Big Fiction, Dan Sinykin
Big Fiction, Dan Sinykin
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Big Fiction
How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature

Author: Dan Sinykin

Narrator: Mike Lenz

Unabridged: 11 hr 43 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/25/2024


Synopsis

In the late 1950s, Random House editor Jason Epstein would talk jazz with Ralph Ellison or chat with Andy Warhol while pouring drinks in his office. By the 1970s, editors were poring over profit-and-loss statements. The electronics company RCA bought Random House in 1965, and then other large corporations purchased other formerly independent publishers. As multinational conglomerates consolidated the industry, the business of literature—and literature itself—transformed.

Dan Sinykin explores how changes in the publishing industry have affected fiction, literary form, and what it means to be an author. Giving an inside look at the industry's daily routines, personal dramas, and institutional crises, he reveals how conglomeration has shaped what kinds of books and writers are published. Sinykin examines four different sectors of the publishing industry: mass-market books by brand-name authors like Danielle Steel; trade publishers that encouraged genre elements in literary fiction; nonprofits such as Graywolf that aspired to protect literature from market pressures; and the distinctive niche of employee-owned W. W. Norton. He emphasizes how women and people of color navigated shifts in publishing, arguing that writers such as Toni Morrison allegorized their experiences in their fiction. This deeply original book recasts the past six decades of American fiction.

About Dan Sinykin

Dan Sinykin is an assistant professor of English at Emory University with a courtesy appointment in quantitative theory and methods. He is the author of American Literature and the Long Downturn: Neoliberal Apocalypse. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Review of Books, The Rumpus, Dissent, and other publications.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Chris on November 25, 2023

Just in terms of aggregating raw information, this is essential. For anyone who gazes at a bookshelf and thinks "why the fuck am I looking at _____?", which should be you if it isn't already. Because nothing comes to you without a story, and the fact that American fiction is both the most and least......more

Goodreads review by Bjørn on December 17, 2023

I am autistic with a side heap of ADHD. People like me develop special interests, and once we do, we want to know EVERYTHING. The publishing industry is one of my special interests. I baulked at a 186 quid PDF (the ePub version is now available on the Columbia University Press website for mere $29.9......more

Goodreads review by Leslie on March 04, 2024

Whatever else they are, books are products made to be sold. Books have always been commercial products, despite our desire to think of them as something quite different from shoes or cars or breakfast cereal, as ART and therefore not subject to the realities of the grubby capitalist marketplace. But......more

Goodreads review by Breann on June 23, 2024

Big Fiction provides a succinct and well-argued look at the publishing industry. That being said, in some ways, it's not for "beginners"-- I occasionally felt like an outsider looking in, not fully read into the insider knowledge that might have hit some of the points home for me. But on the whole,......more