Tag Archives: Irish Books

News

O’Brien Press Acquires Brandon Books

The O’Brien Press has announced the acquisition of Dingle based Irish independent publisher Brandon Books. The move comes a year after Brandon’s founder, Steve MacDonogh, died suddenly, leaving the publisher leaderless.

The deal includes the purchase of the Brandon name and a significant number, thought to be around half the existing list, of the publisher’s key titles, contracts and book stock.

O’Brien Press will continue to publish titles under the Brandon imprint and Ivan O’Brien, Managing Director of The O’Brien Press, said ‘We will be focusing on fiction of literary quality and will actively seek out new original talent, bringing to our Brandon imprint the care, flair and fresh thinking that has helped O’Brien become Ireland’s leading independent publisher. Of course, we will continue to publish established authors like Alice Taylor, Gerry Adams and Sam Millar. Brandon authors will benefit from our worldwide literary agency network and from our in-house design, editorial and production management.’

The acquisition marks a significant departure for O’Brien which, while publishing considerable numbers of children’s and young adult fiction, has only a limited adult fiction list.

Speaking about the acquisition, publisher and founder of The O’Brien Press, Michael O’Brien said ‘Steve was a man of many talents. From a small base in beautiful Kerry, he created an international literary press. He was a lifelong friend and colleague.’

News

Eason 125 Celebration

Last week Easons celebrated it 125th Anniversary with a gala event. Here’s some pictures.

Irish Top Ten News

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 24/09/2011

It’s quite the week for Ross O’Carroll Kelly with a whopping 2,743 sales his book tops the charts nicely. It’s no bad week for his publisher either, as his stablemate, Simon Carswell’s Anglo Republic scored a remarkable 1,179.

Irish authors hold up well (aided by a book written by a quartet or Irish women).

Christmas is hinted at by the presence of the Guinness World Records but the strength of the week rests primarily on ROCK and the phenomenal selling power of One Day by David Nicholls.

1: Nama Mia!, Ross O’Carroll-Kelly, 2,743
2: One Day, David Nicholls, 1,963
3: Kill Alex Cross, James Patterson, 1,269
4: Anglo Republic:Inside the Bank That Broke Ireland, Simon Carswell, 1,179
5: The Burning Soul, John Connolly, 797
6: The Decision, Penny Vincenzi, 781
7: The Help, Kathryn Stockett, 826
8: Click Click, Joyce Kavanagh, June Kavanagh, Paula Kavanagh, Marian Quinn, 663
9: Guinness World Records 2012, 630
10: Ma, I’ve Got Meself Locked Up in the Madhouse, Martha Long, 621

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Top Ten Dynamics
IPN is running a top ten dynamics section looking at the top ten with some data drawn out. Nothing too dramatic, but useful nonetheless.

