Wednesday, December 31, 2025

MEDIA Dragons, Sex and the Bible: What Drove the Book Business This Year


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Nonfiction and Y.A. are hurting, but genre fiction and the Good Book are booming. Here’s how book sales looked in 2025.


This year brought more blockbuster books about sex and magic along with best sellers nobody saw coming. Yet while sales are solid and bookstores are generally flourishing, the book business still faces a dizzying set of challenges.
Rising costs ate into profits. Nonprofit presses lost federal funding. A.I. disrupted online search results and flooded Amazon with poorly written copycat books and slapdash genre fiction, making it harder for books written by humans to stand out from the slop. Major retailers ordered fewer books than they used to, and there weren’t as many companies distributing books to stores. And book bansthreatened to limit collections in schools and libraries.
“The industry itself is in transformation, which is always very challenging,” said Dominique Raccah, the publisher of Sourcebooks.
Still, people are reading — or at least buying books. Print sales are mostly stable, totaling around 707 million units in 2025 through mid-December, according to the most recent figures available from industry tracker Circana BookScan. That’s only three million less than the pandemic peak in 2021, and 57 million copies more than in 2019.
But what are people reading, and why? Here what you need to know.
Yes! Readers bought about 184 million print adult fiction books this year. That’s roughly as many as they bought last year and 66 million more than in 2019, the last year before the pandemic gave book sales a jolt.
Some of this year’s biggest books were genre novels. Freida McFadden’s thrillers sold more than 5.5 million print copies, while Rebecca Yarros’s best-selling romantasy series about dragon riders continued to soar.
But some newcomers and smaller novels did well too.

Virginia Evans’s debut novel, “The Correspondent,” sold more than half a million copies this year, “defying all the metrics,” as the Crown fiction publisher Amy Einhorn, who acquired the novel, put it. Michael Reynolds, the executive publisher of Europa Editions, said his publishing house had a strong year in part because of “Mona’s Eyes,” by Thomas Schlesser, which is on track to be one of Barnes & Noble’s best-selling books of the year.
“Some of the literary imprints at the corporate houses are feeling a little reticent with certain categories, moving away from more literary titles or translations,” Reynolds said. “It feels that maybe the independent publishers are somehow benefiting from that.”
What about nonfiction?Nonfiction had a more difficult year. Among this year’s top 10 best-selling print nonfiction titles, only one came out in 2025 — Kamala Harris’s campaign memoir, “107 Days.” That stands in stark contrast to the wave of political blockbusters that swept best-seller lists after the 2016 election.
The other nine nonfiction best sellers this year are all backlist titles, meaning they were published in previous years. Mel Robbins’s self-help blockbuster “The Let Them Theory,” which came out in 2024, led the pack. It vastly outpaced other self-help titles, selling more than 2.7 million print copies.
“She’s essentially carrying the entire self-help category right now,” said Brenna Connor, an industry analyst with Circana BookScan.
For the moment, popular backlist titles have kept print sales for adult nonfiction down just around 2 percent from last year. But the decline in sales of new nonfiction might reflect a changing information ecosystem. Some nonfiction readers may be switching to audiobooks over print. And people looking for information can now easily turn to chatbots, YouTube, podcasts and other free online sources.
What else is struggling?

Young adult fiction sales have fallen sharply, especially if you exclude sales of books by Suzanne Collins, whose best seller “Sunrise on the Reaping,” a Hunger Games prequel, sold around two million print copies. Setting Collins’s sales aside, Y.A. fiction sales are down 12 percent this year compared with last year, according to BookScanYes! Readers bought about 184 million print adult fiction books this year. That’s roughly as many as they bought last year and 66 million more than in 2019, the last year before the pandemic gave book sales a jolt.
Some of this year’s biggest books were genre novels. Freida McFadden’s thrillers sold more than 5.5 million print copies, while Rebecca Yarros’s best-selling romantasy series about dragon riders continued to soar.
But some newcomers and smaller novels did well too.

