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Faber brings back forgotten classics

Faber is creating a new imprint that will make out-of-print classics available through print on demand. Faber Finds launches on 2nd June with 100 titles, and aims to publish a further 20 titles every month.

The initial list has been selected by Faber authors including Wendy Cope, Andrew Motion and Brian Friel. It includes books by P H  Newby, winner of the first Booker Prize in 1969, along with a range from novelist Angus Wilson, historian A J P Taylor, and literary ­critic F R Leavis. Further authors brought back into print will include children’s author Nina Bawden, crime novelist Celia Dale and Russian translator Constance Garnett. Only some were previously published by Faber.

The books, priced from £9 upwards depending on length, will be printed by Anthony Rowe Ltd, with text reset by Libre Digital. The cover designs will be automatically generated, with an algorithm creating illustrated borders around the title.

Faber has been clearing rights for the list with agents and estates. “We’ve already cleared hundreds of books,” said c.e.o. Stephen Page. Faber is offering a “good royalty” on the books, but “because there is such a large number of titles, we wanted­ a simple agreement to cover our bases”.

The books will be available through cus­tomer order from booksellers and through all the major web players, as well as from a new ­wiki-style website at www.faberfinds.co.uk, which will encourage a community to form around the project.

Page said that one of the big challenges for the project was to reduce the level of cost for each title to as low a threshold as possible. He believes Faber will start to make “a reasonable return” once 50 to 100 copies of a title are sold, but that “as the project aggregates and gets bigger, it will become more affordable”. He said initial conversations with booksellers had been positive. “Obviously this can’t operate like front-of-store promotional titles—it requires more gentle handling. But everyone has been very supportive.”

The imprint will be headed up by editor John Seaton, with no limits other than quality on the number of titles brought back into print. ­“People have tried to do this before, but the thing about the Faber Finds project is our ambition,” Page said. “If you’re going to do something like this it has to be at the heart of the literary and bibliophile world.”

Faber Finds will be publicity-led, starting with a preview of the series in the Guardian Review tomorrow (3rd May), in which writers including Julian Barnes, Margaret Drabble and David Mitchell champion titles that form part of the series. 

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By Stephen E Andrews

I wonder if Faber will see fit to bring any of thier classic Science Fiction back into print (yes, folks, once even a serious literary house were unafraid to support the genre as it recognised that good writing is good writing no matter what its marketing category)? Come on Faber, let's see 'The Birghtfount Diaries' by Brain Aldiss, the early novels of Christopher Priest (now a hot property after the film version of 'The Prestige'), early books by Garry Kilworth and Robert Holdstock, not to mention great American genre writers like james Blish and Harry Harrison. Come on Faber, don't be sniffy about skiffy, republish some!

02 May 08 09:09

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By Paul Stead

I am employed by Canon UK to build their presence in the books on demand sector and would like to hear from publishers and authors on what you think equipment suppliers could be doing to help with your digital drive?

02 May 08 14:25

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By Matthew De Ville at Faber

A message for Stephen E Andrews above: Stephen, we are planning to bring some of the sci-fi back - please get in touch at lostandfound@faber.co.uk and we'll explain more.

06 May 08 12:37

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By Stephen E Andrews

Hi Matthew, have emailed you from my home address, but please feel free to contact me at Waterstone's Bath University. Regards, Steve

07 May 08 08:53

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