At the heart of the book trade since 1858
Issue 6013
Editor's Letter Social climbers L
ast week the Times columnist James Marriot told us that TikTok was a threat to our “intellectual health”, arguing that it was undermining reading and liberal
TikTok is revitalising reading for a generation, as YouTube did before it, or as television and cinema have also done
societ. This argument might surprise those booksellers, publishers and authors who have benefited hugely from the reading culture that has developed on the social network, and who might think this to be a good thing. But Marriot takes a different view. “We are increasingly reluctant to engage with complex texts,” argues Marriot, citing as evidence one unnamed universit lecturer who “can” no longer teach George Eliot’s novel Middlemarch and another academic who reputedly “approaches classic texts through their TV adaptations”. Further—for we are not done yet—the fact that TikTok and Instagram are visual media imperils not just our brains, but also democracy, itself. “We do not yet know how easy it is to run one [a democracy] in a culture that prizes the viral video over the book”. Factually, the premise of the piece is problematic. Marriot tells his readers that “sales of fiction are in long- term decline”, which is not true. Last year, according to Nielsen data, fiction returned its biggest ever haul (since records began), and its largest ever slice of the market (26.6%), up 11.4% on 2021’s comparable data. According to Publishers Association statistics (which include some digital sales, but importantly not Amazon’s) since 2016 sales of fiction books have risen by more than 20%. To be fair to Marriot, on Twiter (where he continued to argue his points), he cited an Atlantic article based on a study charting the
decline in reading for pleasure among nine to 13-year-olds in the US. If that’s the case though, he might want to celebrate BookTok since 90 million books were bought by people who used the platform in 2022 in the UK alone, with the heaviest users 13 to 34-year-olds. Rather than undermining anything, TikTok is revitalising reading for a generation that otherwise might be lost, as YouTube did before it, or as television and cinema have also done. I worry though that for Marriott this doesn’t really
matter because they are reading the “wrong” books anyway, i.e. it is the canon that binds society together. In that case, Marriott could do worse than widen his own reading. He might, for example, pick up Babel, a multi-layered fantasy about the power of language from the growing dark academia genre written by R F Kuang, an author described in the Times as a “scholar first, novelist second”, or her follow-up Yellowface, a modern satire about publishing that comes straight from a classic tradition. Or Adam Silvera’s They Both Die at the End, a modern treatise on love and death. Marriot may well be right to worry how social media changes our ways of thinking, but as far as books are concerned the kids are all right. More people are reading today and more widely thanks to social media, and the impact of this on publishing and therefore on wider societ is likely to be profound. It is not just videos that go viral but also the books they amplify. In short, this does not end with us.
The next issue of The Bookseller will be published on 14th April
Philip Jones @philipdsjones Contents 31st March 2023 06 Lead story
LGBTQ+ voices at the London Book Fair 2023
TheBookseller.com
I think where I am now my scope is slightly wider and I’m thinking less in terms of a generation and more in terms of society
Books Author Profile 16
Gráinne Clear: one of the Rising Stars of the book trade
This Week
The Lead Story ................. 06 News Review .................. 08 Books
Author Profile: Mike Gayle ........ 16 Author Profile: Nazneen Ahmed Pathak ......... 18
Jobs in Books
Recruitment ................... 20 Special
London Book Fair Preview Data The bestseller charts 10 05
week’s number one
This
31.03.23 At the heart of the book trade since 1858. £5.95
Bookseller 50th_Front
cover.indd 1
23/03/2023 11:44
Advertising Cover Week
13.indd 1
28/03/2023 09:30
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40 |
Page 41 |
Page 42 |
Page 43 |
Page 44 |
Page 45 |
Page 46 |
Page 47 |
Page 48 |
Page 49 |
Page 50 |
Page 51 |
Page 52