Jacob Aagaard wrote on 06/29/10 at 08:16:30:
We are the fastest publisher by far. We publish the book when it is finished - not when it fits into some publishing schedule. Everyman, as an example, can spend up to a year before publishing a book, from when it was written. Chess Stars comes close, but are delayed by the translation process - but it is my impression that they are doing as well as they possibly can.
At the moment we are still analysing critical positions in the Najdorf book - in three days we are going to the printer with the final product.
Regarding GM1 & GM2 - the author spent the time writing them (15 months apart) and not the publisher. We inserted new references and analysis the night (literally night) it went to the printer, it was out 3 weeks later.
Part of publishing business is to make sure your authors deliver their work on time. I am confident Everyman is doing a lot better on that front than you guys. Marin and Avrukh would have a hard time taking up so much time if they were working with Everyman or Gambit.
Also boasting about being the fastest publisher (in your sense of the word) is kind of disingenuous. Everyman can wait because the majority of their products age much better than
GM-rep books. For example a 6 month delay for "Starting Out: King's Indian" is not a big deal because it is a light theory book mostly focused on basic ideas of KID rather than sharp detailed variations. You can make the same argument for game collections, endgame books, puzzle books, ... which is the vast majority of what Everyman publishes. With
GM-rep books you guys have no choice but to publish at the very first moment you can, otherwise the material can become quite useless.
Quote:GM6 is ready the 16th of July to shipping to the shops. We will ship it from our office the 20th, the shops will have it 1-2 days later.
Thank god. I hope my hardcover copy arrives here in Vancouver by August!
Quote:Obviously we will not wait for the Khalifman book. It is not a matter of business, but a question of the material in our book being 400+ pages, and we will meet the Khalifman book on only 1 place (the nature of repertoires). If indeed there is a problem - which I hope there will not be - we will probably make an update for our website.
Anyway, it is more fair like this - both teams not having seen the other sides analysis - publishing at the same time.
(I would never decide when to print a theory book because of money. I know it is not the intention to insult, but I am a bit hurt anyway. I think we have proved a long time ago that we are not thinking money first when we do things. The cynics can laugh all the want, but I did not give 5 years of no income to this project to be guided by imaginary financial gains. This does not mean that we are not a business, of course we are. We just produce things in the optimal way - and only then look at a way to make money out of it. We don't allow the money to make the strategy - among other things, it probably does not work anyway...)
I am not saying that you should wait for Khalifman's book because of money. I am merely suggesting you guys live up to the premise of series (I have already had this discussion here regarding Avrukh's choice against semi-Slav). No GM would say: "My Najdorf repertoire against 6. Be3 e6 7. f3 b5 has a hole in it but that line is a small part of the entire theory of Najdorf so I can ignore it!". They would try and find a way to repair the damage, my point was waiting for 2 weeks would make sure this would not happen, I agree it is perfectionist but in "public theory" (theory that everyone has access to) Khalifman is the only other source which potentially could find a hole in your proposed repertoire and if you guys survive him it will be quite some time before your book's material gets challenged.
I find it very puzzling why there are so many complaints about delays. QC is apparently doing all they can to produce the books and deliver them quickly. The authors need time to do the best of the content.
I'm very happy about the QC books I have. Excellent contents and nice layouts. I also like that the QC staff take their time to do their blog and answer questions here. Keep up the good work!