Sunday, August 17, 2008

L.A. Times columnist vs. Corsi

Tim Rutten:
"The Obama Nation" was written and printed because major American publishing houses have decided that there's money to be made in funding right-wing boutique imprints modeled after the Washington-based Regnery, which has made a small fortune stoking the hard-right furnace with combustible prose. Corsi's book is published by Threshold Editions, a division of Simon & Schuster, which hired right-wing political operative Mary Matalin to edit the imprint. Random House has a similar imprint in Crown Forum, and Penguin Group USA has Sentinel. Their business model -- and this is all about business -- is predicated on the existence of an echo chamber of right-wing radio and television shows willing to promote these publishers' products -- however noxious. Beyond that is a network of conservative book clubs and organizations willing to place the sort of advance bulk orders for controversial books that will guarantee them a place on the bestseller lists.
So, basically, Rutten is saying that making money -- profit -- is an unacceptable motive in the publishing industry. If folks at the L.A. Times wonder why they are "struggling with declining revenue," allow me to suggest that having editors who are anti-profit might have something to do with it.

Note also that "right-wing" = "noxious" in Tim Rutten's universe. Is there any left-wing book that Rutten would deem "noxious"?

(Cross-posted at AmSpecBlog.)

1 comment:

  1. >Is there any left-wing book that Rutten would deem "noxious"?

    Perhaps Rutten could put the Obama book in the basement with Pelosi's recent cellar seller, and let the two tomes fight it out.

    ReplyDelete