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Glenn Beck's new three-book deal shows that while conservatives wander the political wilderness, they continue to dominate book sales. As Ben Crair demonstrates, the hit parade stems from title and marketing formulas that are nothing short of scientific.
We know we’re not supposed to judge a book by its cover, but what about its title? For most of the past month, Mark Levin’s stiffly-titled Liberty and Tyranny has topped the Amazon.com bestseller list. (When Hugo Chavez gave to President Obama a copy of Open Veins of Latin America, it rose from 54,295 to No. 2 on the list, unseating every book above it except for Levin’s—a fact in which Levin, a conservative talk-radio host, must certainly take some pride.) It’s a strangely familiar title, Liberty and Tyranny. It reminds you of, well, just about every other conservative bestseller of the past 10 years. A breeze through previous bestseller lists shows such polemics as Deliver Us From Evil, Culture Warrior, Fleeced, The Real America, Unhinged, Invasion, Slander, Treason, etc. That one was written by conservative talker Sean Hannity and another by conservative author Ann Coulter hardly matters. Minimalist, patriotic, and paranoid—one might mistake the titles of contemporary conservative literature for a staticky transcription of Levin’s show. We wanted to know: Is there a science to naming a conservative bestseller?
Adam Bellow suggests a second strategy for titling a conservative book: Bait liberals with an insulting title and then allow their outrage to raise the book’s profile.
Two decades ago, conservative bestsellers had titles that reflected the seriousness of their authors’ arguments—see Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last Man and Allan Bloom’s The Closing of the American Mind—or their impish wit—P.J. O’Rourke’s Parliament of Whores. Taking their cue, perhaps, from William F. Buckley, whose titles like God & Man at Yale set the tone for the industry, they conveyed the impression of a pointed, philosophical, and poetic work. Indeed, there was almost a defensive scholarly aspect about them. As an editor at the publishing house Free Press, Adam Bellow, who now works for HarperCollins, was involved in the 1994 publication of The Bell Curve, Charles Murray’s controversial book about race and IQ. “Why did we choose this boring title?” Bellow said in a recent interview. “The decision made to project a serious, scholarly impression in order to deflect the charge that it was a shrill opportunistic work of hackery.”
Now, Bellow says, “It’s much more personality-driven at the high-end of the commercial curve, and it’s really a result of the growth of mass media outlets for conservative views—radio and cable TV, primarily. Previously, just 15 years ago when The Bell Curve was published, these outlets didn’t really exist.” In other words, a lot of conservative books are not intended as literature so much as commodified extensions of their authors’ personalities. To suggest that these books were scholarly would be to taint their carefully cultivated everyman appeal with a stain of elitism. Consequently, conservative publishing house Regnery, which originally published God & Man at Yale, now grows fat from the book sales of Ann Coutler.
Another reason that conservative titles are pretty similar: The books themselves are pretty similar. “Movement conservative themes are pretty straightforward,” says Reihan Salam, co-author of Grand New Party, a recent book about remaking the GOP. It’s 1,001 variations on the same theme. The title Deliver Us from Evil, for example, comfortingly suggests that Hannity will be attacking liberals or other evil, but doesn’t feel it necessary to spell out what that evil may be. (According to the official description, the book is about "the harsh lessons America has learned in confronting evil in the past and the present”—still not much help.)
At this late date, there are a few conservatives that lack built-in radio or television audiences. Adam Bellow suggests a second strategy: Bait liberals with an insulting title and then allow their outrage to raise the book’s profile. This was the raison d’etre behind Jonah Goldberg’s Liberal Fascism, Dinesh D’Souza’s The Enemy at Home, and Ramesh Ponnuru’s The Party of Death, all of which had titles that were roundly denounced in the liberal blogosphere. (The first two books were edited by Bellow.) This is also the preferred tactic of Ann Coulter, who provokes liberal indignation with Pavlonian preciseness.
Coulter’s one-word titles, starting with Slander in 2002, don’t leave much room for interpretation, but their progression over the course of four major books is potentially illuminating. Slander accused liberals of a crime, with America and conservatives (to writers like Coulter, one and the same) as the victims. Treason (2003) upped the ante to a federal charge. Godless (2006) upped it to an eternal one. Coulter’s latest title, Guilty (2009), represents a slightly different gambit in that it comes right out with verdict. Coulter’s perspective has shifted from the victim’s to the executioner’s—might her declining book sales testify to the fact that most people prefer their movement conservatives as outsiders with pitchforks rather than judges with gavels?
To be sure, liberal authors use these tactics, too: David Sirota’s The Uprising doesn’t exactly shimmer with originality, while Al Franken’s Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot waves its title at conservatives like a bullfighter’s cape. But Franken’s title or Michael Moore’s Dude, Where’s My Country? at least come with built-in irony—the first gives Limbaugh a taste of his own vitriolic medicine, while the second makes a pop-cultural reference. You can smile at them, regardless of whether or not you agree with their politics. Conservative titles, on the other hand, are almost entirely earnest. Glenn Beck’s The Real America sells because some readers actually trust Beck to arbitrate what “a real America” is. (Beck’s follow-up, An Inconvenient Book, has a much better title.)
Should Coulter continue the progression, then her canon will be completed after she titles her next book Damned. For her colleagues, however, the field is still ripe. The National Anthem has not been plundered (Home of the Brave, Broad Stripes and Bright Stars). “America the Beautiful” has not yet shed its grace on Regnery (For Spacious Skies, From Sea to Shining Sea). Moreover, these writers have barely cracked the thesaurus’s spine. Just a minute on Thesaurus.com, for example, yields a synonymic translation of Bill O’Reilly’s A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity that actually describes its contents and its author and is entirely original: A Shameless Immature Specimen of Humankind.
