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http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/01/27/MNG9DNQ8TM1.DTL

 

 

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A financial thriller in the publishing world

- Ilana DeBare, Chronicle Staff Writer

Saturday, January 27, 2007

 

 

 

Bay Area small publishers like McSweeney's, Berrett-Koehler and Parallax Press

don't typically print melodramatic cliff-hangers.

 

But this month, they've been living one.

 

More than 130 independent publishers across the country were hurled into

financial crisis on Dec. 29 with the bankruptcy of the parent company of

Publishers Group West, the Berkeley firm that distributes books from much of the

small press world.

 

Among them are more than two dozen Bay Area publishers whose works range from

Dave Eggers' novels and Deepak Chopra's inspirational writings to business

books, Buddhist books and the " Here Comes the Guide " wedding planning book.

 

The bankruptcy hit these small presses at the worst possible time -- when

Publishers Group West was holding onto its sales revenues from the three months

before Christmas, its most profitable time of the year.

 

At the time of the bankruptcy filing, the company owed nearly $1 million to

Amber-Allen, a San Rafael publisher of personal growth books such as the

best-selling " The Four Agreements, " by Don Miguel Ruiz. It owed $600,000 to

McSweeney's Books, the San Francisco press started by Eggers.

 

And tiny Parallax Press, a nonprofit Buddhist publisher in Berkeley with six

employees, was owed $150,000 of its total annual sales of $850,000.

 

" Revenues from the three most lucrative sales months of the year are not

available to us, " said Travis Masch, Parallax's publisher. " This has a

tremendous financial impact on us. "

 

The bankruptcy threatens the survival of many of these small presses. This week,

a potential white knight appeared in the form of Perseus Books Group, a New York

company that is offering to pay the book publishers 70 cents on every dollar

they are owed. But the bailout is far from certain.

 

The bankruptcy rocked a part of the literary world that even the most avid

readers don't pay much attention to -- the system that enables small presses to

get their wares onto the shelves of bookstores and, eventually, into the hands

of consumers.

 

Publishers Group West was a historic institution within the small press world.

Created in the late 1970s by a young Stanford graduate named Charlie Winton, it

actively promoted the work of its small press clients rather than just

warehousing and shipping their books.

 

It gave small publishers a collective marketing voice that could rival that of a

big corporation like Random House. Along the way, it helped create surprise

best-sellers like Charles Frazier's " Cold Mountain " and " 50 Simple Things You

Can Do to Save the Earth. "

 

" PGW was able to give small publishers access to Waldenbooks and B. Dalton --

the dominant national retail accounts of the day -- continuing on to Amazon,

Barnes & Noble and Borders, " said Munro Magruder, associate publisher of New

World Library in Novato, which is owed about $1.7 million in the bankruptcy.

 

The company supported small presses in ways that were both personal and

financial. Its marketing staff showed new publishers the ropes of book

promotion. Unlike other distributors, it helped publishers pay for promotional

displays in stores. And often it would accelerate payments to help a

cash-strapped client pay bills or give an advance on royalties to an author.

 

" They were willing to put their money where their mouth is, " Magruder said.

 

In 2002, Winton sold the company so he could become a full-time publisher

himself with Avalon Publishing Group, based in Emeryville.

 

The buyer was a much larger company, a San Diego wholesaler called Advanced

Marketing Services that provided books to big-box stores like Costco and Sam's

Club.

 

Publishers Group West kept its administrative offices in Berkeley and continued

to get rave reviews from its client publishers. But its parent company ran into

serious legal troubles.

 

The FBI and the Securities and Exchange Commission began investigations into the

accounting practices of Advanced Marketing Services in 2003. Three of the

company's executives ended up pleading guilty to falsifying the circulation

figures of promotional mailings sent on behalf of publishers between 2001 and

2003.

 

The company promised to restate its financial statements for those years. But it

still hadn't done so by the end of 2006, so the company's lender halted its

financing and on Dec. 29, Advanced Marketing Services filed for Chapter 11

bankruptcy.

 

Publishers Group West's clients said the bankruptcy took them by surprise,

despite Advanced Marketing Services' troubled history. Some said they didn't pay

much attention to events at the parent company because Publishers Group West was

so autonomous, well run and financially successful.

