Blurbs
In today’s Publishers Weekly, Simon & Schuster publisher Sean Manning, who succeeded Jonathan Karp at the top of S&S’s flagship imprint, decided to no longer require authors to obtain blurbs for their books.
It takes a lot of time to produce great books, and trying to get blurbs is not a good use of anyone’s time. Instead, authors who are soliciting them could be writing their next book; agents could be trying to find new books; editors could be improving books through revisions; and the solicited authors could be reading books they actually want to read that will benefit their work—rather than reading books they feel they have to read as a courtesy to their editor, their agent, a writer friend or a former student. What’s worse, this kind of favor trading creates an incestuous and unmeritocratic literary ecosystem that often rewards connections over talent.