Virginia Evans’s debut novel, “The Correspondent,” sold more than half a million copies this year, “defying all the metrics,” as the Crown fiction publisher Amy Einhorn, who acquired the novel, put it. Michael Reynolds, the executive publisher of Europa Editions, said his publishing house had a strong year in part because of “Mona’s Eyes,” by Thomas Schlesser, which is on track to be one of Barnes & Noble’s best-selling books of the year.

“Some of the literary imprints at the corporate houses are feeling a little reticent with certain categories, moving away from more literary titles or translations,” Reynolds said. “It feels that maybe the independent publishers are somehow benefiting from that.”

What about nonfiction?

Nonfiction had a more difficult year. Among this year’s top 10 best-selling print nonfiction titles, only one came out in 2025 — Kamala Harris’s campaign memoir, “107 Days.” That stands in stark contrast to the wave of political blockbusters that swept best-seller lists after the 2016 election.
The other nine nonfiction best sellers this year are all backlist titles, meaning they were published in previous years. Mel Robbins’s self-help blockbuster “The Let Them Theory,” which came out in 2024, led the pack. It vastly outpaced other self-help titles, selling more than 2.7 million print copies.
“She’s essentially carrying the entire self-help category right now,” said Brenna Connor, an industry analyst with Circana BookScan.

For the moment, popular backlist titles have kept print sales for adult nonfiction down just around 2 percent from last year. But the decline in sales of new nonfiction might reflect a changing information ecosystem. Some nonfiction readers may be switching to audiobooks over print. And people looking for information can now easily turn to chatbots, YouTube, podcasts and other free online sources.

What else is struggling?

Young adult fiction sales have fallen sharply, especially if you exclude sales of books by Suzanne Collins, whose best seller “Sunrise on the Reaping,” a Hunger Games prequel, sold around two million print copies. Setting Collins’s sales aside, Y.A. fiction sales are down 12 percent this year compared with last year, according to BookScan

But Kristin Bartelme, a senior vice president of marketing at the book distributor ReaderLink, which stocks big-box stores and pharmacy chains, said that the influence of BookTok is starting to wane. “There have definitely been books here and there,” she said, “but not to the level of Colleen Hoover or Rebecca Yarros.”

What else is selling?
Romance sales are still rising, though the genre isn’t growing at the meteoric rate of recent years. According to BookScan, romance sales rose around 5 percent this year over last, due largely to blockbuster sales of Yarros’s “Onyx Storm.”
Another growth area is Bible sales, which are up over the past few years — a likely sign of some Americans’ growing interest in faith and spirituality — and jumped about 12 percent over last year. And increased interest from a new generation of comics readers helped boost sales at comic book stores by 27 percent through the first eight months of the year, according to a report from the comics industry publication ICv2.

How are print books doing?
One prediction that appears overblown is the idea that readers would fully adopt digital book formats, causing sales of print books to plummet the way sales of physical newspapers have. But people seem to like reading paper books, which make up roughly three-quarters of book sales, according to the Association of American Publishers.

At the same time, sales of e-books have shrunk, even after all but replacing the mass market paperback during the 2010s. Since 2016, e-books dropped from 17 percent to 11 percent of trade publishing revenue, according to data from the A.A.P. that looked at the first 10 months of each year. But revenue from e-books this year was about the same as it was last year.
Audiobooks also performed about the same during the first 10 months of 2025 as they did in the same period in 2024. Over the last decade, though, audiobook revenue has essentially quadrupled.
Audiobook sales tend to excite publishers because they typically don’t just replace print sales. Alongside readers who wouldn’t pick up a book at all if they couldn’t listen to it while commuting or doing the dishes, audiobooks also appeal to habitual readers, who often buy the same book in print and audio. 

What about bookstores?

Physical bookstores were also once assumed to be marching inexorably toward extinction. Reports of their death were greatly exaggerated.

