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Fifty Shades boosts UK book sales | Fifty Shades boosts UK book sales |
(about 2 hours later) | |
British publishers have reported record sales for 2012, despite the recession and the rise of e-readers. | British publishers have reported record sales for 2012, despite the recession and the rise of e-readers. |
Total spending on printed and digital books rose 4% to £3.3bn last year, the Publishers Association said. | Total spending on printed and digital books rose 4% to £3.3bn last year, the Publishers Association said. |
Digital spending rose by 66% to £411m. But it does not appear to have led to a marked decline for print, with physical book sales down by just 1% at £2.9bn. | Digital spending rose by 66% to £411m. But it does not appear to have led to a marked decline for print, with physical book sales down by just 1% at £2.9bn. |
EL James's Fifty Shades trilogy were the best-selling titles in 2012, with combined sales of 10.5 million. | EL James's Fifty Shades trilogy were the best-selling titles in 2012, with combined sales of 10.5 million. |
The series took the top three spots in the 2012 best-sellers chart, according to figures released by sales tracker Nielsen at the end of the year. | The series took the top three spots in the 2012 best-sellers chart, according to figures released by sales tracker Nielsen at the end of the year. |
The rise of such e-readers as Amazon's Kindle has sparked a surge in digital sales in recent years. But fears they would kill off physical books have so far proved exaggerated. | The rise of such e-readers as Amazon's Kindle has sparked a surge in digital sales in recent years. But fears they would kill off physical books have so far proved exaggerated. |
Publishers Association chief executive Richard Mollet said the figures proved that publishers had reacted quickly to the changes in the industry and the move towards e-readers. | |
He said British publishing was "a healthy industry which continues to grow". | |
Premium books | |
"What publishers were very quick to do [was] to make works available," he told the BBC. | |
"That's the key to succeeding in the digital world - having them capable of being read on any device on any platform. | |
"That's what readers said they wanted and that's what publishers have been able to provide. It's now the case that a quarter of all fiction is read on e-readers." | |
Mollet said the Publishers Association was working closely with high street booksellers and would soon launch a scheme to help them overcome challenges in the physical books market. | |
"At the moment we are concerned that independent book shops are finding it tough. Everybody wants there to be a range of ways of getting books, online and on the high street." | |
Philip Jones, editor of industry magazine The Bookseller, said shops such as Waterstones were seeing a "rebound" in sales of physical books, thanks to children's and non-fiction areas and the "growing" market of books such as Fifty Shades of Grey. | |
The 'death' of the physical book was a long way off, he continued, pointing out that physical book sales still made up around 80% of the overall market. | |
"Digital is overtaking it in some areas but not all areas, so I think the physical book is going to be with us for a long time," he told the BBC. | |
"The premium physical book, the £20 hardback... attracts a certain type of person who wants to keep that book on their shelves." |
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