Volume: 11,472 Units
Average Units Per Title: 1,147
~~~~
Fiction: 6 titles, 8,379 units or 73%
Non-Fiction: 4 titles, 3,093 units or 27%
~~~~
Authors: 12 (plus one corporate authors)
Irish Authors: 8, 66%
<strong>Irish Published Books: 0
~~~~
Average RRP: £13.29

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 24th September 2011

News

Apple iBookstore LIVE in Ireland

Irish consumers can now purchase ebooks through Apple’s iBooks reading application.

Irish readers can purchase Maeve Binchy (one of three features Bestselling Irish Authors) ebooks for as little as €1.99.

Apple’s Irish customers can buy in Euro and directly through iBooks/iTunes Ireland rather than being forced to use the US store unlike the Amazon Kindle offering.

Until this launch visitors to the Irish iBookstore were offered only public domain books or books that Apple had chosen to make available for free.

As well as launching their iBookstore business in Ireland, the tech company yesterday brought 25 other countries around Europe into the program including Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Replublic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portgal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.

Top Story

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 23/07/2011

Boy, that was a blow out week last week for A Dance With Dragons. Oddly enough, it hasn’t held on for a second week instead coming in at number twelve with only 696 sales. On the other hand, the first book in the series, A Game Of Thrones, is still selling solidly driven by the HBO tv series and the relentless hype no doubt. George R.R. Martin can rest easy then, if only half of the purchasers of his first book continue to his fifth book he’ll still be doing okay.

The upcoming movie for One Day by David Nicholls boosts that title into the number one slot but in truth the book has been bubbling along very nicely for some time. It has rarely been far from the top of the charts over the last nine or ten months and actually seems to be genuinely popular among readers and reinforced by positive word of mouth.

Overall it’s been a terrible fall off for the top ten after the smashing figures last week. The drop is also exactly the same as the sales for A Dance With Dragons last week strangely.

1: One Day, David Nicholls, 1,208
2: The Leopard, Jo Nesbo, 1,077
3: All for You, Sheila O’Flanagan, 1,066
4: Minding Frankie, Maeve Binchy, 890
5: Something from Tiffany’s, Melissa Hill, 782
6: Fallen, Karin Slaughter, 772
7: The Midwife’s Confession,  Diane Chamberlain, 771
8: A Game Of Thrones Bk One Of A Song Of Ice & Fire , George R. R. Martin,  767
9: The Reversal, Michael Connelly, 716
10: Belle, Lesley Pearse, 703

buy the book from The Book Depository, free delivery

Top Ten Dynamics

IPN is running a top ten dynamics section looking at the top ten with some data drawn out. Nothing too dramatic, but useful nonetheless.

Volume: 8,752 Units
Decrease since last week: 2,300 units
% Decrease since last week: -20.81%
Average Units Per Title: 875

~~
Fiction: 10 titles, 8,752 units or 100%, RRP £9.69
Non-Fiction: 0 titles, 0 units or 0%, RRP £0

~~
Authors: 10
Irish Authors: 3, 30%
Irish Published Books: 0, 0%

~~
Average RRP: £9.69
Decrease in RRP since last week: £1.70
% Decrease in RRP since last week: -14.93%*
*It is important to note that RRP does not reflect actually selling price.

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 23rd July 2011
Image Credit

AttributionNo Derivative WorksSome rights reserved by Mike Willis

Comment & Features

Friday Comment: Irish Booksellers Are Missing Out On Digital Sales

Last week a new science-fiction and fantasy title, A Dance With Dragons, sold 2,200 copies in hardback in Ireland. What’s more, it did so at over €20 per copy. An impressive result and a great boost for the booksellers who sold it.

In countries like the US and the UK though the same book sold huge numbers of hardback copies AND huge numbers of ebook editions, 170,000 print copies and 110,000 e-book copies1 on its first day of sales alone in the US according to its US Publisher, Random House. In the UK, the Bookseller reports that, ‘HarperCollins sold more than 10,000 e-books’ and ‘ 28,840 copies last week in bookshops.’2

You would imagine that with a perfect opportunity to increase the visibility of ebooks in Ireland and with a clear market for the ebook version, Irish booksellers would have been keen to exploit the interest. You’d be wrong. No Irish bookseller sold a single copy of the book in digital form.

In percentage terms those UK & US number are very impressive too, 28.9% for the US and 25.6% for the UK. If those figures were translated into Ireland you might imagine ebooks accounting for some 440 units3.

In percentage terms those UK & US number are very impressive too, 28.9% for the US and 25.6% for the UK. If those figures were translated into Ireland you might imagine ebooks accounting for some 440 units3.

The truth is that Irish ebook sales are nowhere near that level, we’d be lucky if they were 5%. That’s less than 100 units sold in digital format. The point is that for a title where ebooks are a clearly important part of the sales mix, Irish readers, if they want to buy an ebook version, MUST purchase that ebook from a foreign retailer. Not one Irish bookseller was selling the ebook edition as of this morning.

Even allowing for a lower ebook price point (around €12-€15 for A Dance With Dragons) and even allowing for the much lower ebook market share in Ireland, Irish booksellers are allowing foreign retailers to suck up their market and potentially capture their ebook sales in the future too. Imagine if just one retailer HAD sold the ebook to Irish readers and promoted it to Irish digital readers. Even if it had only been 50 sales they could have increased their revenue by €500 or €600. Who, in this day and age, can sniff at that?

Easons, to its credit, has at least made an effort with ebooks. Its store offers 60% of the titles in the top ten last week, but not the bestseller.

Easons, to its credit, has at least made an effort with ebooks. Its store offers 60% of the titles in the top ten last week, but not the bestseller. The ebook listings pages on the site are attractive and the prices not outrageous. However the company does not seem to be pushing ebooks with any degree of enthusiasm.

As for the independents, ebooks seem to not exist for them. Of course they might reply what CAN we do? You might start by looking at what Readings, a small independent chain in Australia, is doing on the book.ish platform.

As for the independents, ebooks seem to not exist for them. Of course they might reply what CAN we do? You might start by looking at whatReadings, a small independent chain in Australia, is doing on the booki.sh platform.

Options do exist. Kobo Books has already called for partners to help it expand internationally. Barnes & Noble, although they have not spoken publicly about their desire to expand the Nook’s reach, must be thinking about how to reach foreign markets. Even Google offers a potential partnership with its ebook service (which was just revealed as the partner for JK Rowling’s Pottermore site).

It seems to me that the key is combining content, a reasonably priced device and a real commitment to digital publishing rather than just lip-service. That strategy has worked for Barnes & Noble when they realized the future was digital and it previously worked for Amazon.

As ebooks grow in Ireland, as they surely will, booksellers failure to embrace ebooks actively will result in more and more digital sales leaking from the Irish market towards UK and US retailers who actually do sell the ebooks people want. Once they start buying ebooks from foreign stores they are unlikely return to Irish retailers for them. If Irish booksellers don’t look for a way to get involved in ebook sales and quickly, they will lose physical sales and not even have a hope of replacing them. That would be bad for them, bad for readers who value Irish bookstores and bad for literary culture in Ireland.