 

" Our understanding was that PGW was having a very good year this year, " said

Karen Kreiger, chief operating officer for Amber-Allen.

 

But even publishers that had closely examined the finances of Advanced Marketing

Services were taken aback. New World Library, for instance, sought access to the

company's internal financial data last summer as part of renewing its contract

with Publishers Group West. " To our accountant, the financials looked pretty

good back then, " Magruder said.

 

Until the bankruptcy, Publishers Group West's distribution process had worked

the following way:

 

Publishers would ship their newly printed books to the group's warehouse in

Indianapolis. The group would sell them to bookstores and collect payment from

the stores. Then, 90 days after the end of the month when a sale was made, the

group would send a check to the publisher.

 

The Dec. 29 bankruptcy put a hold on all payments by Advanced Marketing Services

and its subsidiaries. So publishers suddenly lost access to nearly four months'

worth of sales revenues that had been collected on their behalf by Publishers

Group West.

 

Yet they still owed printing bills for those books.

 

Bell Springs Publishing, a six-person firm in Willits (Mendocino County) that

publishes small-business accounting books, had expected to receive $50,000 from

Publishers Group West to cover a $20,000 printing bill. McSweeney's had expected

to receive $600,000 -- much of that from the sale of " What Is the What, " Dave

Eggers' new novel about a Sudanese refugee. Profits from the book had been

promised to a charity helping Sudanese refugees. With the bankruptcy, those

profits seemed to have vanished.

 

" This was probably the worst time in our history for this to happen, given the

amount we are owed, " said Eli Horowitz, publisher of McSweeney's. " It's a little

incomprehensible how that money can just disappear. "

 

There were also questions about the future of the publishers' own inventory.

Many publishers had 90 percent of their entire book stock sitting in the

Publishers Group West warehouse. Would the group continue selling books? Would

the court allow the publishers to receive any money from future sales, or would

those revenues also be frozen?

 

" We have our own small warehouse, but they have the bulk of our inventory, " said

Kreiger of Amber-Allen.

 

Rumors swirled through the blogs and Web sites of the independent book world.

Meanwhile, publishers scrambled to contain the financial damage.

 

Parallax Press called its printer to negotiate a longer payment schedule. New

World Library laid off one of its 17 employees, slashed nonessential marketing

expenses like the use of outside publicists, and capped the size of the royalty

advances it would offer authors for the foreseeable future.

 

" We went into immediate capital preservation mode, " said Magruder.

 

Then, early in January, the publishers got a bit of good news: The bankruptcy

court allowed Publishers Group West to pay publishers for new sales on a weekly

rather than 90-day schedule. So publishers would have some cash coming in the

door on a continuing basis.

 

This week, some even more promising news emerged.

 

Perseus Books Group -- a midsize New York publisher that has several small press

imprints and recently entered the distribution arena -- offered the publishers

70 cents for every dollar owed them by Publishers Group West if they would agree

to four-year distribution contracts.

 

" We'll pay 70 cents on the dollar to them, we'll also pay to move their books to

our distribution facility in Jackson, Tenn., and we'll pay PGW to continue to

operate for a five-month transition period, " said David Steinberger, chief

executive of Perseus, who flew out to the Bay Area this week to meet with

Publishers Group West staff and clients. " In return, we're asking them to extend

their contracts a little longer than (the three years that) is typical. "

 

Steinberger put the proposal together with the support of Winton, Publishers

Group West's former owner, who in a separate deal is in the process of selling

Avalon Publishing to Perseus.

 

Winton said the offer could be a lifesaver for many small presses, whose only

alternative might be to wait years for the bankruptcy case to resolve and then

receive a tiny fraction of what they were owed.

 

" To get 70 cents on the dollar in Chapter 11 is an exceptionally positive

result, and to remove yourself swiftly from the bankruptcy process is

invaluable, " Winton said.

 

The Perseus offer brought loud sighs of relief from many Publishers Group West

clients.

 

" God bless you, 70 cents on the dollar at this point in the game would be

wonderful, " said Bernard Kamoroff, vice president of Bell Springs Publishing.

