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Michael Pietsch, chief executive of Hachette. Publishers know that whatever terms Hachette ends up with, they will all get. Keith Hayes |
As a young book editor at Little, Brown & Company in 1992,
Michael Pietsch paid $80,000 — $45,000 more than the next-highest bidder — for
a postmodern novel by a little-known writer named David Foster Wallace.
He
spent years urging Mr. Wallace to cut hundreds of pages from the sprawling
manuscript and impose at least some structure on the disparate plot strands.
The book, “Infinite Jest,” was
finally published in 1996 and became an instant literary sensation.
Mr.
Pietsch is now chief executive of Little, Brown’s parent company, the Hachette
Book Group, and is engaged in a very different sort of
battle — not with a
fragile author, but with one of the most powerful corporations in the United
States: Amazon.
As the
first chief executive of a major publishing house to negotiate new terms with
Amazon since the Justice Department sued five publishers in
2012 for conspiring to raise e-book prices, Mr. Pietsch finds himself fighting
not just for the future of Hachette, but for that of every publisher that works
with Amazon.
“In a
sense, Michael Pietsch is like ‘Horatius at the Bridge,’ ” says the
literary agent and former Amazon executive Laurence J. Kirshbaum, referring to
the soldier of legend who single-handedly saved ancient Rome by fighting off an
invading army. “He is carrying the rest of the industry on his back.”
Because
Hachette and Amazon have signed confidentiality agreements as part of their
negotiations, the particulars of their dispute have been kept secret. But
inside the publishing world, the consensus is that Amazon wants to offer deep
discounts on Hachette’s electronic books, and that the negotiations are not
going well.
The
proudly customer-friendly Amazon is delaying shipments and preventing preorders
of certain Hachette books, suggesting to potentially frustrated shoppers that
they buy them elsewhere. Mr. Pietsch (pronounced peach), ordinarily easygoing
and accessible, is refusing to talk to the news media and has told employees to
do the same.
There
is little question that Mr. Pietsch, 56, would not be squaring off against the
country’s largest bookseller if it were not an absolute necessity for his
company’s bottom line. Friends say he never wanted the negotiations to become
public. But now that they have, everyone in the book industry is watching and
waiting.
“We’re
all Hachette now,” one publisher joked last week at the trade fair BookExpo
America in Manhattan.
Given
his background, Mr. Pietsch, is an unlikely figure to find himself in such a
position. He is trained as an editor, not a businessman. He took over Hachette
in April 2013, trading a life of poring over manuscripts for one of
scrutinizing spreadsheets.
Like a
player-coach, though, he has continued to acquire and edit a small handful of
books, most notably Donna Tartt’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, “The
Goldfinch.” He has built an all-star stable of authors that includes highbrow
writers as well as mass-market giants like Michael Connelly and James Patterson.
It is
unusual for a lifelong editor to become C.E.O. of his own publishing company,
but over the years, Mr. Pietsch had developed a reputation as both a man of
letters and a shrewd deal maker. The combination could serve him well in his
dispute with Amazon.
“While
I don’t envy his position in this street fight, I think he’s exactly the right
guy to be conducting it,” said Sloan Harris, an agent at International Creative
Management.
The son of an Army officer, Mr. Pietsch grew up in Norfolk, Va.
He attended Harvard, where he concentrated in English and wrote his senior
thesis on Chaucer’s 14th-century work “The Canterbury Tales.” During his senior
year, Mr. Pietsch interned at a publisher based in Boston, David R. Godine, and
liked it so much that he stayed on after graduating.
He
eventually moved to New York and spent six years at Scribner — among other
things, editing an unpublished Ernest Hemingway manuscript — before joining
Little, Brown as an editor in 1991. Over the next 10 years, Mr. Pietsch helped
transform the company from a sleepy, largely literary house, to a modern,
commercial publisher.
Mr.
Pietsch worked his way up through the ranks there, becoming editor in chief in
1998 and publisher in 2001. Even as a publisher, he was known for being
hands-on. After Mr. Wallace committed suicide in 2008, Mr. Pietsch
painstakingly assembled the thousands of typed and handwritten manuscript pages
that Mr. Wallace had left behind into a posthumously published novel. He also
wrote the introduction to that book, “The Pale King.”
A
resident of Sleepy Hollow, N.Y., Mr. Pietsch is married to Janet Vultee
Pietsch, a children’s book editor. As Hachette’s chief executive, he now
oversees not just Little, Brown but all of the publisher’s imprints, which
together put out about 1,000 books every year.
Hachette
has been largely silent since the dispute broke out into the public last month,
though it did issue a public statement — written by Mr. Pietsch — that
underscored its view that books deserve to be treated differently from hard
drives, diapers and the countless other products that Amazon sells.
“Amazon
indicates that it considers books to be like any other consumer good,” the
statement said. “They are not.”
Mr.
Pietsch received support from one of his authors, Mr. Patterson, who went on a
tirade during a luncheon speech last week at BookExpo. “Amazon also, as you
know, wants to control bookselling, book buying, and even book publishing, and
that is a national tragedy,” he said.
Mr.
Pietsch’s central role in his industry’s dispute with Amazon seems to be
nothing more than sheer happenstance. As part of Hachette’s antitrust
settlement with the government, the company agreed to allow Amazon to continue
to discount the price of e-books for two years. That agreement has expired, and
for some reason — no one is sure why — Hachette is the first publisher to find
itself in the position of negotiating a new one.
Other
publishers are holding their breath. It is in their interests for Mr. Pietsch
to drive a hard bargain, and they are cheering him on, but silently. They have
their own relationships with Amazon to protect, and they do not want anything
they say to be construed as antagonistic, all the more so now that Amazon has
demonstrated its willingness to punish booksellers when negotiations become
contentious.
If
Mr. Pietsch is a hero to some, he is a reluctant one. “He doesn’t want to be
seen as the warrior against Amazon,” said Mr. Wallace’s agent, Bonnie Nadell,
who has known Mr. Pietsch for 25 years. “I think that makes him incredibly
uncomfortable.”
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