“The publishing giant Vintage Press saw that number and realized there was a huge, previously-unrealized demand for stories like this.”
It’s the “previously-unrealized demand” that I simply don’t understand here. The numbers for romance novels took seconds to look up.
74.8 million people read at least one romance novel in 2008. (source: RWA Reader Survey) with an estimated $1.350 billion for 2013. If the author did indeed write 120 chapters, it shows that the author has the ability to produce for the publisher. Taken together with the above average number of online readers, I can’t see how this was a case of pulling the wool over the publishers eyes so much as the publisher being particularly good at finding material for their readers.
To me, it seems the demand was being realized just fine.
“The publishing giant Vintage Press saw that number and realized there was a huge, previously-unrealized demand for stories like this.”
It’s the “previously-unrealized demand” that I simply don’t understand here. The numbers for romance novels took seconds to look up.
74.8 million people read at least one romance novel in 2008. (source: RWA Reader Survey) with an estimated $1.350 billion for 2013. If the author did indeed write 120 chapters, it shows that the author has the ability to produce for the publisher. Taken together with the above average number of online readers, I can’t see how this was a case of pulling the wool over the publishers eyes so much as the publisher being particularly good at finding material for their readers.
To me, it seems the demand was being realized just fine.