" I'd even take 50 cents on the dollar. Just write me a check today. "

 

Some even saw the Perseus offer as a step up. " The possibility of associating

ourselves with an even larger distributor can only have benefits, " Masch said.

 

But this cliff-hanger remains far from its final page.

 

For one thing, Perseus says it needs the participation of 65 percent of the

Publishers Group West client base for the deal to work. The group's two largest

clients -- Avalon and Grove/Atlantic -- have already agreed. But the next few

weeks will determine whether the Perseus plan can attract that target 65

percent.

 

For another thing, the future of Publishers Group West's workforce remains up in

the air. The firm as an independent institution is most likely dead. Steinberger

has said he would like to hire many of its 100-person Berkeley staff and might

allow them to continue working in Berkeley. " We'll need a significant number of

people to make this happen, and PGW is very highly regarded, " Steinberger said.

 

But it's not clear how many of the firm's veterans would be hired, and whether

Perseus could ever replicate the culture of the old company. For better or

worse, the bankruptcy may have ended an era in independent book distribution.

 

" The way PGW operated appealed to the renegade spirit that a lot of these

smaller publishers have, " said Magruder. " It was a personalized, handheld

approach that I don't expect to find from a new distributor arrangement. "

 

 

 

--

 

Some of the books affected:

" What Is the What, " by Dave Eggers

 

" The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, " by Deepak Chopra

 

" The Four Agreements, " by Don Miguel Ruiz

 

" Back on the Fire, " by Gary Snyder

 

 

 

--

 

Who's taking the hit

These are some of the small publishers in Northern California affected by the

bankruptcy of the parent company of Publishers Group West, plus examples of a

few of their books:

 

Amber-Allen Publishing -- San Rafael ( " The Four Agreements, " by Don Miguel Ruiz)

 

Audio Partners -- Auburn (Placer County)

 

Avalon Publishing -- Emeryville ( " Back on the Fire: Essays, " by Gary Snyder)

 

Avalon Travel Publishing -- Emeryville (Moon Travel Guides)

 

Bell Springs Publishing -- Willits (Mendocino County)

 

Berkeley Hills Books -- Albany ( " Ornette Coleman: His Life and Music, " by Peter

N. Wilson)

 

Berrett-Koehler Publishers -- San Francisco ( " Managing by Values, " by Ken

Blanchard and Michael O'Connor)

 

Carousel Press -- Berkeley ( " Weekend Adventures in San Francisco and Northern

California, " by Carole Terwilliger Meyers)

 

Children's Book Press -- San Francisco

 

Cleis Press -- San Francisco ( " Sex Work: Writings by Women in the Sex Industry, "

edited by Frédérique Delacoste and Priscilla Alexander)

 

D.L. Hennessey Publishing -- Los Altos

 

Hopscotch Press -- Berkeley ( " Here Comes the Guide " wedding planning book)

 

Hunter House -- Alameda

 

Live Oak Press -- Palo Alto

 

McSweeney's Books -- San Francisco ( " What Is the What, " by Dave Eggers)

 

Moonlight Publishing -- Lafayette

 

New World Library -- Novato ( " The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, " by Deepak

Chopra)

 

North Atlantic Books -- Berkeley ( " Walter the Farting Dog, " by William

Kotzwinkle and Glenn Murray)

 

North Bay Books -- El Sobrante

 

Parallax Press -- Berkeley ( " Zen Keys: A Guide to Zen Practice, " by Thich Nhat

Hanh)

 

Penngrove Publications -- Pescadero (Bay Area Bike Trails series)

 

The Planning Shop -- Palo Alto

 

PoliPoint Press -- Sausalito ( " Jacked: How 'Conservatives' Are Picking Your

Pocket (Whether You Voted for Them or Not), " by Nomi Prins)

 

RE/Search Publications -- San Francisco

 

Ronin Publishers -- Berkeley

 

Seal Press -- Emeryville ( " The Black Women's Health Book, " edited by Evelyn

White)

 

Shelter Publications -- Bolinas

 

Ulysses Press -- Berkeley

 

E-mail Ilana DeBare at idebare.

 

Page A - 1

URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/01/27/MNG9DNQ8TM1.DTL

 

 

" Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies

in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are

cold and are not clothed. "

-- Dwight Eisenhower

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