Amazon, Hachette end months-long dispute

November 14, 2014 03:04 am | Updated 03:04 am IST - NEW YORK

Setting aside their hostilities, Amazon.com and Hachette  have signed a new agreement for e-books.

Setting aside their hostilities, Amazon.com and Hachette have signed a new agreement for e-books.

One of publishing’s nastiest, most high-profile conflicts, the months-long standoff between Amazon.com and Hachette Book Group, is ending.

Amazon and Hachette announced a multiyear agreement on Thursday. With e-book revenues reportedly the key issue, Amazon had removed pre-order tags for Hachette books, reduced discounts and slowed deliveries.

“This is great news for writers,” Hachette CEO Michael Pietsch said in a statement. “The new agreement will benefit Hachette authors for years to come. It gives Hachette enormous marketing capability with one of our most important bookselling partners.”

David Naggar, an Amazon vice president, said the company was pleased that the agreement “includes specific financial incentives for Hachette to deliver lower prices, which we believe will be a great win for readers and authors alike.”

The agreement takes effect early next year. Restrictions on Hachette books are being lifted immediately, according to the announcement, although delays on Carlos Santana’s “The Universal Tone,” J.D. Salinger’s “Nine Stories” and other works remained in place two hours after the news broke.

The Amazon-Hachette dispute had dominated publishing headlines and conversations for much of the year. James Patterson, John Green and hundreds of authors from various publishers had condemned Amazon, and Hachette author Stephen Colbert mocked the online retailer, which prides itself on customer service. Meanwhile, Hugh Howey, J.A. Konrath and other writers published by Amazon had blamed Hachette and praised Amazon for keeping prices down and allowing authors unhappy with traditional publishers to release their work elsewhere.

Amazon and Hachette had exchanged increasingly hostile press statements.

Neither side had seemed to benefit. Hachette sales on Amazon.com, the country’s biggest bookseller and dominant e-book seller, had dropped sharply. Amazon, meanwhile, issued a disappointing earnings report last month, although the impact of Hachette books was unclear.

Douglas Preston, a Hachette writer who had organized a public campaign against Amazon, wrote in an email on Thursday that he was relieved by the news and hoped that “if disagreements arise in the future between Amazon and publishers, Amazon will never again seek to gain leverage by sanctioning books and hurting authors.”

Under the new agreement, Hachette set prices for e-books, “and will also benefit from better terms when it delivers lower prices for readers.”

Amazon last month reached a multiyear deal with Simon & Schuster, another publisher that was sued in 2012 and eventually settled. Like Hachette, Simon & Schuster will set e-book prices, a top priority for publishers. The terms also included a priority for Amazon- “financial incentive for Simon & Schuster to deliver lower prices for readers.”

Precise numbers were not announced for the Hachette or Simon & Schuster deals, but Howey noted in his email on Thursday that for authors who self-publish through Amazon the retailer takes a higher percentage of revenues when e-books are above a certain price.

Thursday’s news raised expectations that agreements with the remaining major New York publishers, HarperCollins, Macmillan and Penguin Random House, can be achieved without disruption.

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