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Updated Wednesday, January 6, 2010 10:38 am TWN, By Christina Horsten, dpa Argentina's cardboard book publishing a novel conceptA conventional hardback book costs between 15 and 30 U.S. dollars but the cardboard variety costs just three dollars. Eloisa mainly prints texts by its own “house” authors and must obtain publishing rights for anything else, however, most authors allow Eloisa to print their work in return for a donation. The company does not receive any charity and relies totally on its own income. “We make 3,000 books a day but we still can't keep up with demand,” says Cucurto. “I hardly have any chance to write. Only at night or riding the bus do I get some time.” In the meantime the idea has taken off elsewhere. “According to my information there are at least 30 other cardboard book publishers in Brazil, Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Peru, Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay, Ecuador and Uruguay,” says Johana Kunin. The 28-year-old Argentine anthropologist is researching cardboard book publishers. “They're quite successful but of course they have problems to contend with. Staff members often need a second job to make ends meet and many cardboard book publishers are not accepted by the literature scenes in their own countries,” says Kunin. Miguel Angel Meza can confirm that. Meza heads up the Paraguayan cardboard book company Mnurukujarami Kartonera. “The idea is just in its initial stage. We want to expand and improve and we have plenty of ideas.” Meza's company intends to bring out CD covers and attend book fairs in future. The cardboard book concept has even begun to spread beyond Latin America. German publisher Timo Berger has known Washington Cucurto since he began Eloisa Cartonera. Berger translates texts, mediates with authors and provides useful contacts for the company. Many of his own literary works have been published in cardboard format, both in Spanish and German. “In the beginning I treated it as an experiment. I just couldn't imagine how dynamic it would go on to be.” In the meantime the 35-year-old has founded his own cardboard book publishing company in Germany called PapperLaPapp. At the moment he only sells finished books produced by his business partners in Latin America. Berger is not planning to create any cardboard books himself. “There are no Cartoneros in Germany, just bottle collectors. It would be a challenge to create a bottle publishing company but it wouldn't be quite the same.” |
![]() Washington Cucurto, right, founder of “the Eloisa Cartonera” book collective and a staff member, cuts book covers to shape outside the Eloisa Cartonera collective's office in ... Enlarge Photo Books Breaking News
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