Book of the Month Club

The Book of the Month Club (founded 1926[1]) is a United States subscription-based e-commerce book club that offers a limited number of new books each month to members. Books are selected and endorsed by a panel of judges, similar to how the club originally operated when it began in 1926, and members can also discuss the books with fellow members in an online forum.[2]

The Book of the Month Club is part of a larger company called Bookspan that runs book clubs in the United States and Canada. It was formerly the flagship club of Book-of-the-Month Club, Inc. In 2000, that company merged with Doubleday Direct, Inc. The resulting company, Bookspan, was a joint venture between Time Warner and Bertelsmann until 2007 when Bertelsmann took over complete ownership. Approximately six weeks after it acquired complete ownership of Bookspan, Bertelsmann initiated a major overhaul of the book club business, a process that eliminated 280 positions, or about 15 percent of its workforce of 1,900. Many of the specialty book clubs, such as the conservative book club, American Compass, were eliminated.

In 2008, Bookspan (along with DVD club Columbia House) was sold to the private equity firm Najafi Companies.[3] In December 2012, Bookspan was sold to Pride Tree Holdings, Inc.

Membership terms

The club operates a subscription program, similar to other box subscription services, where customers select a membership plan for a set period of time (one month, three months or 12 months) and receive at least one book in the mail each month. Books are shipped to all members on the same day.[4]

Historically, when the club operated through mail-order catalogs, membership involved a "negative response" system whereby a member was shipped the monthly selection on a particular date if the selection was not declined before that date. Members had the option to respond by declining the selection or opting to order another book or merchandise instead. No response was deemed acceptance of the selection.

History

Harry Scherman was a copywriter for the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency in 1916 when he set out to create the "Little Leather Library". With his partners Max Sackheim, and Charles and Albert Boni, Scherman began a mail order service that offered "30 Great Books For $2.98" (miniature reprints "bound in limp Redcroft") and sold 40,000,000 copies in its first five years.[5] Sackheim and Scherman then founded their own ad agency devoted entirely to marketing books.

The problems of building interest in a new book led Scherman to create, along with Sackheim and Robert Haas, the Book-of-the-Month Club in 1926. As Scherman explained it, the club itself would be a "standard brand". "It establishes itself as a sound selector of good books and sells by means of its own prestige. Thus, the prestige of each new title need not be built up before becoming acceptable," he explained later.[6] After starting with 4,000 subscribers, the club had more than 550,000 within twenty years. The size of the club did, in fact, create the Book of the Month Club as a brand. Being a "Book of the Month Club" selection was used to promote books to the general public.

Canada

On December 9, 2010, Canadian operations of DB Media, parent company of Doubleday Book Clubs in Canada (and Columbia House in Canada) were suspended as the company entered receivership.[7]

Clubs operated by Bookspan and affiliates

  • Black Expressions
  • BOMC2 (BOMC2.com)
  • Children's Book-of-the-Month Club
  • Crafter's Choice
  • Crossings
  • Doubleday Book Club
  • Doubleday Large Print
  • The Good Cook
  • History Book Club
  • Literary Guild
  • The Military Book Club
  • Mystery Guild
  • Quality Paperback Book Club (closed in August 2015)
  • Rhapsody Book Club
  • Science Fiction Book Club[8]
  • Scientific American Book Club
  • Stephen King Library

References

  1. Radway, Janice A. A Feeling for Books The Book-of-the-Month Club, Literary Taste, and Middle-Class Desire. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1997.
  2. "Discussion". Book of the Month. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  3. "German media giant Bertelsmann sells US book clubs". Retrieved 2015-01-05.
  4. "How It Works". Retrieved 2015-06-22.
  5. "Harry Scherman," Current Biography 1943, pp 669-671
  6. Id. at 669
  7. "DVD distributor closes its doors". Toronto Star. 2010-12-09. Retrieved 2011-10-03.
  8. http://www.isfdb.org/wiki/index.php/Publisher:Science_Fiction_Book_Club

Further reading

External links

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