Publishing Disrupted
Following some professional and personal updates, we embrace the energy of the coming summer by digging into a recent Publisher's Weekly Religion article highlighting how "anxious readers" are apparently buying up Bibles. It felt like a suspiciously familiar trope, so we tried to unpack that assumption a bit. No mention of the widely publicized decreases in church attendance, or religious disaffiliation as a whole, but we an earlier article claimed some publishers, very different ones, are "saying Amen to resistance" with books from the progressive left (and the conservative right too, of course) responding to our overheated political climate. But even that framing feels shoehorned. We wonder where are the truly fresh takes? Where's the deeper dives beyond the stereotypes? (Again, is "mainstream audience" even a useful term anymore?) If you're tired of the tired tropes and assumptions, we hope you'll tag along for some rousing discussion. Specific articles mentioned can be found at publishersweekly.com, News > Religion section: "Religion Publishers Say Amen to Resistance," and "Anxious Readers Turn to God." Publishing Disrupted is at PublishingDisrupted.substack.com [http://publishingdisrupted.substack.com] Mick Silva is at MickSilvaEditing.substack.com [http://micksilvaediting.substack.com] David Morris is at dvdmorris.substack.com [https://dvdmorris.substack.com/], LakeDriveBooks.com [http://lakedrivebooks.com], and Hyponymous.com [https://hyponymous.com].
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