~~~~
Notes
1 | http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/14/books/george-r-r-martins-dance-with-dragons-sells-well.html
2 | http://www.thebookseller.com/news/hc-hits-digital-martin-milestone.html
3 | Based on a 25% market share of 2200.

News

Dubray Opens New Bookshop

Dubray books has opened a second bookshop in Dun Laoghaire.

The store is in the former Swalk Card and Gift shop with entrances on George’s Street and into Dun Laoghaire shopping centre.

The company owns the Swalk operation and the existing and considerably larger Dubray store on the third floor of Dun Laoghaire Shopping centre has been reorganized to cater for a large Swalk concession.

Adrian White from Dubrary said by email, ‘The advantage of having a bookshop on the main street is obvious and, in a way, it’s the perfect companion to what has always been a very large stock-holding shop upstairs.’

He also said that the company hopes to, ‘make our new shop both small and beautiful.’

With the closure of Easons George’s street store Dubray is now the only bookseller of new books with a George’s street frontage. Eason’s Marine Road store is in the former Hughes & Hughes branch closed following that company’s collapse in 2010.

Irish Top Ten News

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 25/06/2011

After a few weeks where sales seemed to be recovering for the top ten, this week dealt a huge blow with an over 15% drop in sales by volume. That nonetheless offered some bright points as Irish authors still held 4 of the top ten spots in the chart but the trend is disappointing.

The array of fiction is again broad, everything from commercial women’s fiction to children’s fiction with crime, literary and fantasy thrown into the mix. The strength of fiction might be more easily understood as the weakness of non-fiction in the first half of 2011 however, especially when the sales figures are so anemic.

All the same it is nice to see Maeve Binchy (why not listen to her talk about Minding Frankie here) in the number one spot.

1: Minding Frankie, Maeve Binchy, 1,573
2: Something from Tiffany’s, Melissa Hill, 1,475
3: A Game of Thrones Book 1 of a Song of Ice and Fire, George R.R. Martin, 1,109
4: Madeleine: Our Daughter’s Disappearance and the Continuing Search for Her, Kate McCann, 1,059
5: Let the Great World Spin, Colum McCann, 996
6: The Confession, John Grisham, 882
7: Miracle Cure, Harlan Coben, 818
8: Stand by Me, Sheila O’Flanagan, 790
9: Water For Elephants, Sarah Gruen, 780
10: Rodrick Rules:Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Jeff Kinney, 683

Top Ten Dynamics
IPN is running a top ten dynamics section looking at the top ten with some data drawn out. Nothing too dramatic, but useful nonetheless.

Volume: 10165 Units
Decrease since last week: 1,873 units
% Decrease since last week: 15.56%
Average Units Per Title: 1017

~~
Fiction: 9 titles, 9,106 units or 89.58%, RRP £8.55
Non-Fiction: 1 titles, 1,059 units or 10.42%, RRP £14.99

~~
Authors: 10
Irish Authors: 4, 40%
Irish Published Books: 0, 0%

~~
Average RRP: £9.19
Decrease in RRP since last week: £0.60
% Decrease in RRP since last week: 6.13%*
*It is important to note that RRP does not reflect actually selling price.

Image Credit:

Colum McCann. European Graduate School, www.egs.edu/, Photograph by Hendrik Speck, www.hendrikspeck.com/, Source: www.flickr.com/photos/hendrikspeck/

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 25th June 2011

Irish Top Ten

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 11/06/2011

As previously noted, IPN is running a little behind on its Top Ten analysis. This post and a further one later today will bring the site up to date.