This year, 422 newly opened stores joined the American Booksellers Association — nearly a hundred more than joined last year. Barnes & Noble added 55 stores around the country and Books-A-Million added 18. By comparison, Books-A-Million opened seven new stores in 2024.
Genre-specific bookshops are also thriving. New stores popped up across the country, including Spicy Librarian, a romance bookstore in Denver, and The Twisted Spine, a horror bookstore in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

“It’s exciting to see so many people shopping in alignment with their values, and I see that reflected in the tremendous support communities have given indie bookstores this past year,” said Allison Hill, the C.E.O. of the A.B.A. “In some ways, I think that’s a response to the turmoil of 2025 in this country and reflects a backlash against billionaires and algorithms. Indie bookstores are proving to be an antidote for the time we’re living in.”
Elizabeth A. Harris covers books and the publishing industry, reporting on industry news and examining the broader cultural impact of books. She is also an author.
 
Alexandra Alter writes about books, publishing and the literary world for The Times.
Ima 

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

An amateur codebreaker may have just solved the Black Dahlia and Zodiac killings

Stock Market Crash: The 1929 Warning That Looks Like 2026 Share Talk


       Bestselling in ... the UK

       They've released the list of The Sunday Times top 50 bestselling books of 2025 (possibly paywalled ?) -- with actual sales numbers !
       The top-selling title was (is ? the year isn't over yet ...) Richard Osman's The Impossible Fortune, with 391,429 copies shifted; four more titles sold over 300,000 copies.
       Two of the top fifty are under review at the complete review: Yuzuki Asako's Butter (at number 35, with 152,060 copies sold) and Robert Harris' Precipice (at number 47, with 129,934 copies sold).



Stephen Miller calls on CBS News to fire ‘60 Minutes’ producers over ‘revolt’ The Hill. Pass the popcorn. Looks like Miller never heard of the Streisand effect



An amateur codebreaker may have just solved the Black Dahlia and Zodiac killings Los Angeles Times


What if we taxed what people spend, not what they earn?


What 1,000 pages of documents tell us about DOGE

The Verge [no paywall]: “As Brendan Carr heads to Capitol Hill, newly released documents still don’t say much about what DOGE did at the FCC.


The USA’s Censorship and Surveillance Plot is Working

Privacy Guides sits down with technology journalist Taylor Lorenz to decipher a slate of bills – including KOSA, the SCREEN Act, the App Store Accountability Act, and ongoing efforts to repeal Section 230 – being fast-tracked through Congress which threaten free speech, privacy, and your right to freely access information on the internet. There are more resources put together by ‪@FightfortheFuture‬at https://www.badinternetbills.com covering these bills. Check out their site and contact your representatives while you listen to this interview! Guest: Taylor Lorenz ‪@TaylorLorenz‬(she/her) Hosts: Nate Bartram (he/him), Jonah Aragon (he/him) Writer: Nate Bartram Editors: Nate Bartram, Jordan Warne (they/them) Executive Producer: Jonah Aragon.

  • Visit our website: https://www.privacyguides.org ; YouTube is known for silent censorship and general privacy malfeasance. If you want to discuss this video you can do so on our forum at https://discuss.privacyguides.net in addition to commenting here, and you can follow our channel on the fediverse at: https://neat.tube/c/privacyguides/videos
  • Have a question, comment, or tip for us? You can securely reach us on Signal at @privacyguides.01 https://www.privacyguides.org/en/about/ 00:00 Introduction 00:19 Bad Internet Bills 02:46 Introduction: Taylor Lorenz 03:52 Repealing Section 230 04:57What is Section 230? 09:37 How Does Section 230 Protect Small Websites? 11:04 How Does Section 230 Relate to Privacy? 12:48 What is the SCREEN Act? 17:13 How Would Identity Verification Work? 20:15 Identity Verification is Already Happening 22:02 What is KOSA? 23:02 KOSA is Bad For Everyone 27:03 How Would KOSA Hurt Small Websites? 29:26 KOSA Would Censor Everyone 32:56 Final Thoughts & BadInternetBills 34:48 
  • Privacy Guides is a nonprofit project dedicated to promoting privacy, best cybersecurity practices, and digital rights. As a part of MAGIC Grants, a 501(c)(3) public charity, your donation to support our cause may be tax deductible.

