reid@glacier.ARPA (Brian Reid) (03/23/86)
I just heard from a cookbook editor at a large U.S. publishing firm (Crown). She told me this: About 10 years ago we had "the great metric scare" in the cookbook industry. Publishers believed that they were going to have to go metric, as did food packers, and there was a rush of activity to produce metric cookbooks for the U.S. audience. Nobody bought them. Absolutely nobody. They just plain did not sell. There are 75 million cooks in the U.S., and only a few hundred thousand of them were willing to abandon intuitive measurements for metric. Cookbooks are the third-largest category of book sales in the U.S. (behind religious tracts and bibles, and romance novels). During the Great Metric Scare the sales of cookbooks fell to below 20th place. The publishers took a horrible loss, sold the books to remainder houses, and went back to the way they have always done it, which sells. They have no intention whatsoever of trying metric cookbooks again anytime soon. -- Brian Reid decwrl!glacier!reid Stanford reid@SU-Glacier.ARPA