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Philip K. Dick breaks records

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Philip K. Dick    Posted date:  June 5, 2008  |  No comment


GalleyCat reports that the Library of America’s collection of Philip K. Dick novels—Four Novels of the 1960s, which was published last year and contained The Man in the High Castle, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, and Ubik—was that project’s fastest-selling title ever.

pkdick-bestselling

The story even provided sales details, which I don’t often see revealed in stories like this:

Marketing manager Brian McCarthy was happy to oblige, informing me that the Library had shipped 23,750 copies of Four Novels of the 1960s—the better part of two complete print runs—and that returns were a “staggeringly low” 5 percent. By way of comparison, the Library’s last major foray into science fiction and fantasy, the H.P. Lovecraft Tales published in 2005, sold 11,860 copies (with a similar return rate) in its first year (with gross sales-to-date now standing at 26,000-plus).

I wasn’t one of those purchasers, as I’d already read all of Dick during my teen years, when I’d gorged on all of SF’s past masters. But I’m pleased to see that the interest is there.

I wish we could somehow determine how many people who bought the book were already SF readers and/or Philip K. Dick fans, and how many picked it up as just the latest installment in their education in the American literary canon. Impossible, of course, so there’s no way we’ll ever know.





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