Perceptions of Price

Over the past few years, I’ve seen more than a few complaints about the cost of books, particularly the cost of mass market paperbacks. So I did a little analysis. My first book, The Fires of Paratime, was published in 1982 as a mass market paperback, for a price of $2.95 (which would theoretically cost $9.81 in today’s dollars). In 1993, Tor published The Towers of The Sunset (the second Recluce book) in mass market paperback format for $6.99 (costing $12.50 in today’s dollars).

But those comparisons fail to take into account the length of books. The Fires of Paratime was only 239 pages long (for a price of 1.2 cents per page), while The Towers of the Sunset was 536 pages long (for a price of 1.3 cents per page).

Over the next ten years, the price of my books increased fairly consistently at the rate of inflation while the price per page rose to around 1.5 cents. That per-page-price remained around that level until 2023, when it jumped 33% to 2.0 cents per page. Even so, that increase didn’t cover inflation. When my last mass market paperback was published (Contrarian in 2024), it listed at $14.99, but for Tor to cover the increased inflationary costs would have required a price of $16.25, which most readers are unwilling or unable to pay without sacrificing something else.

Historically speaking, the price of paperback books has pretty much tracked inflation over the past sixty years – until 2023. While a mass market paperback still remains the same in inflation adjusted dollars as it has for the last twenty years, the income of the average middle-class or poorer American hasn’t kept up with inflation.

And that’s not a problem that the publishing industry can solve, because the industry is low margin, where the majority of editors make less than legal secretaries.

3 thoughts on “Perceptions of Price”

  1. KevinJ says:

    Just a data point:

    Agatha Christie
    Remembered Death
    Pocket Books, 3rd printing, 214 pp.
    1959
    $0.35

    (Inherited from my mom.)

    1. KevinJ says:

      Tiny bit of research:

      bls.gov:
      $0.35 in 1959 = $3.92 in 2025
      officialdata.org:
      $0.35 in 1959 = $3.90 in 2025

      Guess paperbacks were a better buy that far back, anyway…

  2. Elena says:

    It’s the e-book prices that are really shocking now though.

    A large range of your e-books are listing at $21.99 CDN on Kobo. Thing is, in 2019 those same books were sitting at $8.99 or so (I double-checked against the receipts in my e-mail for specific titles). In 2022, it was $12.99 or so.

    Just took a look at the hardcopy prices and just about choked. I’m thinking some of it is the specific publisher though, as I went and looked at a few other authors I follow too. For comparisons, the new Mercedes Lackey novels are listing at $37-$39 apiece hardcover. Those are both DAW and Baen books, and the paperbacks are all over the map from $12 and going up, though the trade paperbacks are pretty expensive (27-30-ish).

    Indigo is listing your paperbacks starting at $31 and going up to almost fifty for some!

    Granted this is CAD and I have no idea what the ever-changing tariff landscape is doing to publishing and book-buying.

    I don’t even want to try and say it’s overpriced or not. I don’t have the knowledge to make a judgement. I can say I’m thinking twice about my book-buying and a lot of potential purchases end up waiting for sale prices. I only hope that doesn’t impact what the authors make.

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