A paperback of Species: A History

My not-inconsiderable ego has expanded several sizes upon the news from University of California Press that my book Species: A History of the Idea (see at right or on the My Books page) is to become a paperback. I hope to make a couple of corrections, and maybe add a section on Blumenbach (which you, my dear readers, have already seen, here, here and here). I expect tens of thousands of sales now…

26 Comments

Filed under Administrative, Book, History, Species and systematics, Species concept

26 Responses to A paperback of Species: A History

  1. Achrachno

    Well, I’ll help out by buying one. How soon do they expect to have it out?

    I’ve been pondering getting the hard cover and, if I finish what I’m reading and get impatient, maybe I still will.

       0 likes

  2. That’s some good news amongst all the flood gloom. I’ll expect you to autograph my copy with something witty and pithy.

    How many meters is the water from your front door now?

       0 likes

  3. Great news.

    Kinda glad I held off buying (read: can’t afford presently) the hardcover. Now I have *no* excuse.

       0 likes

  4. When will the audiobook come out? And will it be read by Christopher Walken?

       0 likes

  5. I will watch for the announcement and perhaps it would be a good occasion to invite you for an interview on the Radio Show.

    Russell Blackford is scheduled for 2/13, and PZ Meyayarrssez is scheduled for the 20th. Can’t let those blokes one-up you, can you?

       0 likes

  6. (I may or may not be angling for a preview copy via PDF/.epub.)

       0 likes

  7. Drat. That last comment was by me, and not my cousin.

       0 likes

  8. Mitchell Coffey

    Excuse my not-inconsiderable ignorance, but isn’t it unusual for a book of this kind to go to paperback? Could someone other than John answer this, as he has a congenital inability to repost anything good about himself, especially when true?

       0 likes

    • Mitchell Coffey

      Make that “report,” not “repost.”

         0 likes

    • Yes and no! It depends very much on the publishers but an increasing number of academic publishers are apparently beginning to realize that if they make good scientific books, and John’s book is very good, available as ppbs at a reasonable price then they actually sell surprising well.

      However there are academic publishers who still haven’t caught on and insist on publishing interesting and good books only in hardback at a price that nobody in their right mind would even consider paying and then saying to the author, “see I told you that there is only a very limited market for your type of book!”

         0 likes

  9. That’s very cool. I’ll definitely pick a copy of the paperback when it comes out. Hardbacks are generally out of my league, unless they are of the can’t-possibly-do-without-if-I-am-to-complete-my-phd variety (and unfortunately yours is not since philosophy of science is not my AOS).

    BTW, hope the floods aren’t going to hit you too badly. News reports look terrible. I believe the peak has been reached round about now.

       0 likes

  10. Yes and no! It depends very much on the publishers but an increasing number of academic publishers are apparently beginning to realize that if they make good scientific books, and John’s book is very good, available as ppbs at a reasonable price then they actually sell surprising well. However there are academic publishers who still haven’t caught on and insist on publishing interesting and good books only in hardback at a price that nobody in their right mind would even consider paying and then saying to the author, “see I told you that there is only a very limited market for your type of book!”

       0 likes

  11. Congrats!

       0 likes

  12. Robert E. Harris

    Hardback is $39.95 at Amazon now, so paper should run around 20 bucks, maybe a little less, I hope.

       0 likes