From: Tony Sanfilippo <[log in to unmask]> Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2013 08:43:19 -0400 Hello, On January 22nd I received the following set of guidelines from Baker & Taylor/YBP concerning the presentation of our titles to our B&T/YBP buyers. This is information they are now expecting publishers to provide. I'm not quite sure what they thought our motivation would be to provide this information, but they have asked. Note the very first criterion: "Content/Format that significantly affect sales through YBP" During YBP’s Profiling process, our bibliographers assign “tags” to a book’s record describing its content. Many libraries limit their acquisitions of these kinds of material, so providing this information in (or with) a book’s announcement is essential to accurate ordering. Revised Dissetration: Master’s thesis or doctoral dissertation which has undergone some revision prior to publication.. If it is not stated somewhere in the book (usually the Preface, Introduction, or Acknowledgements) that this began as the author’s dissertation, then we do not assign this tag and therefore it is not necessary to inform us of this information. Unrevised Dissertation: Master’s thesis or doctoral dissertation with no revisions. If it is not stated somewhere in the book that this is the author’s actual dissertation, then this tag is not assigned. Conference Monograph: A book based on a conference, symposium, work-shop, etc., where papers have been edited and new, related material added. If the conference was held 2 or more years prior to publication of the book, a “+2” tag is added, which can limit sales even further. Conference Proceeding: Literal or barely edited record of a meeting or meetings, or papers presented at those meetings. If the conference was held 2 or more years prior to publication of the book, a “+2” tag is added, which is even more limiting. Personal Narrative: Non-fiction relating one person’s experiences, which we refer to as a “first person nobody” book. Not to be confused with biographies, autobiographies, letters/diaries, memoirs of noted people or historical accounts. Textbook: For use in a classroom or in a course of study, often including summaries, sidebars, test questions, and other pedagogical features. Can also be used as a reference work by professionals. Abridgement: Truncated version of the original work. Museum Publication: Catalogs of collections and/or traveling exhibitions. Reprint: Previously published book. We don’t handle reprints until the original edition is 10 or more years old. In this case, it can be very helpful for you to indicate the date and the ISBN of the original publication. Collections: We have 4 collection definitions. I’ve noted all below to show the difference. The first two will generally not limit sales; the second two can be very limiting. Collection (one author): Material by one author, the preponderance of which is first published elsewhere. Most Variorum titles get tagged with this. Collection/New: Collection of works brought together by an editor or compiler. The preponderance of essays, articles, etc., should not be previously published. Can apply to previously-published literary works now brought together in a new form with notes or other new material. Collection/Anthology: Collections of works brought together in the same book for the first time by an editor or compiler, where the majority of the works are reprinted from various other sources (includes gov’t documents, but not material only available on the internet). The works can be related by theme or form. Periodical Anthology: Collection of articles reprinted from several issues of one periodical. Thanks for your thoughts, Tony Sanfilippo Assistant Director Penn State Press On Mon, Apr 15, 2013 at 9:27 PM, LIBLICENSE <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > From: Rick Anderson <[log in to unmask]> > Date: Sun, 14 Apr 2013 23:45:24 +0000 > > When I worked for an academic bookseller that provided approval plan > services to libraries, I don't think I knew of any who excluded > revised dissertations from their purchase programs. Most did restrict > UNrevised dissertations, however. > > This was 20 years ago, though, so it's possible that restrictions on > revised dissertations were more common than I remember. > > Rick Anderson > Interim Dean > J. Willard Marriott Library > University of Utah>