Flock Exposed Its AI-Powered Cameras to the Internet. We Tracked Ourselves.

404 Media: “I am standing on the corner of Harris Road and Young Street outside of the Crossroads Business Park in Bakersfield, California, looking up at a Flock surveillance camera bolted high above a traffic signal. On my phone, I am watching myself in real time as the camera records and livestreams me—without any password or login—to the open internet. I wander into the intersection, stare at the camera and wave. On the livestream, I can see myself clearly. 


Hundreds of miles away, my colleagues are remotely watching me too through the exposed feed. Flock left livestreams and administrator control panels for at least 60 of its AI-enabled Condor cameras around the country exposed to the open internet, where anyone could watch them, download 30 days worth of video archive, and change settings, see log files, and run diagnostics. Unlike many of Flock’s cameras, which are designed to capture license plates as people drive by, Flock’s Condor cameras are pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras designed to record and track people, not vehicles. 

Condor cameras can be set to automatically zoom in on people’s faces as they walk through a parking lot, down a public street, or play on a playground, or they can be controlled manually, according to marketing material on Flock’s website. 


We watched Condor cameras zoom in on a woman walking her dog on a bike path in suburban Atlanta; a camera followed a man walking through a Macy’s parking lot in Bakersfield; surveil children swinging on a swingset at a playground; and film high-res video of people sitting at a stoplight in traffic. In one case, we were able to watch a man rollerblade down Brookhaven, Georgia’s Peachtree Creek Greenway bike path. The Flock camera zoomed in on him and tracked him as he rolled past. Minutes later, he showed up on another exposed camera livestream further down the bike path. The camera’s resolution was good enough that we were able to see that, when he stopped beneath one of the cameras, he was watching rollerblading videos on his phone…”

Youse - Interpol announces 574 arrests across Africa for cybercrime

The nine Sydney councils where the CEOs are paid more than $500,000 
Cindy Yin December 30, 2025 

Chief executives and general managers at Sydney councils took home on average more than $480,000 a year and more than four in five bosses were paid more than NSW Premier Chris Minns. 
Nine out of 34 Sydney councils paid their chief executives more than $500,000. Minns takes home $431,540 a year. 
Senior ministers are paid $344,729 and MPs are paid $178,616. Analysis of remuneration figures from councils’ 2024-25 annual reports reveals the median pay package for general managers was about $464,000, including base salary, superannuation, fringe benefits tax and non-cash benefits.



In joint operation Interpol announces 574 arrests across Africa for cybercrime; including BEC gang in Senegal and ransomware operation in Ghana
 
Financial Times video program on spies, scam compounds, online gambling, transnational crime and triads (30 minutes)
 


Georgia: DOJ seizes stolen password database used to take over bank accounts; at least $28 million stolen; gang used fake websites of real banks and harvested log in information
 
FTC releases new Data Spotlight on home rental fraud
  • Since 2000 65,000 rental frauds reported to the FTC
  • Losses of $65 million; median loss $1000
  • Those 18-29 three times more likely to lose money
  • See my in depth study of this issue for the BBB in 2019
 Wired: Chinese crypto scammers on Telegram are fueling the biggest darknet markets ever
 

Fraud Studies: Here are links to the studies I’ve written for the Better Business Bureau: puppy fraudromance fraud; BEC fraudsweepstakes/lottery fraud,  tech support fraudromance fraud money mulescrooked movers, government impostersonline vehicle sale scamsrental fraud, gift cards,  free trial offer frauds,  job scams,  online shopping fraud,  fake check fraud and crypto scams
 
Fraud News Around the world
HumorFTC and CFPBArtificial Intelligence and deep fake fraudBenefit Theft Scam CompoundsBusiness Email compromise fraud Bitcoin and Crypto FraudRansomware and data breachesATM Skimming                                                       Jamaica and Lottery FraudRomance Fraud and Sextortion