I was surprised to read of a decline in non-fiction. I always thought it sold well.
I was not surprised by the growth of e-books, but was surprised that in the specific statistic provided (number in the top 150), the growth was only 2 percent.
More self-published authors made their debut on the list.
I welcome the decline in non-fiction. All the how-to books have been mind-boggling. Fiction authors eventually caught on to this and started to write books on how to write novels. It's ridiculous.
Just like fiction, there is plenty of non-fiction that I look at and think, "are you kidding me?" But there is some good non-fiction as well. I'll be curious to see if there will be an increase in non-fiction sales related to the election year.
I was genuinely surprised at the 2% increase - I thought it would have been more.
I think the demise of non-fiction sales is tied to the rise of e-books. E-books are better suited for fiction material, something that offers a page-by-page narrative. Reference material often requires a lot of jumping around the pages. It's also crammed into not so ideal situations, like when my copy of Joy of Cooking leans against a pot of boiling water. Wouldn't do that with my Nook.