SWM wrote:You clearly do not know the publishing industry. There is FAR more involved than you think. And it takes a lot longer to print and bind thousands of books than you think.
All but one of the books I listed above are from Baen. The only series that Weber sends to any other publisher is the Safehold series, through Tor/Forge. Tor/Forge handles hundreds of authors; they can only do about one, maybe two, David Weber books in a year.
Baen publishes only six or seven books a month. And that includes new editions or paperback editions of previously published books. So that's about three or four new titles a month. That's all they can handle. Of the 38 books Baen is publishing from May to October, 6 are from David Weber. The remaining 22 books are split among 20 other authors!
Are you a publisher?
All print these days is automated. It can run day and night - and no doubt does. While Baen tends to *highlight* 6 books or so each month, I'm not entirely convinced that's all they actually *print*; just the ones that are totally new or else reprints they think will have a good audience. I would suspect they print more, though the rest are probably reprints that they *don't* think people are going to be so much on the lookout for. "Restock", more or less.
Almost 30 years ago I worked for a major telephone company, and using one (large) laser printer and blank paper they printed roughly 100,000 multi-page (around 9 or 10 pages each) bills a night. That would roughly correspond to the pages of 1000 books - using only one printer for around 8 hours. If they'd had 10 printers and ran bills 24 hours a day, they'd have printed even more.
Like I noted, this is no longer the days of typesetting, inking, and printing multiple copies of a page at a time, collating them, and then binding them.
It may not be as fast as burning CD's and DVD's; but it's not the labor intensive process it used to be, either.
I suspect that if there's any real limiting factor at Baen, it's the editors and proofreaders, and, frankly, from what I've seen to date, they might as well just publish the book as it comes from the author. I've seen some of the same errors in the allegedly "unproofed" eARC's they sell as in the supposedly "proofed and edited" paperbacks I buy. Makes one wonder just *why* they even have those folks - or at least why they pay them, anyway. Maybe they just have one; and they're not really into science fiction?