User:JackyR/sandbox
Stephen Williams (artist) Stephen (Steve) Williams (17 November 1948 – 24 July 1996) was a Zimbabwean artist and director of Zimbabwe's National Gallery in Bulawayo.
He was described as "a dynamo, an enabler, a giver, a colleague".[1]
He died in a motorcycle accident in Bulawayo in 1996.
References
[edit]- ^ NGB Newletter, National Gallery in Bulawayo. Sept/Oct 1996
Book stuff
[edit]Background info
[edit]This is to give a general grasp of what “all books with an ISBN” means, and the expected lifespan of a book compared to the expected lifespan of Wikipedia. (Apologies for choice of national industries - this was what I could get hold of quickly.)
Worldwide
[edit]Number of new books annually (in 1996): 800 000 [1].
UK
[edit]Number of new books annually (in 2005): 206,000 [2]
US
[edit]Number of new books annually (in 2005): 172,000 [3]
In the US, paperback fiction falls into mass market or “pulp” paperbacks, and “trade” paperbacks. [4] Mass market books are intended to have a shelf-life of one to three months (similar to that of magazines). [5] [6] [7] They are then destroyed.[8] In 2003, there were 118 mass market titles which sold more than 500,000 copies.[9]
“Trade” paperbacks are published on better paper and used to have a separate distribution network.[10] These have a shelf-life of six to nine months.[11]
A popular hardback has a shelf-life measured in months. [12]
Most US books of any kind go out of print within three months; best-sellers may go out of print in two years.[13]
Canada
[edit]Number of new books annually (in 2004): 16,776 [14]
In Canada, 60% of mass market books are pulped, not sold (60% of copies, not titles) [15]
Wikipedia and the book industry
[edit]WP is already used by some small publishers to promote their authors.
Wikipedia has not yet been “discovered” by major publishers in the UK and US as a potential marketing tool. As of 2006-07-14 Wikipedia gets zero hits at The Bookseller, the UK industry magazine, and four at Publishers Weekly, the US industry magazine (only one of which is in a marketing context, and even then doesn't overtly suggest putting articles for books on WP). The Bookseller does, however, have an article on literary blogs [16] which illustrates the current lack of knowledge within the UK industry.
Other Wikipedia notability
[edit]Generally Category:Wikipedia notability criteria. Also:
- Wikipedia:Notability (music)
- Wikipedia:Notability (academics)
- Wikipedia:Notability (companies and corporations)
- Wikipedia:Notability (web)
ISBNs
[edit]An ISBN meets WP:V in verifying that a book exists, and that it was published by a particular publisher in a particular country. It does not give and information about influence, importance or notability of a book.
Small local, but non-vanity, presses may not use ISBNs, particularly if all their sales are expected to be local. Eg, a newspaper publisher might produce a local history book without an ISBN, which is then cited on WP.
What should have an article?
[edit]Some of the issues emerging in discussion:
- Are all books with an ISBN notable (meaning "worth an article")?
- Are all books with an ISBN notable except where WP:VANITY applies?
- If no to the above, what other types or egs of books might be non-notable?
- What information would an article about a book contain? Will WP end up with lots of articles containing no more information than Amazon?
- Is en.wiki intended to be primarily about the en.world?
- Is en.wiki intended to be primarily about parts of the world with large numbers of Wikipedia editors?
- Are modern books without an ISBN ever notable?