| | I wish I were just splashing around in shallow waters to discredit a publisher, since what is being discussed is some writing by Ayn Rand. Unfortunately, this is not merely an opinion. I am going on things I read on the Internet.
I mentioned the removal of Durban House from Writer's Market. That's not an opinion, that's a fact. Anyone can consult the book and the page numbers and check for the accuracy of what I reported.
Here is an appraisal of Durban by an online service called Preditors and Editors. I will quote it here:
Durban House Publishing: Poor contract. Strongly not recommended. A small publisher located in Dallas, Tx. Research indicates this to be a vanity publisher.
I got a little interested when Durban popped up on a list of vanity publishers listed by a popular writer, Lee Goldberg. His links on this appear to be broken right now, but I kept a copy in my files. Here is a brief summary. On March 7, 2005 Goldberg listed Durban House as a vanity press on his "typepad" blog. On March 29, 2005 John Lewis, the publisher, stated in a letter to Goldberg that from 1999 to 2003, Durban requested some authors (some represented by his wife, who is a literary agent) to pay for the promotional costs of their own books, but that the costs were reimbursed over time. Since 2003 Durban has not needed this type of collaboration. I have the full letter on finle and can post it, if need be. On April 12, 2005 Goldberg reversed himself and wrote:
I'm willing to take him at his word. I've also heard from a number of DH authors who say they haven't been asked to pay a penny to anyone and that they have been treated professionally. So I will strike them from my list of Vanity Presses masquerading as publishers.
Then there is this link from a writer's forum, June 7, 2005 by Fantasy Novelist, Victoria Strauss, which I shall quote. She was asked why "Lindsey's Literary Services" received a "not recommended" rating from Preditors and Editors.
Lindsey's Literary Services refers writers to an editing service run by Kay Garrett. It also shares an address and fax number with Durban House, a publisher that has offered contracts requiring authors to pay $25,000. Durban House is run by Richard Lewis, husband of Karen Lewis, who runs Karen Lewis & Co., a literary agency that places books with Durban House and refers authors to a paid editing service run by...Kay Garrett. Can you say "multiple conflicts of interest"?
There is a story in 2004 by a disgruntled author, William Barnes, recounted here. The story is pretty abrasive on both sides, so it is difficult to judge.
There is more in 2004 on this here (including response by Mr. Lewis), but it is interesting because the last post on the page by Victoria Strauss analyzes some of the clauses of Durban's publishing contract, and her judgment is that it is author-unfriendly, even when there is no $ 25,000 price tag for the author to pay. But she notes that the $ 25,000 price tag was not an isolated experience for Mr. Barnes, as she had confirmation of this from another author who was asked for $ 25,000 to publish a book, not directly from Durban House, but through his wife's company instead. (If this actually happened in 2004, then Mr. Lewis's claim that Durban's author subsidy practice stopped in 2003 is not accurate.)
Here is a June 2005 discussion called Vanity, thy name is Durban, by best-selling author Michael Prescott that goes into many of the pros and cons of this issue. His conclusion is that Durban is a subsidy press, at least for some of its published works, since if an author is asked to subsidize his own work, it is a subsidy publisher, period. He states that there is a difference between a vanity press and a subsidy press.
In a publicity blurb, Durban claims in many places, "not a subsidy press."
In light of all this controversy, I am intrigued by Mr. Fahy's comment that:
... that cannard has long been exposed as a liable...
LOLOLOLOL...
What the hell does that mean? Does he mean canard instead of cannard? "Liable," as far as I know, is an adjective and not a noun. So I have a serious problem here with spelling and syntax. But even discounting the errors, I have no idea what this amazing statement means.
I am certainly glad the publisher is thrilled with its astonishing returns on its investment, though. I presume that the book is selling gazillions. I would be interested in knowing just how many books actually were sold (and I know a lot of the tricks used for padding). A cursory Amazon survey is not encouraging. Nope. Not at all. Then I would be interested in putting that figure against comparative figures of Rand's other works (from the time they were released). Hell, throw in Peikoff for good measure. See how it measures up. I somehow doubt that this ever will be done in public by the publisher's side.
Mr. Fahy seems to think that I am claiming that Valliant paid to have his book published. I never claimed that. I expressed (as I still express) surprise and outrage that, with a hot publishing name like Ayn Rand, an outfit with this kind of vanity-subsidy controversy swirling around it, including different agent-publisher-type interests feeding off each other, would be chosen instead of a major player with a reputation for good promotion.
On to another issue. That is the "warts-and-all" image of Rand presented in the two Branden books. Mr. Fahy and Mr. Valliant pretend that, in addition to there being no warts at all (well... maybe a gracious "at some point in her life Rand felt jealousy"), this view is something exclusive to the Brandens or something prompted in others by their respective works on Rand. Barbara and others, here on Solo and in other places, have stated that there are many, many people who personally knew Ayn Rand and have held this view of Ayn Rand waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay before Barbara's bio came out. The list includes the Blumenthals, the Kalbermans, the Holzers, Bob Hessen, Kay and Phil Smith, Edith Efron, Bob Efron, John Hospers, Lee and Joyce Shulman, the Hirschfelds, Joan Kennedy Taylor, Alan Greenspan, etc., etc., etc.
I have come across evaluations by some of these people that support this - and even Valliant cites some of them in his book.
Are all these people delusional or time travelers?
Michael
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