Akademik

unread bestseller
(UN.red best.sel.ur)
n.
A book that many people purchase but few read in its entirety.
Example Citation:
There's the National Book Critics Circle Awards, another nice "high-culture" opportunity for Jonathan Franzen, author of jumbo unread bestseller The Corrections.
— Alexandra Jacobs, "The Eight-Day Week," New York Observer, March 11, 2002
Earliest Citation:
A 500-page novel set in a 14th-century monastery and written by an Italian professor of semiotics is hardly the stuff of conventional best sellers. But "The Name of the Rose," by Umberto Eco, has proven to be just that. ...
A few cynical observers suspect that snob appeal has played a considerable role in the book's rise. Says Howard Kaminsky, president of Warner Books, which bought the paperback rights for $550,000: "Every year there is one great unread best seller. A lot of people who will buy the book will never read it." It serves, he has said, as a "passport" to intellectual respectability. "It doesn't hurt to be seen carrying a copy at the Museum of Modern Art. It hints you've got something more in your mind than getting picked up."
— Alexandre Still, "Miracle of the Rose," Newsweek, September 26, 1983
Notes:
Here's my all-time Top 10 unread bestsellers list:
The Bible
A Brief History of Time, Stephen Hawking
The Satanic Verses, Salman Rushdie
The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco
The Closing of the American Mind, Allan Bloom
Doctor Zhivago, Boris Pasternak
Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon
The Bell Curve, Charles Murray and Richard Herrnstein
The End of History, Francis Fukuyama
Beowulf, Seamus Heaney (trans.)
Related Words:
bonkbuster
chick lit
hiss and tell
Judas biography
misery lit
pancake people
snob hit
thud factor
Washington read
well-booked
Category:
Books and Magazines

New words. 2013.