This post is my normal monthly review of the top ten art books sold in the last month - December 2011. You can see more about:
First a preamble about identifying the top fine art books.
Commentary the fine art book market
I started doing this review because I'd become very familiar with just how poor the categorisation was on Amazon and how difficult it could be to identify good fine art books
It doesn't get any easier!
Sales in December seemed to correct
some of the very odd results I got in November. However "Music" and the "Performing Arts" are still unaccountably mixed up with what used to be the Art, Architecture and Photography category on Amazon.com. They are nowhere to be seen on Amazon.co.uk which has a completely different system for categorising books - and a completely separate category for
Music, Stage & Screen!)
Does this mean sales of art books are way down in the USA?
Or does the current algorithm leaves much to be desired?
I lean towards the latter being the explanation having seen some quite ludicrous so-called art book entries in the top 100 of the Arts
(and that's other than items like the Thomas Kinkade Disney Collection: 2012 Wall Calendar - I kid you not!).
What it does mean is that the top 100 books in December / January are dominated by books about music and calendars! Not at all helpful to those trying to find a decent fine art book!
What's very interesting is that expensive books about art history have come to the fore of late with two books about understanding art history taking the top two slots for art books in the top 100 books about art. Maybe they make great Christmas presents? Or maybe they're so expensive they only ever get bought as presents?
Also I've yet to understand the rationale for why an ebook is more expensive than a print book. Yet I've now come across several examples of the ebook having the higher price tag.
Another interesting aspect was seeing a book which purported to be the most popular book in one category - but was absolutely free in the Kindle version while the paperback was priced. I can't help but think this is an edited "trailer" for the real thing. I ignored it on the basis that it was not a new book and it had no other merits when published four years ago.
I'm also beginning to see quite a few self-published books - some of which are a long way short of adequate.
Also, while I was compiling the listings for December, I kept running into whole swathes of explicit adult p**n books in the "arts" section. I'm assuming that Amazon has been caught napping and that if it has any sense it will realise it will lose a lot of customers if it continues to allow such books to be mixed up with books which children might want to access. If it doesn't disappear I'll be telling Amazon exactly what I think of its new role of pimp!
I can't help thinking that wading through the nonsense of some of the rankings on Amazon and elsewhere might just be about to get a lot more difficult in 2012.
On to the results for December........