Rupa & Co will be glad that former External Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh dropped his plans to publish his memoirs, A Call to Honour, on his own. |
Trade circles say the book, in the market for a week, is on course to selling 50,000 copies. That will put it on a par with the last non-fiction bestseller, President APJ Abdul Kalam's Ignited Minds. In India, any book that sells 5,000 copies is a success. |
|
Kapish Mehra, publisher with Rupa, which eventually brought out Singh's book, says he is confident that the book, priced at Rs 495, will go into a fourth re print. |
|
The industry is largely unanimous that the controversy around Singh's book "" which talks of a Central Intelligence Agency mole in the Prime Minister's Office during P V Narasimha Rao's regime "" has a big role to play in the sales of the book. |
|
"There is much merit in the book. However, increased public awareness certainly helps," concedes Mehra. |
|
Anil Syal, vice-president (marketing) with Safexpress, the logistics company that handles book supplies, says a controversy "can increase the sales of a book by 100-200 per cent". |
|
But then, controversies always have helped sales, starting from Taslima Nasreen's Lajja. |
|
Ira Trivedi's What Would You Do To Save the World?, published by Penguin India, has sold 7,000 copies in just a month since its launch and is going into a reprint. |
|
The book, an uncharitable fictionalised account of beauty pageants, has generated quite a cat fight on the front pages of city supplements. |
|
Penguin earlier hit the jackpot with Khushwant Singh's Truth, Love and a Little Malice, which generated plenty of heat and 30,000 copies in sales. "It is now out in paperback," says Penguin's editor-in-chief Ravi Singh. |
|
Even Girja Kumar's Brahmacharya, Gandhi & His Women Associates, which raised hackles, has already sold 1,100 copies. Interestingly, 1,000 copies of the Rs 695 apiece book, published by start-up Vitasta, are being supplied to Pakistan. |
|
An extreme case is of How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a Life. Little, Brown & Company has withdrawn all editions of the book by 18-year-old Harvard student Kavvya Vishwanathan after the Chennai-born girl admitted to plagiarism from several sources. |
|
However, Harper Collins India head P M Sukumar says there is a big demand for pirated copies of the book and it continues to do brisk sales on the pavements. |
|
"A controversy ensures that the book becomes widely known. For example, many more people "" three to four times "" have become aware of A Call. That straightway would help in sales," says Sukumar. |
|
|
|