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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: lightning source, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Plague, Pestilence, and POD

When you look at the title of this article you probably wonder what these three things have in common. Not much in reality. Okay, the plague and the pestilence are pretty nasty, but what about POD? For some reason, a large portion of the book industry considers the latter to be as bad as the two former. What does POD stand for? Let’s be clear on this.

POD = PRINT ON DEMAND

This is a form of printing where a specific company utilizes digital printing machinery to actually print books one at a time, when the demand necessitates action. Will it give you a rash? Will it kill you? Will it even hurt you? No to all of those questions.

PRINT ON DEMAND is simply a term used for a type of printing and not a type of publishing. There are many extremely reputable publishing houses that utilize PRINT ON DEMAND printing for a number of reasons.

POD technology allows publishers who prefer to put there $$ into marketing as opposed to printing books that may or may not sell. It allows printers to save money on purchasing materials that might ultimately be wasted when a print run doesn’t sell as well as a publisher hopes. It allows the paper producers to destroy fewer trees to produce materials that are again wasted.

There seems to be some misunderstanding in the book industry that POD books are substandard. Booksellers and librarians have been mislead to believe that books printed one at a time are not as good as “real books.” Okay, here is a news flash; some books that are printed on demand are actually better quality than books printed by offset printing companies.

Let’s consider why I say that. Say you are a bookseller and you order one book from Publisher A who uses print on demand technology. You can be assured that the POD book you will receive will have been thoroughly reviewed by the quality control staff member and is of the highest possible quality.

Now, say you buy one books from Publisher B who uses an offset printer (or as some in the industry insist on calling them, a traditional printer.) These books were printed in a set of, say, 25,000. How many of those books do you think were specifically checked for quality control? Probably 10%. You increase your chances considerably of getting a book that might not be properly bound or glued, or perhaps a section of the book got crimped in the binding process. That is a book you cannot sell and must go through the hassle of returning for credit. What a pain.

I hope that this brief explanation will make you stop and think about the options available to you as a bookseller or librarian next time an author or publisher comes to you.

As readers, I hope you will ignore all the hoopla about POD books and allow yourself the pleasure of reading an author who just might become a favorite author. It truly is of no concern to you as a reader how the book is printed, as long as the author has written an incredibly entertaining book.

Are you looking for a new favorite author? I would highly recommend you give Echelon Press authors a try. I am not at all embarrassed to say that Echelon has published some of the best writers currently available in the market. You can get more information on our authors by visiting www.echelonpress.com/directory.htm

Print on Demand companies
Lightning Source (owned by Ingram Book Company-largest Book distributor in US)
BookSurge (Owned by Amazon.com-need I say more?)
Lulu


Happy Reading!
©Karen L. Syed

4 Comments on Plague, Pestilence, and POD, last added: 12/22/2008
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2. Favorites: Part Ten Dylan Moulton

To celebrate the holidays we asked some of our favorite people in publishing what their favorite book was. Let us know in the comments what your favorite book is and be sure to check back throughout the week for more “favorites”.

Dylan Moulton is an Associate Marketing Manager at Palgrave Macmillan.

The book that stuck with me this year was Alan Weisman’s The World Without Us. With so much attention directed to the environment lately, it’s a thought experiment with teeth. The imagery of a human impact on the earth – that millions of years from now Manhattan could be a lush forest while the only evidence of human beings may lie in degraded plastics – not only lingered but sparked conversation.

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3. Pentecost Island, Vanuatu

bens-place.jpg
Pentecost Island, Vanuatu

Coordinates: 15 42 S 168 10 E

Area: 190 square miles (492 sq. km)

Whether or not they should be classified as wholly fascinating or purely frightening, you’ve likely heard of skydiving, bridge jumping, and cliff diving. Less familiar may be the practice of land diving, a ritual performed by the men of Pentecost, one of a chain of about 80 volcanic islands that compose the Republic of Vanuatu. (more…)

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