Sentences with phrase «adult hardcover sales»

According to the March Association of American Publishers (AAP) net sales revenue report (collecting data from 1,189 publishers), adult eBook sales were $ 282.3 million while adult hardcover sales counted $ 229.6 million during the first quarter of 2012.
E-books, which have roughly doubled or tripled in sales each of the past several years, not only blew past mass - market paperback sales, not only passed adult hardcover sales, but have now overtaken adult trade paperback sales to become the largest single category of book sales in February.
Adult hardcover sales were down 6.5 % to $ 242.9 M (down 7.7 % year - to - date), adult paperback sales were down 11.8 % to $ 115 M (no change year - to - date), and adult mass market paperback sales were down 1.1 % to $ 60.2 M (down 14.3 % year - to - date).
Despite the strong July performance, adult hardcover sales were down 17.8 % for the seven month period, while e-book sales were up 152.8 %, to $ 560.5 million.
February figures showed steeper declines in some print categories, with adult hardcover sales falling 43 per cent to $ 46.2 m and mass - market paperbacks down 41.5 per cent at $ 29.3 m.
And any readers who don't buy the YA trend can't argue with these numbers: In the first half of 2009, adult hardcover sales were down 17.8 %; children's / young adult hardcovers were up 30.7 %.

Not exact matches

This is significant news, if not the «tipping point» that Amazon claims (as of May, according to the AAP, ebook sales are 8.48 % of trade sales; adult hardcovers are 43.2 %).
Early in the week we heard the Borders chain has finally shuffled off its mortal coil, and on Thursday, Publishers Lunch reported book sales suffered another huge monthly drop — especially for adult hardcover and mass market paperbacks.
Hardcover sales in adult trade fiction and non-fiction combined increased to a total of $ 1.5 billion in 2013; ebooks in fiction - only sold almost as much as hardcover for both fiction and non-fiction for adults — despite the typically lower price point of ebooks compared to hardcover and paperback — a fact that speaks to the need to revamp the strategy by which publishers perceive digital - first and ebooHardcover sales in adult trade fiction and non-fiction combined increased to a total of $ 1.5 billion in 2013; ebooks in fiction - only sold almost as much as hardcover for both fiction and non-fiction for adults — despite the typically lower price point of ebooks compared to hardcover and paperback — a fact that speaks to the need to revamp the strategy by which publishers perceive digital - first and eboohardcover for both fiction and non-fiction for adults — despite the typically lower price point of ebooks compared to hardcover and paperback — a fact that speaks to the need to revamp the strategy by which publishers perceive digital - first and eboohardcover and paperback — a fact that speaks to the need to revamp the strategy by which publishers perceive digital - first and ebook - only.
Tellingly, ebooks for young adults and children shot up 233 percent, and this shouldn't surprise anybody (by comparison, adult hardcover book sales were up, slightly, 2.7 percent).
Jason Boog at GalleyCat writes that the sales report from the March Association of American Publishers indicates that net sales revenue from adult eBooks were $ 282.3 million; hardcover sales, $ 229.6 million.
The AAP is beefing up its monthly reports with data from many more publishers — 1,149 for January 2012 compared to under 100 in past months — and more detailed reporting on specific genres: Children's / young adult e-book sales are now broken out and religious book sales are divided by hardcover, paperback and e-books.
Ebooks are now THE dominant sales format for adult fiction; bigger than hardcover, bigger than paperback.
Sadly, PW also seems to have stopped providing as much detail on breaking down print book sales (hardcovers, trade paperbacks, etc.), although they did reveal that print book sales «plunged» in June, with trade paperback sales down a whopping 64 %, adult hardcovers down 25 %, and mass - market paperbacks down 22 %.
Fairly brutal numbers across the board, with only a slight (2.1 %) increase in young adult hardcover, flat adult trade paper sales, and decreases in the other categories, including a dramatic 54.3 % decrease in mass - market paperback sales.
Even more impressive, e-book sales not only surpassed, but thoroughly trounced both adult mass - market paperback sales ($ 39.0 M) and hardcover sales ($ 49.1 M) for the first time ever.
April sales in the children's / young adult category fell 12.6 % with ebook sales plunging 51.6 % in the month and hardcover sales off 12.1 %.
Print books made a comeback, totaling $ 96.6 M for adult trade hardcover sales, $ 115.9 M for trade paperbacks, and $ 55.2 M for mass - market paperbacks.
So it's clear that e-books are a fast growing market, but adult hardcover books were also on the rise in May and grew by 43.2 percent for a total of $ 138.5 million in sales.
E-book sales are up 160.1 % since last year, while adult trade paperbacks -LRB--17.9 %), adult hardcovers -LRB--23.4 %), and adult mass market paperbacks -LRB--30.1 %) all suffered double - digit declines from 2010.
The May 2011 e-book sales stats bring with them the announcement that, so far in 2011, e-books are the # 2 format, behind only adult trade paperbacks, and ahead of both adult hardcovers and adult mass - market paperbacks.
Adult trade paperbacks were $ 96.5 M, adult hardcover $ 82.9 M, and adult mass - market $ 33.1 M. (Note that their YTD totals and prior months» sales don't usually add up exactly; I assume they update and adjust prior month totals without tellinAdult trade paperbacks were $ 96.5 M, adult hardcover $ 82.9 M, and adult mass - market $ 33.1 M. (Note that their YTD totals and prior months» sales don't usually add up exactly; I assume they update and adjust prior month totals without tellinadult hardcover $ 82.9 M, and adult mass - market $ 33.1 M. (Note that their YTD totals and prior months» sales don't usually add up exactly; I assume they update and adjust prior month totals without tellinadult mass - market $ 33.1 M. (Note that their YTD totals and prior months» sales don't usually add up exactly; I assume they update and adjust prior month totals without telling us.
On the other side of the coin, sales of paperback books were down 30 % year - over-year, and sales of adult hardcover books dropped to $ 49.1 million in January 2011 from $ 55.4 million during January 2010.
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