SuperJail Warden wrote:
uziq wrote:
SuperJail Warden wrote:
When you guys choose non-fiction, are there any guidelines you follow? I mentioned that both of my ISIS books were from university presses. I don't trust any history or political science books that didn't come out of a university press or were published by a tenured professor. The Putin book is an exception because of the NYT. Too much crap out there like the Bill O'Rielly series.
there are a lot of other good presses that are non-university, just a different market (and i don't say that because i'm temporarily an industry i'm involved in). university presses are good for monographs and, though less often, polemics. there are plenty of imprints attached to leading journals and other organs of public opinion. NYRB do a good series. publishers such as verso offer a 'radical' or 'critically engaged' perspective. if you just go to university presses, you're getting a rather specific type of history. to say that the major non-fiction publishers, being trade publishers rather than academic, are doing 'lesser' history is just stupid. one puts more focus on new research, meticulous scholarship (including the settling of academic scores), and paratextual stuff (appendices, bibliographies, indexes, concordances). the other prioritises narrative and interpretation. they are both forms of 'good history work'.
also, appealing to 'yale' or 'oxford' as a brand for university presses doesn't really matter. the ranking of a university doesn't correlate exactly with the quality of its university press. they are almost entirely separate entities in terms of budget and specialism. you could go to just about any major university press and get a monograph of the same quality as an OUP/CUP tome.
You are in the industry and it would be dumb for me to try to argue this out with you. I will just say in my experience the quality of history books I read from university presses were better and more referenced than the stuff I got from elsewhere or the history section of Barnes and Noble. Of course there are exceptions like Hobsbawn whose Age of Revolution series is published by Vintage Press. But he was a historian so it goes back to my point about still preferring academics. Interestingly the good history books I have from non-university presses are from Vintage Press. Almost all of them actually.
i think you have quite a skewered view on what the non-academic market is. the fact you use the word 'historian' to talk about academics writing for university presses suggests you don't realise that there are lots of full-time 'historians' who don't write research. a great deal of 20th century and contemporary stuff won't be published by university presses because they are traditional and prefer to mull over european courts or clausewitz for the umpteenth time.
academic books are definitely better on paratextual scholarly stuff (obviously). but i will say again that many academics, particularly in niche subjects, cannot write for shit. a 320pp hardcover on the middle ages written by a medievalist ensconced in a university can be a torturous thing. academics are not so good at taking all their research materials and honing it into a lean, well-paced book. admittedly this isn't a problem if you're using the book as an academic reference, anyway, dipping in and out using the index as much as reading from cover to cover. but there's a giant market and a big reading public in between 'exhaustive monograph' and 'bill o'reilly hires a ghost writer'.
to kJ's point above about reading another account of a war: fair enough. doesn't interest me, either. but there are enthusiasts and fanatics for every period, conflict, genre, whatever. i can read endless books on modernism and 20th century art – it's my thing. some people are fascinated with american civil war. the most written about person in history is napoleon (he beats jesus). some people really like their napoleonic history. you'll find the same ground gets covered and renewed every 10 years or so. that's when a good (non-academic) history writer can really make a difference. at this stage no one is going to unearth a great new fact or angle on the romanovs or henry viii. good writing and a personality make up for that. the academic version of this is that, where the fashions and paradigms of thought change every generation too, a new bunch of scholars will recycle the same events through a different jargon. marxist, feminist, constructivist, relativist, etc.
i'm not a big history reader, in any case. non-fiction for me normally means polemics, theory, criticism, philosophy, etc. check my goodreads, lug nuts.
Last edited by uziq (2017-01-04 18:15:55)