On a personal note it’s great to see Jeffery Archer in a bestseller list. His books were a mainstay of my younger reading life and anyone who looks down their nose at his work doesn’t understand the compelling nature of his writing or the power of a pacy thriller.

Aside from that the week, while not incredible, marks a slightly bright note in book sales. For one thing more than one non-fiction titles made the top ten, the first Kate McCann’s book which is still selling well, the second a somewhat surprising arrival, is Edmund De Waal’s The Hare With Amber Eyes. While it is a winner of the Costa Biography award, it still seems a little strange that it has worked in Ireland.

Of course, fiction still dominates and in a board sweep includes commercial women’s fiction, fantasy, children’s, crime and literary fiction. The average sales per title in the top ten also crept up and with Hill and McCann’s total’s dropping a little,  other titles did a little better.

If this kind of week were to be the base for an improvement, then most booksellers and publishers would be happy.
1: Something from Tiffany’s, Melissa Hill, 2,162
2: Madeleine: Our Daughter’s Disappearance and the Continuing Search for Her, Kate McCann, 1,586
3: The Confession, John Grisham, 1,495
4: Stand by Me, Sheila O’Flanagan, 1,001
5: Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen, 925
6: The Hare with Amber Eyes:A Hidden Inheritance, Edmund De Waal, 914
7: A Game of Thrones Book 1 of a Song of Ice and Fire, George R.R. Martin, 805
8: Rodrick Rules: Diary of a Wimpy Kid:Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Jeff Kinney, 772
9: The Moment, Douglas Kennedy, 665
10: Only Time Will Tell, Jeffery Archer, 623

Top Ten Dynamics
IPN is running a top ten dynamics section looking at the top ten with some data drawn out. Nothing too dramatic, but useful nonetheless.

Volume: 10,948 Units
Increase since last week: 432 units
% Increase since last week: 4.11%
Average Units Per Title: 1095

~~
Fiction: 8 titles, 8,448 units or 77.16%, RRP £9.62
Non-Fiction: 2 titles, 2,500 units or 22.84%, RRP £11.99

~~
Authors: 10
Irish Authors: 2, 20%
Irish Published Books: 0, 0%

~~
Average RRP: £10.09
Increase in RRP since last week: £0.30
% Increase in RRP since last week: 3.06%*
*It is important to note that RRP does not reflect actually selling price.

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 11th June 2011
Image Credit
AttributionNoncommercialSome rights reserved by icantcu

Irish Top Ten

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 4/06/2011

Our top ten listing is running a little behind so over the next few days we’ll be rolling out about four of them. Enjoy.

While Melissa Hill has stormed the charts this week and passed by Kate McCann’s book, the overall sales for the top ten have only budged slightly and the dynamics make that clear. All the same, the reduction in McCann’s share of sales is showing the continued strength of fiction at the moment.

1: Something from Tiffany’s, Melissa Hill, 2,299
2: Madeleine: Our Daughter’s Disappearance and the Continuing Search for Her, Kate McCann, 1,920
3: The Confession, John Grisham, 1,063
4: Stand by Me, Sheila O’Flanagan, 962
5: Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen, 867
6: The Search, Nora Roberts, 765
7: A Game of Thrones Book 1 of a Song of Ice and Fire, George R.R. Martin, 718
8: Taken, Niamh O’Conor, 659
9: The Moment, Douglas Kennedy, 639
10: Rodrick Rules: Diary of a Wimpy Kid:Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Jeff Kinney, 624

Top Ten Dynamics
IPN is running a top ten dynamics section looking at the top ten with some data drawn out. Nothing too dramatic, but useful nonetheless.

Volume: 10,516 Units
Increase since last week: 389 units
% Increase since last week: 3.84%
Average Units Per Title: 1013

~~
Fiction: 9 titles, 7,596 units or 81.74%, RRP £9.21
Non-Fiction: 1 titles, 1,920 units or 18.26%, RRP £14.99

~~
Authors: 10
Irish Authors: 3, 30%
Irish Published Books: 0, 0%

~~
Average RRP: £9.79
Increase in RRP since last week: £0.30
% Increase in RRP since last week: 3.16%*
*It is important to note that RRP does not reflect actually selling price.

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 4th June 2011

Images Credits:
AttributionNoncommercialShare AlikeSome rights reserved by ALA – The American Library Association