their intention to remainder the book. They offered me a chance to buy the remaining stock (1300 of the original 5000) at an 80% discount. That would have been about $3600. Fortunately, I never got the letter. I admit that after the first year or so, I quit reading things Eerdmans sent to me. Not out of disrespect, but most of the time it was new catalogs and stuff that had nothing to do with me. I'm sure the letter came. I just never opened it. If I had, I would have tried to scrape together whatever money I could find to buy a few hundred copies.

Eerdmans took my lack of a response as a no and moved on to their next step. They offered the book to a series of closeout buyers at an EXTREMELY discounted price. A pennies-on-the-dollar kind of price.

There were no takers. None. I can imagine what the conversations were like.

"Real Live What? Preacher? Never heard of it or him or whatever. What's it about?"

"Eh, it's this guy in Texas. Allegedly an actual minister. Pretty good writer. Writes about tamales and stars and stuff you might find in your pockets. There's some religious stuff in there too. Kind of liberal. A lot of cussing. Sort of a weird mix. The editor who found him and brought him to our attention is no longer with the company. It does have a kind of interesting cover, though."

So after my book was refused by every closeout buyer who deals with Eerdmans, I got a last email from them. Since no one wanted it, they were just going to donate it to someone...anyone. Unless I wanted to buy the stock for $0.25 a copy. This was the first I heard of any of this. "Hell yes I want it!" I said. I did the math. It comes out to $325. The deal is done, and they are shipping me the the last 1300 copies of RealLivePreacher.com.

I'll tell you why this is so cool. First, I am now in complete control of this book. It's my book. All the rights to the essays have reverted back to me. The first thing I'm going to do is post the 8 or 9 essays from the book that have never been published online. Hey, it will give me some material to post here, and I can work harder on a little project I have in mind for our friend Foy Davis. (Don't ask. It's a secret)

Second, I don't have to give this book to anyone. I'm hoping Amazon.com will sell a copy and write me asking for one. I'm currently crafting my response to them. I want to find a really funny way to say, "Hell no, you incentive-crushing destroyer from the nether regions!"

Third, I get to have a lot of fun with this book. People still find this blog and want to buy the book sometimes. I'll have them all at my house. I might make a chair out of the cartons of books in my living room and watch Cowboys games from there. When someone buys one, it will be a big deal. I won't have pre-printed labels. Handwritten all the way. I'll have to find an envelope and dig though my wife's purse for stamps.

I'll probably write little notes on the inside cover to the people who buy them. Maybe like a little letter to them or something. Just to say hello and ask how they are doing. Maybe mention whatever's happening in my life at the time. I'll probably put a surprise between the pages. Maybe a pressed flower from my backyard or a ticket stub from a Spurs game.

Ooh, how cool would this be: Maybe there will be one copy that I give away for free, with the understanding that you have to mail it to the next person who writes me and asks for it. You sign it, date it, then mail it to the next person. They do the same. Maybe some day it would come back to me.

Who knows what I'll do? That's the point. I can do whatever I want. Do you get this? Do you get how fun this is? I can't wait for them to arrive.

My babies are coming home to me. I love every essay I wrote for that book. Each creation was like a birth. There was inspiration and pleasure then hard labor and delivery. This is where they should live anyway, don't you think? They belong with me. And if people want a copy of the book, I should be the one to hand it to them.

Doesn't that seem...absolutely right? The way it should be?

rlp

 

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