Arab Times

Stephen King testifies for US govt in books merger trial

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WASHINGTON, Aug 3, (AP): Stephen King didn’t break any legal ground on the stand Tuesday as he testified against his own publisher’s efforts to merge with Penguin Random House. But he did know how to please a crowd and even get the judge to thank him for his time.

“It was a real pleasure to hear your testimony,” the otherwise businessli­ke US District Judge Florence J. Pan told the author after he finished speaking as a government witness in a federal antitrust lawsuit against the merger of Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster, King’s longtime publisher.

The 74-year-old King had a haunting but gregarious presence, his gaunt features accented by his gray suit and gray sneakers, his walk tentative, as it has been since he was struck by a van and badly injured in 1999. But once sworn in, he was relaxed and happy to talk, and ever alert to how to tell a story,

“My name is Stephen King. I’m a freelance writer,” King said upon being asked to identify himself. The Justice Department is bidding to convince Pan that the proposed combinatio­n of Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster, two of the world’s biggest publishers, would thwart competitio­n and damage the careers of some of the most popular authors - a status King holds like few others.

King’s remarkable career, with so many bestseller­s he could only offer an estimate, has come amid waves of consolidat­ion in the industry. As he noted in his remarks, there were dozens of publishers in New York when his breakthrou­gh novel, “Carrie,” came out, in 1974, and he has seen many of them either acquired by larger companies or forced out of business.

Now, New York publishing is often a story of the so-called Big Five: Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, HarperColl­ins Publishing,

Hachette Book Group and Macmillan. The publisher of “Carrie,” Doubleday, is now part of Penguin Random House. So is another former King publisher, Viking Press.

Impact

Over the first two days, attorneys for the two sides have presented notably contrastin­g views of the book industry. The Justice Department sees an increasing­ly limited market for bestseller­s, with the Big Five well in command. Penguin Random House’s side sees book publishing as dynamic and open to many, with the proposed merger having limited impact.

King’s appearance in US District Court in Washington - highly unusual for an antitrust trial - brought a narrative of the evolution of book publishing toward the dominance of the Big Five companies. As government attorney Mel Schwarz walked King through his history starting as a new, unknown author in the 1970s and his relationsh­ips with agents and publishers, King homed in on a critique of the industry as it is now.

King crisply answered Schwarz’s questions, with some moments of humor and brief flashes of gentle outrage, as he testified during the second day of the trial expected to last two to three weeks.

“The Big Five are pretty entrenched,” he said.

Under questionin­g later in the day, Simon & Schuster CEO Jonathan Karp detailed a world of fiercely competitiv­e bidding among publishers - including between his firm and Penguin Random House - for authors’ works, sometimes besting each other by millions of dollars for high-profile writers.

With his possible future boss, Penguin Random House Markus Dohle, among those looking on in the courtroom, Karp rejected the Big

Five moniker, calling it “parochial and ethnocentr­ic.”

“I think there are a lot of good publishers all over the country. It’s not all about us,” Karp said.

As an example, he said the nearly 100-year-old Simon & Schuster has endured more aggressive competitio­n recently from Amazon’s book publishing business.

But Justice Department attorney Jeff Vernon brought forward a message Karp had sent to John Irving, his favorite author, saying he didn’t think the government would allow Simon & Schuster and Penguin Random House to merge. “That’s assuming we still have a Department of Justice,” Karp wrote in the message.

At one point, the judge appeared to support a core government argument - that greater concentrat­ion in the industry could reduce the compensati­on paid to authors. Through two days of testimony, Pan said, “there’s a sense that competitio­n raises the amounts of advances” and less competitio­n lowers them.

King’s displeasur­e about the proposed merger led him to voluntaril­y testify for the government.

“I came because I think that consolidat­ion is bad for competitio­n,” King said. The way the industry has evolved, he said, “it becomes tougher and tougher for writers to find money to live on.”

King expressed skepticism toward the two publishers’ commitment to continue to bid for books separately and competitiv­ely after a merger.

“You might as well say you’re going to have a husband and wife bidding against each other for the same house,” he quipped. “It would be sort of very gentlemanl­y and sort of, ‘After you’ and ‘After you,’” he said, gesturing with a polite sweep of the arm.

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