Wednesday, June 14, 2006

I should have posted about this earlier ...

... Perseus Defends 'Cathy's Book' (Hat tip, Roger Miller.)

Just so you know, I got this email from Commercial Alert:

Dear book review editor:You may have heard that Running Press is publishing a new written work for teens titled “Cathy’s Book. ” This “book” is actually part of a marketing campaign for Procter & Gamble’s Cover Girl line. The book contains a prominent mention of a Cover Girl product, and the corporation will market it on this basis. According to the New York Times, a passage in “Cathy’s Book” refers to “a killer coat of Lipslicks,” which is a line of Cover Girl Lip Gloss. In the galley version, the reference was to a “killer coat of Clinique #11 ‘Black Violet’ lipstick.” But the product was changed in accordance with the marketing agreement with P&G. It is not unknown for works of fiction to advance political and other agendas, but this crosses a line. “Cathy’s Book” is in the form of a novel. But in reality it is an adjunct of a corporate marketing campaign aimed at impressionable teenagers. Its contents have been altered to that end.Will you treat this book as a novel to be reviewed, or as an advertisement, which is suitable for discussion in the business pages?We strongly urge you to choose the latter. Something large is at stake here. There is a difference between a novel and an ad; and if you do not uphold that distinction, then who will?Sincerely,Jonathan Rowe, issues director, Commercial Alert Gary Ruskin, executive director, Commercial Alert

2 comments:

  1. I read about this in Publishers Lunch. I guess it does mess with the purity of the writing, but to me it's the same as seeing product placement in a movie...no biggie!

    I can see it mattering to the 'literary' vs 'commercial' writer camps.

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  2. Anonymous9:11 AM

    I can think of lots of ways to increase an author's advance based on the type of subtle product mentions I could put in a book's text if I were a smart editor with a smart marketing department. How about a full-page advertisement on the inside cover for the hotel mentioned in a detective story? How about a photo of the lobby of a restaurant where the characters always eat dinner? A gold mine if exploited smartly, even if it is considered bad form!
    Lynne AKA The Wicked Witch of Publishing

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