Rowling Book Skyrockets to Instant Hit
âThe Cuckooâs Callingâ Soars When Writer Is Revealed
By the end of last week, âThe Cuckooâs Calling,â by the debut mystery novelist Robert Galbraith, was as good as dead.
Bookstores with unsold copies on hand were contemplating shipping them back to the publisher. Reviews, while generally positive, had tapered off. According to Nielsen BookScan, which tracks about 85 percent of print sales, only about 500 copies had sold in the United States since the book went on sale in April.
Then J. K. Rowling, easily one of the most bankable authors on the planet, admitted over the weekend to The Sunday Times of London that she â" and not a male military veteran, as initial information from the publisher claimed â" was the real author.
That has left the publisher and bookstores with an entirely different problem: getting copies of what has suddenly become the hottest book of the summer into the hands of Ms. Rowlingâs impatient fans.
The publisher has also had to contend with the suspicion that Ms. Rowlingâs camp was secretly responsible for leaking her identity. Speculation was rampant in the publishing world that the revelation was part of a big publicity ploy to help sell books â" so much so that Ms. Rowlingâs spokeswoman, Nicky Stonehill, was compelled to release a tightly worded statement denying it.
âWe can confirm the story in The Sunday Times was correct, and it was not a leak or elaborate marketing campaign to boost sales,â she said in an e-mail on Tuesday. âWe are not commenting any further.â
The story of âThe Cuckooâs Callingâ began to unravel last week when The Sunday Times of London received a tip via Twitter that it was Ms. Rowling, the author of the hugely popular Harry Potter series, who had written the book, and not Robert Galbraith, who was identified in publicity materials as a military veteran writing about his own experiences. Ms. Rowling confirmed the paperâs suspicion, saying that writing the book under a pseudonym was a âliberatingâ act.
âIt has been wonderful to publish without hype or expectation, and pure pleasure to get feedback under a different name,â she said.
Since then, Little, Brown & Company, her publisher, appears to have been scrambling to meet demand. Nicole Dewey, a spokeswoman for Little, Brown, said that on Monday the publisher began to print an additional 300,000 copies, a huge undertaking that takes several days. Ms. Dewey said the books are expected to start shipping some time this week. That isnât soon enough for many bookstores, which are locked in a fierce competition with Amazon, and with the e-book, which, compared with hardcovers, is inexpensive and instantly available. (The hardcover list price of âThe Cuckooâs Callingâ is $26; a Kindle or Nook edition is $9.99.)
In Austin, Tex., customers have stopped by the BookPeople store asking for the title, only to be told that it is out of stock. Forty copies are on order, said a bookseller there, Carolyn Tracy, adding that at least eight people had asked to reserve copies.
âWhat I think will be interesting is whether this is going to be a flash in the pan,â said Cathy Langer, the lead buyer at the Tattered Cover in Denver. âAre people going to want it now and then forget about it later?â
Gayle Shanks, an owner of Changing Hands bookstore in Tempe, Ariz., said that after learning Ms. Rowling was the bookâs author, she quickly ordered 25 copies, but was told not to expect them to arrive for at least 10 to 14 days.
âPeople who canât get it as a book are going to run and get it as an e-book,â Ms. Shanks said. âBy the time the books are back, two weeks from now, most people are going to have read it on some device. That really concerns me.â
Amazon, which sells more books than any other retailer in the country, is also out of stock of print books, telling customers online that âThe Cuckooâs Callingâ will ship in one to three weeks.
In the meantime, the book has risen to No. 1 on Amazonâs best-seller list. And copies of the first edition of âThe Cuckooâs Callingâ in hardcover are floating around eBay at considerable markups: on Tuesday afternoon one copy in Britain had risen to more than $2,300, with 67 bids. Another copy in the United States was available for a more modest $41, with shipping costing $3.99.
Robert McDonald, a bookseller at the Book Stall in Winnetka, Ill., said this act of literary deception was reminiscent of the days when Stephen King, yearning to step away temporarily from his own celebrity, wrote books pseudonymously as Richard Bachman.
Publishing executives harboring suspicions about the timing of the leak pointed to several bits of striking synchronicity. The paperback edition of âThe Casual Vacancy,â Ms. Rowlingâs first adult novel, which was published last year, is to be released next week and will benefit from the attention paid to Ms. Rowlingâs new book. (âThe Casual Vacancyâ was panned by some critics but emerged a commercial success, selling more than 2.5 million copies.)
In addition, the news that Ms. Rowling wrote âThe Cuckooâs Callingâ broke over the weekend, ensuring that the subsequent rush of sales would occur in the same calendar week â" ideal for the purposes of best-seller lists, which typically collect numbers from Sunday through Saturday.
Exhibit A Books, a crime fiction imprint, tweeted on Monday: âI wonder what evil spell was used to out J K Rowling at the real author behind The Cuckooâs Calling? Maybe publicitystuntiarmus?!â
Some people involved with the publicity windup for âThe Cuckooâs Callingâ said they saw nothing amiss.
Owen Laukkanen, an author asked to provide a blurb for the book, said he had no idea Ms. Rowling was involved.
âThe book was such an unflinching portrayal of British celebrity culture,â he said in an interview. âIt was clearly written by a talented writer. But Iâm gobsmacked that it was J. K. Rowling.â