Plus: Check out Book Beast, for more news on hot titles and authors and excerpts from the latest books.
Ben Crair is an assistant editor at The Daily Beast.







xbainx
And if you have ever read any of these books, they are double spaced, 100 pages long, and full of errors and lies.
sophia5
@ xbainx
RIGHT ON XBAINX !!! You tell 'em !!!
It's always good to see objective points of view.
Democrats never make errors and never lie. LOL.
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JackJack
It's healthy to view all sides, makes for spirited discussions. To simply slam books one has never read, is quite frankly, "a double spaced lie."
Mark Levin's book is well written and threads in valuable truths, about "the Constitution".
DavidBarron
Pulp politics is worse than pulp fiction. Nobody ever pretended Doc Savage was true.
I've read my fair share of these sloppily written volumes,and I declare them fluff. I don't blame the authors for trying to make a living though.
labman57
In order for the GOP to resurrect itself and become a viable, relevant entity, it will need to find its voice and leadership in someone who is not currently in the forefront. The American public does not want another leader with the inarticulate, anti-intellectualism of GW Bush or the smug, snarky Machiavellian demeanor of Dick Cheney.
The Republican Party will need to develop a positive message with specific ideas and policies, rather than the current simplistic, obstructionist approach of the their membership in Congress. They will need to break away from embracing the disingenuous hate and fear-mongering rants of Limbaugh, Coulter, Bachmann, et al., and find someone with more substance and less theatrics than Steele, Beck, and Palin.
All of that is possible. It would certainly make the next two election cycles more interesting for the public and more challenging for the Democrats. But I see no evidence of any of this developing so far.
carlinho
JackJack wrote "To simply slam books one has never read, is quite frankly, "a double spaced lie." -
In certain cases, I must disagree. In the same way that I don't need to place my hand over a flame to appreciate it will get burned, I don't think anyone has to actually READ anything from Ann Coulter to understand it will be full of the same shrill anti-progressive vitriol that she spews every time anyone bothers to put her on the air (which, thankfully, is becoming a more and more rare occurrence).
Books from Coulter = waste of dead trees.
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flyoverland
In 1976, Rick Dees, a friend of mine and the then most popular disk jockey in Memphis was fired from WMPS Radio by the station's crumudgeonly owner, Abe Plough (Abe also owned Schering Plough). Rick had the audacity to simply play his hit record "Disco Duck" on the station while we was employed there. Never mind that it was the number one record in America at that time, Abe had a policy that you didn't pimp your own material on the station. Never mind Abe was making millions off Dees' morning drive shift, a policy was a policy. Rick briefly moved to another station in Memphis and soon to LA where he became on the that market's legendary broadcasters. When I watch all these cable shows and hear the shameless self promotion of books, speaking engagements, etc. on talk radio, I wonder where are the Abe Plough's of today?
oliverckerr
The poet prophet jacklegs is banned from the Beast. At the end of every post he wrote his webby address michael s levinson dot commie and also mentioned amazon and "New World Hors D'oeuvres."
On his web site there is a "New World Hors D'oeuvres," (sub-title) "The Recipe for World Peace" cover that takes you to the first eleven pages. He also listed an internet address that gave you a free copy of the whole book, excluding the front and back cover, in pdf format.
Well, once you post something its public domain, although when the Beast banned the "jacklegs" they also removed every post he ever made. Hmm. I know him. I called him up and asked permission. he said, "Go ahead."
www.michaelslevinson.com/newworld.pdf
Do it. Download the book. It is a political treatise satire history biography unlike any book you have ever read. You will find yourself reading about half and then starting over. It's like a good movie. The second time around you see all the bits you missed on the first reading.
When he first published, "New world Hors D'oeuvres," under his pen name, Golashes Journalista, someone FBI connected broke into the Ingram book distributor magazine and listed it as "art." They also broke into the Bowker ISBN data base and changed "New world Hors D'oeuvres" from a trade book, with full return, to a "specialty book" (means a bookseller pays up front) of "witty humor" targeted for people age 13 - 17.
What book store would order that?
What does FBI want you not to find out about. How about a famous Supreme Court Case someone FBI connected altered after the judges approved their galleys. And you thought "The Pelican Brief" was a suspense thriller having nothing to do with life, or with the eight police cars that five weeks ago pulled onto the poet prophet's parking lot, looking for the poet prophet and there to break down his doors and then, without witnesses, bang and the ankle throw away gun then placed in the poet prophet's hand, resisting arrest.
That was the police set up five weeks ago, in America.
Download the book. It is hot. It is also literature as nearly every paragraph could actually be retype set to read as a poem. Do it. I didn't tell you to do that. I am innocent. Free. Enjoy the read. Pass it to your friends. Poet prophet has words for all man kind.
J. Edgar Hoover's minions are following J. Edgarina's orders. They tried to assassinate him five weeks ago. Eight police cars. In one of them, the alpha-cop in charge with the throwaway gun. Rhyme is his crime.
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Fentro
left, right; up/down. here/there/everywhere. it's yin-yang ding dong sing-song. We're ALL wrong (how could we be right?)
We fight, we blight, all day & all night.
What's true to you, whether Muslim or Jew, just realize, we ALL spew such utter trash, we gnash and bash each other's stash while chasing cash, it's fashion. Fission. A Fusion Mission. Go get informed. Get well read, each night before you go to bed. The words will tell, just break that spell of utter hell on television. THAT'S MY MISSION. Not fashion nor fission, the con of fusion.
It's hard to find, it's hard to fake. It's a fucking good cake to bake. So I cook (unlike the crook who took the book from the schnook and then got hooked).
The truth? Who knows? Read these comments, Nobody knows. It blows my nose like a hose goes, it comes and goes with the flow. Time to go....
Thank you.
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