Thursday, July 23, 2020
Will Bourdain Break Through as a Brand-Name Imprint
Will Bourdain Break Through as a Brand-Name Imprint Giving a celebrity a book imprint might sound like the equivalent of bestowing a horse-drawn carriage. (Imagine the maintenance.) But this fall, HarperCollins announced a new publishing imprint helmed by media star Anthony Bourdain. Bourdain will release three to five books a year, published by Ecco, with the all-together-now moniker âEcco: An Anthony Bourdain Book.â No release dates have yet been set, but my mind is already eggbeater-ing over the possibilities. What kinds of titles will they acquire and will Bourdainâs name actually drive sales? In many ways, the pairing makes sense. Bourdain and Dan Halpern, Eccos president and publisher, go way back. Bourdainâs first bestseller, Kitchen Confidential, was one of Eccoâs early titles after the press was bought by HarperCollins. Both Bourdain and Halpern describe years of âover the tableâ conversations about exciting chefs and authors. Halpern credits Bourdain with pushing him to publish cookbooks by Fergus Henderson and Ferran Adrià . Somehow I imagine these talks happening over a roast suckling pig and many tumblers of wine â" greasy chins and happy grins. Hopefully theyâll keep this two-hander up. But even if Bourdain gets nearly free rein with his selection, thereâs cause for optimism. Heâs a voracious but choosy reader. In interviews over the years, heâs raved about Michel de Montaigne and Ludwig Bemelmans, along with the authors you expect him to love (hereâs looking at you, Hunter S. Thompson). In the press release, Bourdain indicates that his imprint could include fiction and non-fiction, new authors and old, ebooks and print. He adds, âWere presently looking at an initial list composed of chefs, enthusiasts, fighters, musicians and dead essayists.â And while he relishes the fact that âIâm doing this because⦠I can,â he kicks against the idea of a vanity project. As he told Eater.com: âthis is NOT some cynical bullshit list were talking about.â So Iâm hopeful about the authors Bourdain might introduce or champion. Ecco and HarperCollins may benefit from celebrity-driven sales, but I think Bourdain will focus on excellent and unusual writing. On the other hand, my skeptical side wonders: How will Bourdain carve out time from his new TV show, media appearances, and other projects to find, cultivate, and publicize his authors? Who will actually edit the books? How much skin does Bourdain have in the game? Thereâs been a little rash of celeb imprints in the past year. This month, HarperCollins touted another new imprint, for mystery writer Dennis Lehane. Deepak Chopra and Chelsea Handler each landed namesake imprints, at Crown and Hachette respectively. Next year is shaping up to be a proving ground, when weâll see if publishers can actually cash in on such name brands. Daniel âHarry Potterâ Radcliffe has been pretty vocal about all the great authors he enjoys â" perhaps heâs subtly gunning for an imprint of his own. If another celebrity was going to grab the imprint spotlight, who would you nominate? Did I hear you say Cher? Sign up to Today In Books to receive daily news and miscellany from the world of books.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)