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tv   Book TV  CSPAN  December 20, 2014 10:51am-11:01am EST

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i think women are, despite some of the setbacks in terms of, oh, debates about contraception and reproductive rights programs, doing a better job at putting their issues on the agenda. and certainly, the fact that we're having this conversation is testament to the fact that we do see some ongoing problems for women. and the real challenge for us, i think, is not just to recognize the problem, but to make the solutions a greater social priority. and i think in the long term we're going to be able to do that. so thank you all very much for coming. [applause] >> [inaudible] >> thank you. >> booktv is on twitter and facebook, and we want to hear
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from you. tweet us, twitter.com/booktv or post a comment on our facebook page, facebook.com/booktv. >> host: and now joining us on booktv is dennis johnson who is the co-publisher of melville house. melville house is publishing the senate intelligence committee report on torture. mr. johnson, what's the purpose of publishing something that's in the public domain? >> guest: well, for one thing it's not readily available as a print book, and we felt that that was an important format for it to be in so that it could just circulate more widely, be more accessible to more people, be more affordable and findable for most people. we also felt that the edition of it that was issued by the government which is a very low resolution pdf format was very difficult to read. you know, it's not laid out and
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properly formatted like a book. it's just like a huge collection of manuscript pages, and it's very difficult to read because it's so low resolution. it's very difficult to search. it's almost impossible to search, in fact. so we wanted to make a better edition of that so that i don't know if people really want to read that edition the way you would read a book, but it's more useful to have that for researchers and academics and things like that to have a more searchable edition of the book. >> host: now how much of the report will you be publishing? will there be editing? commentary? >> we we are publishing exactly what the government has released. the only -- the full report is over 6,000 pages long, but it has not been declassified. what has been declassified was declassified in april and only just released this month was the summary report issued by the
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senate subcommittee, and that came with an introduction by the head of the committee, dianne feinstein. and that will all be included as well as all the notesererfying -- note verifying all the documents in the report. we are not amending anything else to it. we feel that it should just be the core document. it's a historic document, it should not be freighted with any other kind of apparatus that would give it any kind of bias or dilute the power of the pure report. >> host: now, what goes into publishing a book of this sort where the material is already written, but you're organizing it, i guess, would be a word to use? >> nothing, we're not, we're not -- >> guest: , no, we're not organizing it or changing it or anything. we're just trying to make it readable. it was released as a pdf, very hard to scan, almost impossible to scan, in fact. it's a low resolution, so there are lots of corruptions in the
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document. if you try to scan it and say there's a smudge, that smudge might then, you know, be translated as a word, it might trigger repetitions, it might trigger deletions. so we really had to take this document and, basically, retype it and reformat it just to, you know, to be able to lay it out like a proper book so that it'd be much more readable than in the petition the government issued. >> host: introduction? commentary? >> guest: as i say, just the introduction that came, that is actually part of the summary. an introduction to the findings of the committee written by senator dianne feinstein, the head of the committee. of. >> host: now, have you published books like this before? >> guest: no, we haven't within allowed to publish books -- been allowed to publish books like this before. previously, the government has taken these reports such as the 9/11 committee report or the investigation that the senate did into the financial crisis, and it has awarded those books as if they were contracts to larger publishers.
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and gave them the report early so that they could lay it out for the government and publish those books simultaneously with the government's release of the document. i've never quite understood why that was allowed. those are public documents, they should not be, you know, given preferentially to one publisher or another. they belong to the people of the united states. the government did not do that this time. senator feinstein seems to have been opposed to that. i mean, in the past the government's given production money to some publishers to do this. senator feinstein seemed opposed to that. it didn't happen this time, and so those publishers, without that advantage, declined to do it. so when we realized that's what was going on at melville house, we decided, well, these documents must exist as a print book, they must exist as a more readable digital book, and so we jumped to do it as quickly as we could. but there were all kinds of difficulties in doing that on short notice. it's called crashing a book.
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it's christmas time, so it's very hard to, you know, get into the system. booksellers have already ordered their books for the season, warehouses are already shipping those books, it's hard to get on the trucks to be distributed, it's hard to get printed. the printers are very busy at that time of year, and it's hard to cut to the front of the line. so we had to pull a lot of strings, ask for a lot of favors. we had about five consecutive days of the entire staff and a team of volunteers staying up around the clock to, basically, retranscribe the book, copy edit that new transcription, proof it, compare it to the original, make sure we didn't get anything wrong, lay it out and then print it. so it's been, it's been an amazing, an amazing five days just trying to jam that back into the system at christmas time. >> host: and is it being published as a paperback and an e-book? >> guest: that's correct. it'll be issued simultaneously as a trade paperback and also as
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an e-book. >> host: now, "the new york times" is reporting that your initial print run will be about 50,000. is that accurate? >> guest: well, that is accurate at the moment, although we're getting just deluged with requests for the book not only from booksellers large and small, but from libraries and all kinds of academics are contacting us asking how quickly they can get the book. and so it's looking right now like that number may have to go up. >> host: when will it be available? >> guest: the official publication date is december 30th. we will have the book printed and in our warehouse friday, three days from now. and we will start shipping immediately. so it may start p popping up a little before the 30th in various independent bookstores, but it'll be fully distributed around the country and available on online retailers and in brick and mortar retailers and independent bookstores and chain bookstores and you name it on
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december 30th. >> host: and dennis johnson is the co-publisher of melville house located in brooklyn, new york. here is the cover, the senate intelligence committee report on torture. thank you, sir. >> guest: thank you. >> here's a look at the current best-selling nonfiction books according to politico. at the top of the list, commentator sharyl attkisson shares her experience as an investigative reporter looking into the obama administration in "stonewalled." up next is radio host michael savage's "stop the coming civil war" followed by dr. ben carson's analysis of several issues facing the country in "one nation." dinesh disease saw comes in fourth on the list with "america," which questions the future stability of the united states. in fifth is" hands off my gun, with" by dana lash, a look at gun control regulations. charles krauthammer's collection
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of political columns, "things that matter: three decades of passions, pastimes and politics," comes in sixth on politico's list. in seventh, former secretary of state henry kissinger shares his take on international affairs if "world order," and in eighth, james risen's book. next is a collection of mark steyn's columns from the national review, and wrapping up the list, peter zion argues that the global system is going to experience an extreme reorganization in "disebl superpower." that's this week's list of nonfiction bestsellers according to politico. >> russ roberts talks about adam smith's take on human nature and his writings on the pursuit of the happiness. this is about 50 minutes. ..

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