Wellington publisher undaunted by industry challenges
Press Release, 2 November
2012
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
Wellington
publisher undaunted by industry challenges
With three new books being released on 15 November, Wellington’s Lawrence & Gibson thumb their noses at talks of the demise of the book.
With the rise of e-books, self-publishing and the Random House/Penguin merger, some have been suggesting the publishing industry is in for a rocky time.
Lawrence & Gibson, however, are thriving with a leash of new books for November and an optimism unseen since 2008.
William Dewey, author of the forthcoming The Homeland of Pure Joy is in a mood to match his book’s title.
“International publishing has become so
dire. Coming back into the fold with Lawrence & Gibson feels
like a homecoming. The mood is one of joyous optimism, and
it’s infectious.”
The collective of authors, editor,
and other ‘textual mercenaries’ put their success down
to the group’s community of authors who regularly met at
Saturday night/Sunday morning soirees at the now defunct Te
Aro-based bar/speakeasy Cool Town.
The collective’s most prolific member, Richard Meros, sees the industry as ten or even fifteen years behind what has happened to music. “For publishers the next step is creating our version of vinyl. That means high quality with a fetish element to the purchasing. Why do people want books as a physical product? So they can sit on their shelves, spines facing outwards, and look sexy.”
“Though the three new titles are all paperback, ultimately we’ll expect to be making hard-covers with jackets as dapper as anything Wilde could devise.”
Lawrence & Gibson’s trick is keeping overheads down and getting involved in the production of their books with local anarchist collective Rebel Press. This allows them to make books on demand and avoid the bane of any independent publisher: ten year warehousing cycles.
Low overheads allow them to spend money on the books themselves. They use exquisite New Zealand made, recycled papers where others opt for regular photocopy paper. With all their books retailing between $15 and $28, they are a bargain for locally produced content.
From 6pm on November 15 Lawrence & Gibson
release three new books at Unity Books Wellington. The new
books are The Homeland of Pure Joy by William Dewey, Haiku
News Anthology edited by Dick Whyte and Laurence Stacey and
Richard Meros’ Easy Whistle Solo.
See www.lawrenceandgibson.org for more
details on the three new
titles.