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The nine-day fair, which comes to a close on Sunday, brought a happy start to 2020 for the publishing industry with biggies in the trade – like Penguin, Hachette and Pan Macmillan – making a killing in their business, thanks to loyal bibliophiles who came in droves.
“We are happy to start 2020 with a successful performance at the World Book Fair. Many school teachers and librarians have bought books for their institutions, thousands of school children visited our stall in the last two-three days,” said Sameer Mahale, General Manager (Sales) at the Penguin Random House India.
Books on Gandhi got the cash register ringing, be it at the stall of the National Book Trust, the organiser of the fair, or other publishing houses with books like “The Oxford India Gandhi” by Gopalkrishna Gandhi, “The Diary of Manu Gandhi” by Tridip Suhrud, “Gandhi After 9/11” by Douglas Allen or Ramachandra Guha’s bestseller “India After Gandhi”.
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The Hachette too expected about “8-12 per cent” growth in sales than last year.
Their top-sellers, a mix-bag, included the recently out “Mind Master” by chess wizard Vishwanathan Anand and “Young Pandavas” by Anupam Arunachalam – a children’s book yet to be out in the market – and famous children’s titles from Enid Blyton and the much famed “Harry Potter” series by JK Rowling.
“It’s better so far than last year… if the trend continues this way, we expect to close about 8-12 per cent higher than last year,” Thomas Abraham, MD – Hachette, said a few days into the festival.
Other top-sellers in the fair were: “Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty by 2019” by Nobel Prize-winning authors and economists Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, “The Palace of Illusion” by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, “Kaizen – The Japanese Method for transforming habits” by Sarah Harvey and 1970s cult modern-day classic “Love Story” by Erich Sehgal, among others.
“I am not a regular at book fairs. But it was both, fun and educative to attend this one. I got discounts on the majority of the books that I bought. And some that I bought were an absolute steal, take for example the old edition of Dan Brown’s ‘Origin’ and PG Wodehouse’s ‘Ring for Jeeves’ at Rs 50 each,” said Anshul Sharma, a 28-year-old law graduate.
That said, there is always a room for improvement and the majority of the publishers were very upfront about what bothered them the most in the fair.
Topping their complaints were the “space crunch” and the growing presence of “pirated and remaindered” book vendors at the fair.
The exhibition centre, which was inaugurated in 1972 by then prime minister Indira Gandhi, is presently being re-built into an Integrated Exhibition-cum-Convention Centre (IECC). The fair, which traditionally was spread over 40,000 sq metres, is allotted only “24,000 sq metres” since last year due to the ongoing construction.
While OUP blamed the space crunch as the primary reason for some publishers not participating in the fair, the PanMacmillan requested the organisers to take “corrective step” and stop the increase in the number of “remaindered and pirated booksellers” within the fair.
The Penguin, on the other hand, suggested the NBT to set up separate halls to accommodate the second-hand and bargain booksellers.
Over 600 publishers – from India and abroad – displayed books at more than 1300 stalls this year.